Bump Elliott

Bump Elliott

Infobox NFL PlayerCoach
name=Chalmers "Bump" Elliott


Caption=Chalmers W. "Bump" Elliott
DateOfBirth= birth date and age|mf=yes|1925|1|30
Birthplace=city-state|Detroit|Michigan
DateOfDeath=
PlaceOfDeath=
Position=HB
College=Purdue University University of Michigan
Honors=Chicago Tribune Silver Football, 1947 All-American, 1947
CollegeHOF=40051
coach=Y|coachingyears=1948 1949-51 1952-56 1957-58 1959-68 1969-70 1970-91
coachingteams=Michigan (Assistant backfield) Oregon State (Assistant) Iowa (Assistant) Michigan (Backfield) Michigan Michigan (Associate Athletic Director) Iowa (Athletic Director)
player=Y
years=1943-1944 1946-1947
teams=Purdue University University of Michigan

Chalmers W. "Bump" Elliott (born January 30, 1925 in Detroit, Michigan)cite web|title=College Football Hall of Fame: Bump Elliott|url=http://www.collegefootball.org/famersearch.php?id=40051|publisher=College Football Hall of Fame] was an American football halfback at Purdue University (1943–1944) and the University of Michigan (1946–1947). He grew up in Bloomington, Illinois, enlisted in the United States Marine Corps as a senior in high school and was assigned to the V-12 Navy College Training Program at Purdue University. He received varsity letters in football, baseball, and basketball at Purdue, before being called into active duty in late 1944, serving with the Marines in China.

After being discharged from the military, he enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1946 and joined the football team for whom his brother Pete Elliott played quarterback. In 1947, he played for an undefeated and untied Michigan football team known as the "Mad Magicians," led the Big Nine Conference in scoring, won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football trophy as the Most Valuable Player in the Conference, and was selected as an All-American by the American Football Coaches Association.

After graduating from Michigan in 1948, Elliott spent ten years as an assistant football coach at Oregon State, Iowa, and Michigan. He was appointed as Michigan's head football coach in 1959 and held that position until 1968, leading the team to a Big Ten Conference championship and Rose Bowl victory in the 1964 season. For a period of 21 years from 1970–1991, he was the athletic director at the University of Iowa. During his tenure as athletic director, he hired coaches Dan Gable, Hayden Fry, Lute Olson, C. Vivian Stringer, and Dr. Tom Davis, and the Iowa Hawkeyes won 41 Big Ten Conference championships and 11 NCAA titles. In 1989, Elliott was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Early life

Elliott was born in Detroit, but grew up in Bloomington, Illinois.cite news|title=Bump Elliott Named Iowa Athletic Director|publisher=Iowa City Press-Citizen|date=1970-06-11] His father, Dr. J. Norman Elliott, was an ears, nose and throat doctor who also coached football at Illinois Wesleyan University from 1930–1934.cite news|title=Brothers Could Clash Someday|publisher=Charleston Daily Mail|date=1958-11-18] Elliott's given name is Chalmers, but he has been known by the nickname “Bump” since he was six months old, though nobody remembers how he got the nickname, "not even his mother."cite news|author=Lowery, Lucie|title=Football Fills Lives of Bump Elliott Family|publisher=The Independent (Pasadena)|date=1964-12-31]

Elliott and his younger brother, Pete Elliott, both played football together for Bloomington High School, where Bump was an All-State halfback in 1942, and Pete made it as a fullback in 1943. Had it not been for World War II, Bump and Pete likely would have attended the University of Illinois, which was about 50 miles from their home in Bloomington. However, both brothers wanted to get into the V-12 Navy College Training Program, and Illinois did not have such a program. Bump enlisted in the United States Marine Corps while still a senior in high school and was called to active duty in 1943. He was assigned to the V-12 officer training program at Purdue University. His brother, Pete, also enlisted and was assigned to officer training at Michigan.

