Lou Holtz, college football staple
who coached Notre Dame to 1988 national title, dies at 89
[March 05, 2026]
By ERIC OLSON and TOM COYNE
Lou Holtz never met an opponent that couldn't beat him. Somehow, he
squeaked out nearly 250 wins and a national title while cementing
himself both as one of the most lovable and unlikable characters in
college football — a one-of-a-kind iconoclast in a profession
brimming with originals.
The pint-sized motivator who restored greatness at Notre Dame and
demanded it everywhere else he went died in Orlando, Florida, Notre
Dame announced Wednesday. He was 89.
Spokeswoman Katy Lonergan said the family did not provide a cause of
death.
“Notre Dame mourns the loss of Lou Holtz, a legendary football
coach, a beloved member of the Notre Dame family and devoted
husband, father and grandfather,” Notre Dame president the Rev.
Robert A. Dowd said in a statement.
His son, Skip, who followed Holtz into coaching, said in a post on X
that his father had passed away and was "resting peacefully at
home.”
“He was successful, but more important he was Significant," Skip
Holtz wrote.
Holtz went 249-132-7 over a career that spanned 33 seasons and
included stops at Minnesota, Arkansas, South Carolina and, most
notably, Notre Dame.
It was there that he won his lone national championship, in 1988,
capped with a win over West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl but
highlighted by a 31-30 victory earlier in the season over Miami —
one of the notable meetings in the so-called “Catholics vs.
Convicts” rivalry of the '80s.

For all the big personalities coarsing through college football
during the day, none stood bigger than Holtz. He was only 5-foot-10,
but commanded the sideline like someone much bigger. The lead-up to
the big games were sometimes his best theatre.
Armed with a homespun brand of folksiness that could trickle into
corny but always contained a kernel of truth, Holtz lit up bulletin
boards and motivational posters with dozens of memorable quotes and
pithy observations, virtually all of them constructed to inspire:
—“Life is ten percent what happens to you and ninety percent how you
respond to it.”
—"When all is said and done, more is said than done."
—“You’re never as good as everyone tells you when you win, and
you’re never as bad as they say when you lose.”
He could make any team — from Akron to Army to Alabama — sound like
a world beater on any given week. More often than not, his Fighting
Irish figured out a way to scratch out the wins.
Restoring Notre Dame to greatness
Before Holtz arrived in South Bend, Notre Dame was wallowing in
mediocrity — a mere shell of the program built on a foundation of
Knute Rockne, Ara Parseghian, the Golden Dome and Touchdown Jesus.
Holtz turned things around quickly and had the Irish in the Cotton
Bowl in Year 2 and winning the national title the season after that.
His 1988 and 1989 teams won a school-record 23 consecutive games and
he beat three teams ranked No. 1 — Miami in 1988, Colorado in 1989
and Florida State in 1993.
The Irish finished No. 2 in the AP poll in 1993. Holtz left South
Bend after the 1996 season with a record of 100-30-2.
“Lou and I shared a very special relationship," said current Notre
Dame coach Marcus Freeman, who led the Irish back to the national
title game in 2025 — a contest Holtz attended and spiced up with
some trolling of the Ohio State program that beat the Irish that
day. "Our relationship meant a lot to me as I admired the values he
used to build the foundation of his coaching career: love, trust and
commitment.”

A fast start, then a detour to the NFL
Notre Dame was the highlight of a head-coaching career that began at
William & Mary and North Carolina State and also included a one-year
stop in the NFL.
Like so many who mastered the college game in his profession, he
failed up there, resigning with one game left in a 3-10 campaign
with the New York Jets in 1976 and proclaiming “God did not put Lou
Holtz on this earth to coach in the pros."
That opened the door at Arkansas, which was one of the four schools
he led into the AP Top 25. His teams made 18 appearances there;
eight of those were in the top 10.
After Notre Dame, Holtz transitioned into the TV booth with CBS,
promising he would never coach again.
“I said, ‘You could put it in granite.’ I’ve got the granite stone,”
Holtz said. “It wasn’t very good granite.”
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Notre Dame's head coach Lou Holtz and the Fighting Irish walk onto
the field of the Los Angeles Coliseum to warm up for an NCAA college
football game against Southern California Saturday, Nov. 30, 1996 in
Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian, File)

He took an open job at South Carolina, where he had once served as
an assistant coach. Despite posting a career-worst 0-11 mark in his
first season with the Gamecocks, Holtz went 17-7 over the next two
seasons, beat then No. 9 Georgia in the second game of 2000 and also
beat Ohio State twice in the Outback Bowl.
He left the sideline for good following the 2004 season and returned
to the airwaves, working 11 more seasons with ESPN.
Core values of trust and getting the best out of players
On the field, each program he led reached new heights in part
because he never wavered from his core values of trust, a commitment
to excellence and caring for others.
“I think you have to go in there with a vision of where you want to
go and a plan of how you’re going to get there,” Holtz once said.
“You have to hold people accountable, and you have to believe it can
be done."
The results were impressive, even if he sometimes used
unconventional methods.
He once tackled quarterback Tony Rice following a failed play in
practice and was widely critiqued in 1991 when he grabbed a player
by the facemask, pulling him to the sideline and yelling at him the
entire way after the player committed a personal foul. Holtz later
apologized.
Holtz suspended his leading rusher, Tony Brooks, and leading
receiver, Ricky Watters, in 1988 because they were 40 minutes late
to a team meal the night before Notre Dame faced then No. 2 Southern
California. The Irish still won 27-10.
At Arkansas, he once suspended three starting offensive players for
disciplinary reasons before facing then No. 2 Oklahoma in the Orange
Bowl. Arkansas, an 18-point underdog, still won 31-6.

As demanding as Holtz could be, though, he used his charm and eye
for good players to recruit top talent. Notre Dame’s 1990 recruiting
class included five future first-round NFL draft picks, and he found
unique ways to motivate his team.
“The first thing I said at every practice was, ‘Boy, what a great
day to work,’” Holtz recounted. “It could be raining. It could be
whatever. I’d be, ‘Boy, am I glad to be here. No place I’d rather be
than here.’ I used to say to them, ‘I travel all over the world
speaking to every major corporation and they’d pay me money. I speak
to you for free and you don’t have to take notes.’”
Born in West Virginia, dreamed of coaching high school
Louis Leo Holtz was born Jan. 6, 1937, in Follansbee, West Virginia,
and aspired to be a high school football coach. His future wife
broke off their engagement in 1960. That’s when Holtz, once a
150-pound linebacker at Kent State, took a graduate-assistant job at
Iowa. A year later, he married Beth Barcus, and they were together
more than 50 years.
She inspired him again in 1966 when, eight months pregnant with
their third child, Holtz was jobless. Beth bought him a book about
setting goals, and Holtz created a wish list of what he wanted to
do: attend a White House dinner, appear on “The Tonight Show” and
see the Pope.
Holtz said there were 107 entries on the list: “She said, ‘Gee,
that’s nice. Why don’t you add 'get a job.’ So we made it 108,” he
said.
In 2008, Holtz was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame
and Notre Dame placed a statue of him outside its home stadium.
He said numerous times that his plan was to be buried on that
campus, as well. He figured it was only fitting because, as he said
in 2015: “The alumni buried me here every Saturday,."
___
AP Sports Writer Michael Marot in Indianapolis contributed to this
report. Tom Coyne is a former AP sports writer.
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