Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, Loyola
Chicago's beloved chaplain, dies at 106
[October 10, 2025]
By ANDREW SELIGMAN and TIM REYNOLDS
CHICAGO (AP) — Sister Jean Dolores Schmidt, the chaplain for the
men's basketball team at Loyola Chicago who became a beloved
international celebrity during the school's fairy-tale run to the
Final Four of the NCAA Tournament in 2018, has died, the university
announced Thursday night. She was 106.
Health issues caused Sister Jean to step down from her role with the
university in August, though the school said she remained as an
adviser in the final months of her life.
“In many roles at Loyola over the course of more than 60 years,
Sister Jean was an invaluable source of wisdom and grace for
generations of students, faculty, and staff,” Loyola President Mark
C. Reed said.
“While we feel grief and a sense of loss, there is great joy in her
legacy," Reed said. "Her presence was a profound blessing for our
entire community and her spirit abides in thousands of lives. In her
honor, we can aspire to share with others the love and compassion
Sister Jean shared with us.”

Sister Jean — born Dolores Bertha Schmidt on August 21, 1919, then
taking the name Sister Jean Dolores in 1937 — became one of the most
talked-about personalities during that 2018 NCAA Tournament. She did
countless interviews and even was celebrated with a bobblehead in
her likeness.
She published a memoir in 2023, “Wake Up with Purpose! What I’ve
Learned in My First 100 Years,” sharing lessons she’d learned
throughout her life and offering spiritual advice.
The basketball teams at Loyola already had learned many of those
lessons. And when that run in 2018 ended with a 69-57 loss to
Michigan in the national semifinals, players received immediate
consolation from their biggest fan.
“Sister Jean just said it was a great season,” forward Aundre
Jackson said after the loss. “She was so happy to be on this run
with us and we should keep our heads high and be happy with what we
accomplished.”
The players on that team, some of them 80 years younger than Sister
Jean, made no secret of what she meant to them, to the program and
to the university. And she was not just there to be there, either.
The Ramblers insisted she was a real part of their success.
“Sister Jean, she has meant so much to me personally and obviously
the team,” Loyola’s Donte Ingram said after hitting one of the
biggest shots in school history, a 3-pointer that lifted the team
past Miami 64-62 in the first round of the 2018 tournament.
“She is there before every game. She’s saying a prayer before every
game. After the game, she sends a general email to the team. And
then at the end of the email, it’ll be individualized: ‘Hey, Donte,
you did this, you rebounded well tonight. Even though they were out
there to get you, you still came through for the team.’ She’s just
so special, her spirit. She’s just so bright, and she means so much
to the city of Chicago and Loyola obviously and the team.”
Sister Jean’s news conference at that NCAA Tournament, she was told,
had more journalists than Tom Brady drew at the Super Bowl. Her
likeness appeared on everything from socks to a Lego statue at her
gallery in Loyola’s art museum. She saw the attention as a holy
opportunity to tell her story and share what she’s learned.
“I love life so much and enjoy being with young people,” Sister Jean
told The Associated Press in 2023. “They’re the ones who keep me
going because they bring such joy into my life -- and they keep you
updated on what’s happening in their world.”
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Loyola, which helped break down racial barriers by
winning the 1963 national championship with four Black starters, had
not played in the tournament since a Sweet 16 loss to Georgetown in
1985. But with a then-98-year-old nun providing a spiritual lift,
the Ramblers captured the nation’s imagination.
“Prayers definitely mean a little bit extra when she prays for us,”
Loyola guard Clayton Custer said during the tournament.
Sister Jean lived in the dorms on and off beginning in 1978, helping
her maintain a strong relationship with the students. It was not
unusual for her to sit with them in the student center during lunch,
getting to know them and offer guidance. She led prayer groups in
residence halls and established a program to connect students with
residents at a retirement community.
Born in San Francisco in 1919, Sister Jean grew up in a devoutly
Catholic family. She witnessed the impact of the Great Depression,
World War II and the building of the Golden Gate Bridge, which she
recalls crossing on foot when it opened in 1937.
Her religious calling, she said, came at the age of 8. She was in
third grade when she met a kind, joyful teacher who belonged to the
Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Brimming with
admiration, she would pray every day: “Dear God, help me understand
what I should do, but please tell me I should become a BVM sister,”
she recounted in her memoir.
“I guess God listened to me on that one,” she wrote.
She followed her calling to the order’s motherhouse in Dubuque,
Iowa, where she made her vows. She went on to teach at Catholic
schools in Chicago and Southern California, where she also coached
girls’ basketball, before she ended at Mundelein College — on the
Chicago lakefront — in the 1960s. The school became affiliated with
Loyola in 1991, and Sister Jean was hired to help students with the
transition.
In 1994, she was asked to help student basketball players boost
their grades — “the booster shooter” she called herself, and later
that year she was named chaplain of the men’s basketball team. The
role, she wrote in her memoir, became “the most transformational and
transcendent position” of her life.
“Sports are very important because they help develop life skills,”
she said. “And during those life skills, you’re also talking about
faith and purpose.”

Her celebrity continued to grow and her life continued to be
celebrated in her final years. At 100, Sister Jean received an
Apostolic Blessing from Pope Francis. On her 103rd birthday,
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker was among the political officials
dedicating the day in her honor. On her 105th birthday, Sister Jean
received a proclamation from President Joe Biden — who had sent her
flowers on at least one previous occasion.
Biden's message, in part, told Sister Jean, “You have shown us all
that yours is a life well lived."
The university said Sister Jean is survived by her sister-in-law,
Jeanne Tidwell, and her niece, Jan Schmidt.
___
Reynolds reported from Miami.
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