Purdue University and military service

Elliott attended Purdue from 1943–1944. In his freshman year, Elliott earned varsity letters in football, basketball and baseball. He played three games for the unbeaten and untied 1943 Purdue football team where he was described as "a capable triple-threater and stellar defensive performer." [cite news|title=Big Ten Notes|publisher=San Antonio Express|date=1944-09-14] He scored a touchdown against Minnesota in his first game, [cite news|title=Late Score Gives Purdue 14-7 Win Over Minnesota|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1943-11-07] and made a key interception at Purdue's ten-yard line in the season's final game against Indiana. [cite news|author=Ryan, Cornelius|title=Purdue eleven ends season with 7-0 win over Indiana|publisher=The Nebraska State Journal|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1943-11-21] A May 1944 newspaper article reported that the 19-year-old Elliott, who had been a "high school sensation last year," had won three major athletic letters in his first year as a Naval V-12 student at Purdue. "A speedy 160-pound, five foot 10-inch performer, he lost little time making his mark in football last fall once he became eligible upon completion of his first V-12 term."cite news|author=Sholl, Harry|title=Eight To Go|publisher=The Vidette-Messenger (Valparaiso, Ind.)|date=1944-05-12] Elliott appeared in the final three games of the football season, and his performance in the season's final game against Indiana "provided one of the highlights of the Boilermaker season."

In basketball, he was "consistent as a guard on Purdue's cage combination." [cite news|title=Chalmers Elliott Speaks for Frosh|publisher=Council Bluffs Iowa Nonpareil|date=1944-05-28] In baseball, Elliott played shortstop and center field, where he was "a steady fielder with a strong arm." In a May 1944 game, Elliott led the Boilermakers to a 17–4 win over Wisconsin, with five hits, five stolen bases, four RBIs, three runs scored, and four putouts in center field. His performance against Wisconsin was "one of the biggest baseball days ever turned" by a Big Ten baseball player. [cite news|title=Purdue Swamps Wisconsin in Seven-Inning Tilt, 17-4|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1944-05-14]

Elliott played in the first six games of the 1944 football season for Purdue before being transferred by the Marine Corps. In a game against Marquette in late September, he broke up a 7–7 tie with successive touchdown runs of 24 and 71 yards. [cite news|title=Saturday's Stars|publisher=Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune|date=1944-10-02] He was also the only defensive player in 1944 to pull down Illinois' Claude "Buddy" Young from behind. [cite news|title=Wolves Prep For Purdue 11 Saturday|publisher=The News-Palladium, Benton Harbor, Mich.|date=1944-10-24] Elliott received orders to report for active duty in October 1944, and he played his last game in a Purdue uniform against the Michigan Wolverines on October 28, 1944.cite news|title=Lions H.S. Grid Banquet: To Hear Bump Elliott of Iowa University|publisher=Blue Island Sun-Standard|date=1952-11-20] In November 1944, Elliott was sent to Parris Island. He was later sent to China and emerged from the war as a Marine lieutenant. [cite news|title=Wolves Prep For Purdue 11 Saturday|publisher=The Oelwein Daily Register|date=1944-10-26]

University of Michigan

Elliott and his younger brother, Pete Elliott, were teammates at Bloomington High School in 1943 and again at Michigan in 1946 and 1947. After his discharge from the military, Bump joined Pete at Michigan, where Pete played quarterback and Bump was the right halfback for the undefeated 1947 team. Before the 1948 Rose Bowl, one article noted that the two brothers roomed together at Michigan and arranged their programs so that their classes were identical. The article observed: “They look alike, act alike and think alike and in Ann Arbor, Mich., when they walk down the street any Michigan student can recognize Bump and Pete, the inseparable Elliott Brothers, Wolverines right half and quarterback respectively.”cite news|author=Bussey, Beverly|title=Bump, Pete Elliott Are Great Wolverine Duo|publisher=Long Beach Press-Telegram|date=1947-12-26] The brothers shared the same distinctive golden red hair, and the two were so close that they told a reporter in 1947 that a girl had to receive "the Bumper stamp of approval" before passing Pete's test.

1946 season

After being discharged from the Marine Corps, Elliott attended the University of Michigan, where he joined his brother, Pete, in Michigan's backfield. [cite news|title='Bump' Elliott, Ex-Purdue Star, Joins Michigan|publisher=The Wisconsin State Journal|date=1946-09-14] Elliott "practically stepped off a World War II transport from Marine Corps duty in China to Michigan's Ferry Field and stardom." [cite news|title=Michigan Grid Coach Will Be Here Tonight|publisher=Ironwood Daily Globe|date=1961-05-31] With less than a week of conditioning after his discharge from the Marines, he was reported to be giving Michigan's coaching staff "something lovely to look at." [cite news|title='M' Coaches See New Star in Ex-Marine|publisher=The News-Palladium, Benton Harbor, Mich.|date=1946-09-17]

In a 14–14 tie with Northwestern in mid-October 1946, Elliott scored all 14 of Michigan's points. He scored the first touchdown late in the first quarter on a 37 yard pass from Bob Chappuis in the corner of the end zone. In the fourth quarter, Michigan fullback Bob Wiese intercepted a pass on Michigan's 1- yard line, and lateralled to Elliott on the Michigan 40-yard line. From that point, Elliott ran it back 60 yards down the sideline for his second touchdown. [cite news|title=Swiped Pass Lets Wolves Salvage Tie: Wildcat Lead Wiped Out in Last Quarter|publisher=Council Bluffs Iowa Nonpareil|date=1946-10-20] He again scored two touchdowns in Michigan's 21-0 win over Minnesota on November 2, 1946. [cite news|title=Swiped Wolves Can Win Big 9 Title If Ohio State Co-Operates|publisher=The News-Palladium, Benton Harbor, Mich.|date=1946-11-04] He also helped Michigan to a 28–6 win over Wisconsin with a bullet pass to end Bob Mann in the end zone.

Big Nine MVP in 1947

In 1947, Elliott played for the Wolverines team known as the "Mad Magicians" that went undefeated and untied, and defeated the USC Trojans, 49–0 in the 1948 Rose Bowl. The team is considered to be the greatest Michigan team of all time.cite book | last = Jones | first = Todd | editor= MacCambridge, Michael | title = ESPN Big Ten College Football Encyclopedia |chapter=Michigan | publisher = ESPN Enterprises | year = 2007| isbn = 1933060492] Along with Bob Chappuis, Elliott was one of the key players in Michigan's undefeated season. He led the Big Nine in scoring, made the All-American team picked by the American Football Coaches Association, and was voted Most Valuable Player in the Big Nine Conference to win the Chicago Tribune Silver Football trophy. Elliott was one of two Michigan players in 1947 (the other was fullback Jack Weisenburger) who played both offense and defense. [cite news|title=The Specialist|publisher=Time|date=1947-11-03] Indeed, Elliott was actually a four-way threat as he contributed in rushing, receiving, punt returns, and defense. He scored a total of 12 touchdowns in 1947 -- eight rushing, two receiving, one on a punt return, and another on an interception return. He contributed 911 all-purpose yardage – 438 rushing, 318 receiving, and 155 on punt returns. He averaged 6.4 yards per carry as a rusher, 19.9 yards per reception, and 17.2 yards per punt return. Michigan head coach Fritz Crisler called Elliott the greatest right halfback he had ever seen.cite web|title=Bump Elliott|url=http://www.umich.edu/~bhl/athdept/football/coaches/celliott.htm|publisher=The Regents of the University of Michigan]

Elliott had a breakthrough season that began with the team's "Blue" versus "White" exhibition game in mid-September in which he scored four touchdowns, including 50 and 60 yard runs. [cite news|title=Four Touchdowns for Bump Elliott|publisher=Council Bluffs Iowa Nonpareil|date=1947-09-14] He scored touchdowns in each of the team's early season wins over Michigan State (55–0), [cite news|title=Michigan Serves Warning to Big Nine; Manhandles Spartans in 55-0 Landslide|publisher=Nevada State Journal|date=1947-09-28] Stanford (49-13), [cite news|title=Michigan Powerhouse Whips Stanford, 49-13|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1947-10-05] and Pitt (69-0). [cite news|title=Michigan's Power Crushes Pitt, 69-0|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1947-10-12] His touchdown against Pitt came on defense, as he intercepted a pass and ran it back 37 yards. [cite news|title=Wolverines in Easy 69-0 Win Over Panthers|publisher=Kingsport Times-News|date=1947-10-12] In the Big Nine opener against Northwestern, Elliott scored on a nine-yard run less than two minutes after the game started, as the Wolverines won, 49-21. [cite news|title=Open Big Nine Drive in Easy 49-21 Victory: Win Is Powerful Michigan's Fourth Straight|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1947-10-19] In Michigan's closest contest of the 1947 season, a 13-6 win over Minnesota, Elliott caught a 40-yard pass from Bob Chappuis on his fingertips at the Minnesota 15-yard line and went on to score with a minute and 15 seconds to go in the first half. [cite news|title=Minnesota line Nearly Upsets Michigan, 13-6|publisher=Waterloo Daily Courier|date=1947-10-26] Said one reporter: "It was the exceptional speed of Elliott on this play that turned the tide. He completely outmaneuvered the Minnesota secondary." [cite news|title=Michigan, Texas Extended But Retain Clean Reocrds|publisher=Charleston Gazette (West Virginia)|date=1947-10-26]

The biggest challenge of the 1947 season came in a 14–7 win over Illinois. The Associated Press described Elliott as Michigan's "Big Cog" in the Illinois game,cite news|title=Wolves Clear Big Hurdle: Michigan Topples Illini, 14-7|publisher=Council Bluffs Iowa Nonpareil|date=1947-11-02] and the United Press proclaimed: "Bump Elliott Steals Show in 14 to 7 Defeat of Illinois Saturday." [cite news|title=Three Hurdles Between Mich. and Rose Bowl: Bump Elliott Steals Show in 14 to 7 Defeat of Illinois Saturday|publisher=Record-Eagle, Traverse City, Mich.|date=1947-11-03] In the first quarter, he ran back a punt 75 yards for a touchdown, as Bob Mann "bulldozed the path with a vicious block," and "the Bloomington blaster scampered down the sidelines." Elliott also set up the Wolverines second score with a long reception to the Illinois four-yard line. He also played a key role on defense, intercepting a pass at the Michigan nine-yard line to halt an Illinois drive. Another article concluded: "The individual hero was Bump Elliott, a 168-pound halfback who loped 74 yards for one touchdown and caught a pass for a 52 yard gain to set up the second and winning marker." [cite news|title=Michigan, Past Toughest Hurdles, Appears Sure Bet to Play in Rose Bowl|publisher=The Daily Register, Harrisburg, Ill.|date=1947-11-04]

He finished the season scoring two touchdowns each in games against Indiana and Ohio State. [cite news|title=Michigan Rocks Hoosiers, 35-0|publisher=The Long Beach Press-Telegram|date=1947-11-09] [cite news|title=Michigan Completes Perfect Season: Ohio State Bows to Wolverines by 21-0 Score|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1947-11-23] At the end of the season, Elliott and Bob Chappuis both received 16 of 18 possible points in voting by the AP for the All-Big Nine football team. [cite news|title=Wolverines Get 4 on All-Big Nine|publisher=Charleston Daily Mail|date=1947-11-25] Elliott weighed only convert|160|lb|kg stlb|1|lk=on during his All-American season in 1947. Asked later about how he managed to compete at his weight, Elliott noted, “I was awful lucky to get by at that weight.”cite news|author=Schrader, Gus|title=Red Peppers: The Danger to Young Coaches|publisher=Cedar Rapids Gazette|date=1952-02-06]

1948 Rose Bowl against USC

As the Big Nine Conference champions, the 1947 Wolverines were invited to play in the 1948 Rose Bowl game against the USC Trojans. Michigan dominated the game, winning 49–0, as "the shifty Chappuis and the speedy Elliott began to fake (the Trojans) out of their shoes." [cite news|author=Stiles, Maxwell|title=Michigan Rips Trojans Apart|publisher=Long Beach Press-Telegram|date=1948-01-02] Elliott scored on an 11 yard touchdown pass from Chappuis. In August 1948, Elliott was chosen as the captain of the College All-Stars in their game against the Chicago Cardinals at Soldier Field. [cite news|author=Ward, Al|title=Patrolling the Sport Highway|publisher=The Ogden (Utah) Standard-Examiner|date=1948-08-20] Injured in practice, Elliott was unable to play as the Cardinals beat the All-Stars, 28–0. [cite news|author=Liska, Jerry|title=Chicago Cards Roll Over All Stars 28 to 0|publisher=Council Bluffs Nonpareil|date=1948-08-21]

Application for 1948 eligibility denied

Elliott applied for an extra year of eligibility in 1948. Due to his military service, he played in only three games as a freshman and six games in his sophomore season. Under the Big Nine conference code, he was eligible for a fifth season due to a war-caused stay at Purdue in 1943-1944. [cite news|title=Bump Elliott May Play Again for Wolverines|publisher=The Lima News|date=1947-12-14] However, his request was denied by the Big Nine Conference. The decision was criticized by Michigan’s representative on the Big Nine faculty committee as a “grave injustice.”cite news|title=Bump Elliott Ruled Ineligible for Further Grid Competition|publisher=Ironwood Daily Globe|date=1948-03-01] Nonetheless, Elliott set the Michigan career interception return yards record that stood for five years until Don Oldham pushed the record from 174 yards to 181 yards. His 174 career yards still ranks fifth in school history.cite web|url=http://www.mgoblue.com/document_file/fbl-2007spring-records1.pdf|title=Record Book|accessdate=2008-01-01|date=2007|publisher=University of Michigan & Host Interactive]

Coaching career

The Elliot brothers served as assistant coaches together at Oregon State in 1949 and 1950, before going their separate ways.cite news|title=Bump Elliott Selected ‘Coach of the Week’|publisher=The Holland, Michigan Evening Sentinel|date=1963-11-13] The Elliotts coached against each other in the early 1960s while Bump was the head football coach at Michigan and Pete held the same position at the University of Illinois.cite news|author=McCormick, Henry J.|title=Playing the Game: Saga of The Elliott Brothers|publisher=Wisconsin State Journal|date=1960-01-17] In November 1963, Pete Elliott’s Illinois team was ranked No. 2 in the country and the favorite for the Rose Bowl when it faced off against Bump Elliott’s Michigan team. Michigan had a record of 2–3–1 when the brothers met in 1963, but Michigan came out on top, 14–8, marking the fourth time in four games that Bump’s Wolverines came out on top of brother Pete’s Illini.

After graduating from Michigan, Bump turned down an offer to play professional football for the Detroit Lions, saying he said he had obtained a job in Chicago outside of football. [cite news|title=Playing Bump Elliott Spurns Lions|publisher=Syracuse Herald Journal|date=1948-06-08] Elliott also considered going into medicine as his father had done, but he chose instead to go into coaching. He started his coaching career at Michigan in the fall of 1948 as assistant backfield coach. In the spring of 1949, he was hired as an assistant coach under Kip Taylor at Oregon State, where he remained for three seasons, from 1949–1951. Elliott later recalled, “I was only 24 when Kip Taylor hired me as backfield coach at Oregon State, and it bothered me a little because there were two backs on the squad who were older than I was.” It was even worse for his brother Pete, who was 22 when he was hired to coach the ends. Bump recalled: "After practice one night some players noticed Pete light up a cigaret. One of his ends drew Pete aside and said in a fatherly voice, 'You shouldn't smoke, coach; I didn't do it when I was your age.” Oregon State had an overall record of 14–15 in Elliott's three years as an assistant coach.

In 1952, Elliott was hired as an assistant at the University of Iowa under its head coach, Forest Evashevski, another former All-American at the University of Michigan. On being hired at Iowa, Elliott said, “I should feel at home back in the Big Ten. I grew up in Bloomington – 40 miles from Illinois. I played at Purdue and Michigan and coached at Michigan. My father went to Iowa and Northwestern and now I’m coaching at Iowa.” He stayed at Iowa until 1957. Elliott was with the Hawkeyes in 1956 when they went 9–1, won the Big Ten championship, and defeated his former team, Oregon State, 35–19, in the 1957 Rose Bowl game.

He returned to Michigan in 1957 as a backfield coach under Bennie Oosterbaan. In 1959, Elliott was elevated to head football coach at Michigan. He was the head coach for ten years from 1959 to 1968, posting a career record of 51–42–2, for a .547 winning percentage. In Big Ten Conference play, his record was 32–34–2 (.485). His record over the ten years at Michigan was as follows:

CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = University of Michigan Wolverines
conf = Big Ten Conference
startyear = 1959
endyear = 1968
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1959
name = Michigan
overall = 4–5
conference = 3–4
confstanding = 7th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1960
name = Michigan
overall = 5–4
conference = 3–4
confstanding = T-5th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1961
name = Michigan
overall = 6–3
conference = 3–3
confstanding = 6th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1962
name = Michigan
overall = 2–7
conference = 1–6
confstanding = 10th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1963
name = Michigan
overall = 3–4–2
conference = 2–3–2
confstanding = 7th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference
year = 1964
name = Michigan
overall = 9–1
conference = 6–1
confstanding = 1st
bowl = yes
bowlname = Rose Bowl
bowlopp = Oregon State
bowloutcome = W 34–7
bcsbowl =
ranking = 5
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1965
name = Michigan
overall = 4–6
conference = 2–5
confstanding = T–7th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1966
name = Michigan
overall = 6–4
conference = 4–3
confstanding = T–3rd
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1967
name = Michigan
overall = 4–6
conference = 3–4
confstanding = T–5th
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1968
name = Michigan
overall = 8–2
conference = 6–1
confstanding = 2nd
bowl =
bowlgame =
bowlopp =
bowlscore =
bcsbowl =
ranking = 12
CFB Yearly Record End
overall = 51–42–2
bcs =
poll =
polltype =

Although his tenure at Michigan was unsuccessful by the school's historic standards, he did lead the 1964 Wolverines to a 9–1 record, a Big Ten title and a win in the Rose Bowl against Oregon State. His final team, in 1968, won eight of its first nine games but then suffered a humiliating 50–14 loss against Ohio State. Despite having a 36-point lead, Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes passed for, and failed to get, a two-point conversion after the final score and with 1:23 remaining in the game. When asked why he went for the two-point conversion, Hayes reportedly said, "Because we couldn't go for three!" [cite news|author=Miller, Rusty|title=The Game: Buckeyes, Michigan renew rivalry|publisher=The Indiana Gazette|date=2002-11-21] Shortly after the game, Elliott resigned, and athletic director Don Canham hired Bo Schembechler to replace him as head coach. Schembechler would use the memory of the 1968 Ohio State loss to motivate his team the following season.

There were reports during the 1968 season that Elliott had been given an ultimatum: “Either win or face the possibility of being kick upstairs.”cite news|author=Ford, Bob|title=Warmath Called Michigan Shot; Canham Helped|publisher=The Kokomo Tribune|date=1968-11-20] There were also reports when Don Canham was hired that Elliott had expected to be named athletic director and that there was “bad blood” between Canham and Elliott.

However, Canham later denied that Elliott was “eased out” of his job. In an interview with Joe Falls, Canham said: “Bump and I are close personal friends. Bump is not naïve – he knows that when you work at a place for 10 years and you’re not winning consistently, it doesn’t become fun for anybody – the coach, the alumni, the players or anybody else. We talked about this and we talked about it openly. If Bump had said to me, ‘Look, give me a couple of more years,’ I would have given it to him. I mean that. I didn’t fire Bump Elliott. My first year as director Bump had an 8 and 2 record. Anyone could live with that.”cite news|author=Grady, Al|title=Words From A New Book About Bo Schembechler|publisher=Iowa City Press-Citizen|date=1973-10-12]

According to Canham, he met with Elliott in December 1968 and offered him the job of associate athletic director. Canham told Elliott he could stay on as coach if he wanted, but Canham could not promise him that the job of associate athletic director would still be open in another couple of years. Canham said: “Bump smiled at me and said, ‘I don’t have to think about it.’ He was ready to get out. I did not force him, and I mean that in all honesty. But the job had ceased to be fun for him.”

Schembechler later recalled that he remained loyal to Elliott when he took over as Michigan’s head coach in 1969. When Schembechler won the Big Ten championship in 1969, he said, “I made certain I let everyone know I won with Bump’s kids. Bump was a man of great class and he showed it to me again and again in that first year, never getting in the way, always trying to be helpful, always trying to encourage me.” After Michigan won the 1969 Ohio State game, the team presented the game ball to Elliott, and Schembechler noted that “I don’t remember when I felt happier about anything in my life.”

From 1969 to 1970, Elliott was the associate director of athletics at Michigan.

Athletic director at Iowa

Elliott became the athletic director at the University of Iowa in 1970, succeeding Forest Evashevski. He came to Iowa in the midst of a feud between athletic director Forest Evashevski and football coach Ray Nagel. Evashevski resigned in May 1970, and Elliott was hired to replace him. On accepting the job, Elliott noted: “It’s difficult to leave a town where you’ve lived for 13 years (Ann Arbor, Michigan), but the opportunity is so good at Iowa with the people and the school that no one could pass it up.”

During Elliott's tenure, the school’s teams won 41 Big Ten championships and 11 NCAA titles, as well as making three Rose Bowl appearances and one trip to the Final Four in basketball. The university also built a basketball arena (Carver-Hawkeye Arena), erected an indoor workout center for football and added more than 10,000 seats to its football stadium.cite news|title=Bump Elliott announces his retirement: Iowa athletic director to end 21-year tenure|publisher=Waterloo Courier|date=1991-02-24] His career at Iowa was marked by a general resurgence in the competitiveness of Iowa athletics. Elliott hired a number of notable coaches, including Lute Olson, Dan Gable, Hayden Fry, C. Vivian Stringer, and Dr. Tom Davis. During Elliott's 21 years as athletic director, the Iowa Hawkeyes won 41 Big Ten championships in football (1981, 1985, 1990), wrestling (1974–1990), men's basketball (1970, 1979), baseball (1972, 1974, 1990), men's gymnastics (1972, 1974, 1986), men's swimming (1981, 1982), women's basketball (1987–1990), field hockey (1981–1983, 1985–1987), and women's cross-country (1982). "See" Iowa Hawkeyes for complete list of championships.

Elliott was known as “a coach’s AD.” “He hired coaches he trusted, then gave them the resources, latitude and support they needed to operate as they saw fit – providing they played by the rules.” Iowa wrestling coach Dan Gable said his wife cried on learning that Elliott had retired. In 2005, Gable wrote: “Right after I came to coach at the University of Iowa, I had a meeting with Bump Elliott, who was the Athletic Director. I’ll never forget what Bump said to me: ‘Don’t ask for the moon. Strive to get there, sure, but do it wisely through continuing to build upon what you already have. As you build, come see me, and we’ll see how I can help you out.’ I now call that bit of wisdom the Bump Elliott Rule, and it serves a good reminder to keep things in perspective. Gradual, solid growth is better than any quick fix.” [cite web|title=Dan Gable Blog|url=http://gableblog.blogspot.com/2005/10/power-of-money-yes-or-no.html|date=2005-10-13] “The one thing we emphasized from the start was that our staff had to make sure we were 100 percent loyal to each other and the university,” Elliott said at the time of his retirement. “There could be no jealousy between the coaches and various programs. I wanted no one talking behind anyone’s backs. I wanted absolute loyalty. If not, then that person could leave any time.”cite book|author= Mike Firn, Chadi Leistikow |title=Hawkeye Legends, List & Lore, p. 195|publisher=Sports Publishing LLC|date=1998| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cP7rCdVdFFcC&pg=RA2-PA195&lpg=RA2 PA195&dq=bump+elliott&source=web&ots=mlSeLTVBKb&sig=W1KbIvJ6Mm57bslz2cTiYoQ_yiE#PRA2-PA196,M1]

Elliott was also the one who hired Hayden Fry as Iowa’s football coach in 1979. Fry later said that Elliott was one of the principal reasons he chose to coach at Iowa. In his autobiography, Fry wrote: “Iowa had one thing in its favor as far as I was concerned: Bump Elliott was its athletic director. Bump had a reputation as being a fair, honest and well-liked administrator.” [cite book|author=Fry, Hayden|title=Hayden Fry: A High-Porch Picnic, p. 99|publisher=Sport Publishing LLC|date=2001] Elliott told Fry that he would be the last football coach Bump ever hired. Fry was puzzled and asked Elliott what he meant. Elliott said, “Simple, I don’t think they’ll give me a chance to hire another coach, so if you don’t make it, neither will I.” [cite book|author=Fry, Hayden|title=Hayden Fry: A High-Porch Picnic, p. 100|publisher=Sport Publishing LLC|date=2001] He is the only person to have been with Rose Bowl teams in five capacities – player, assistant coach, head coach, assistant athletic director, and athletic director.

Family

Elliott and his wife Barbara met while he was with the Marine Corps at Purdue and she was studying pre-school education there. They married in 1949, and have three children, Bill (born c. 1952), Bob (born May 1953), and Betsy (born c. 1955). Son Bob Elliott was Iowa’s defensive coordinator under Hayden Fry in the 1990s. [cite news|title=Elliott’s recovery from transplant going well|publisher=Waterloo Courier|date=1999-04-30]

Honors and accolades

Elliott has received numerous honors and accolades, including the following:
*Recipient of the Chicago Tribune Silver Football as the Most Valuable Player in the Big Nine Conference in 1947;
*Selected as an All-American by the American Football Coaches Association in 1947;
*Inducted into the University of Michigan Hall of Honor in 1986 for his contributions in football, basketball, baseball, and as a football coach; [cite web|title=University of Michigan Hall of Honor|url=http://www.letterwinnersmclub.com/hallofhonor.html]
*Inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1989;
*Inducted into the National Iowa Varsity Club Hall of Fame in 1997;cite web|title=Michigan Sports Hall of Fame|url=http://www.michigansportshof.org/inductees/archives/elliott.html]
*Inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in 2002; and
*Elliott Drive, the Iowa City street on which Carver-Hawkeye Arena is located, is named in his honor.

ee also

*1947 Michigan Wolverines football team
*University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor

Notes

ee also

References

* [http://www.umich.edu/~bhl/athdept/football/coaches/celliott.htm Bentley Library Profile of Elliott]
* [http://www.rosebowllegends.org/chalmers-bump-elliott.php Rose Bowl Legends Profile of Elliott]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=fd87BHQ4VrkC&pg=PT146&lpg=PT146&dq=bump+elliott&source=web&ots=-yL6stK2QH&sig=C_c67AKBzpwZYTV0UkaxFIVtRZI Brief Profile from the book, “Michigan: Champions of the West,” by Bruce Madej]
* [http://www.collegefootball.org/famersearch.php?id=40051 College Football Hall of Fame: Bump Elliott]


Persondata
NAME=Bump Elliott
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Chalmers W. Elliott
SHORT DESCRIPTION=American football player, coach and athletic director
DATE OF BIRTH=January 30, 1925
PLACE OF BIRTH=Detroit, Michigan
DATE OF DEATH=
PLACE OF DEATH=

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Work It (Missy Elliott song) — Single infobox | Name = Work It Artist = Missy Elliott from Album = Under Construction Released = September 3, 2002 Format = Digital download CD single 12 single Recorded = 2002 Genre = Hip hop Length = 4:58 Label = Goldmind/Elektra Writer =… …   Wikipedia

  • Missy Elliott production discography — The following is a discography of production and writing by American hip hop artist/producer Missy Elliott. Contents 1 Official credits 1.1 1990s 1.1.1 1993 1.1.2 1995 …   Wikipedia

  • Missy Elliott discography — Missy Elliott discography Releases ↙Studio albums 6 ↙Compilation albums 1 …   Wikipedia

  • Missy Elliott — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Elliott. Missy Elliott Surnom Misdemeanor Missy Elliass « Reine du Hip Hop » Nom Melissa Arnette Elliott Naissance …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Pete Elliott — For the Canadian Anglican priest, see Peter Elliott. For the middle distance runner, see Peter Elliott (athlete). Peter R. Pete Elliott was the former college football player and head football coach at several colleges. He was an All American… …   Wikipedia

  • 1947 Michigan Wolverines football team — NCAATeamFootballSeason Year=1947 Team=Michigan Wolverines Conference=Big Ten Conference Division= ShortConference=Big Ten CoachRank= APRank=1 Record=10 0 ConfRecord=6 0 HeadCoach=Fritz Crisler OffCoach= DefCoach= OScheme= DScheme=… …   Wikipedia

  • History of Iowa Hawkeyes football — 19th century – Origins of Iowa football = Football was first played as a club sport at Iowa in 1872, with intramural games against other colleges played as early as 1882. But it was in 1889 that the University of Iowa first officially recognized… …   Wikipedia

  • Michigan Wolverines football — Current season …   Wikipedia

  • Rose Bowl Game — Granddaddy of Them All redirects here. For the pay per view wrestling event, see WrestleMania. Rose Bowl Game The Granddaddy of Them All 2011 Rose Bowl game logo Stadium Rose Bowl Location Pasadena, California …   Wikipedia

  • Dennis Brown (quarterback) — Dennis Brown Brown (No. 22) from 1968 Michiganensian Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born c. 1948 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”