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Georgia Tech legend Homer Rice dies at age 97
Credit: Courtesy photo
Former Georgia Tech athletic director Homer Rice is honored at halftime of the Yellow Jackets' Oct. 30, 2021 game against Virginia Tech. The homecoming game served as a reunion of the school's 1990 national championship team. (Danny Karnik/Georgia Tech Athletics)
By Steve Hummer
19 minutes ago
When considering Homer Rice’s legacy at Georgia Tech, there’s a little something for everyone, for both the hardened pragmatist and dreamy idealist. Because Rice, who died Monday at the age of 97, so naturally worked both sides of that street.
He was part program-builder, arriving at Tech in 1980 and sparking a sporting renaissance on The Flats during his 17 years as athletic director. Where before him there was a football team that teetered on irrelevance and signs of dry rot throughout the athletic department, there followed one of the golden periods of Tech athletics. Highlighting Rice’s reign was a football national championship, a men’s basketball Final Four appearance – both in 1990 – and six different programs enjoying at least some time atop the national rankings.
And part person-builder, who dared step beyond the often cynical, win-today realm of college athletics and advocate for a player’s long-term well-being beyond the field. His “Total Person” program, which stressed life skills, career planning and self-improvement, was the model for a similar course later launched by the NCAA.
Make no mistake, Rice served the bottom line of winning. “When he took that job in ‘80, Georgia Tech was probably as low as it has ever been and will never be again, whether it was facilities or funding,” said Bernadette McGlade, one of Rice’s initial hires at Tech as its women’s basketball coach, now the commissioner of the Atlantic 10 Conference. “He literally reinvented and rebuilt an entire academic institution’s athletic program.”
As Rice put it succinctly in early 2023: “We were able to put some money together and some wins together and one by one, we moved it forward and gained a lot of success.”
But he also reached deeper into the athlete, past the fast-twitch fiber to the mind and spirit, to where the ever-fading ideal of college athletics lives.
“His most important legacy is in the education and self-esteem the student-athletes earned by going through his program,” said Bill Curry, the football coach hired just before Rice’s arrival who spent the 1980-86 seasons there before leaving for Alabama. “If you took the Total Person program it affected everything else in your life and made a difference in your life. I think that’s Homer’s gift.”
So committed was Rice to the educational component of his life that he taught a Leadership Fitness class to the general student body at Tech well into his 90s, the students often enjoying a dinner on the coach after class.
Filling out muscle and mind were equally important to the AD. Curry learned that lesson soon after his new AD showed up on the Tech campus, when asked by his boss not how practice was going but rather how his Total Person sessions with the team were progressing.
Rice received a lukewarm answer. “We were working on recruiting and short yardage and goal-line, two-minute drill, football stuff,” Curry recalled.
“I’ll get around to it,” Curry told Rice.
“No, you didn’t understand what I said,” Rice shot back. “Here’s what we’re going to do. Thursday at 11 all of the football team will be in the team meeting room, and I’ll be on the front row, and you will teach the Total Person program for an hour. I’ll see you then.”
Now 81 years old, Curry still can quote each of the seven pillars of the “attitude technique” that Rice devised as part of his developmental program, from “making the commitment,” to “giving of yourself sacrificially,” to “believing in yourself, believing in your team, such that your belief is unshakable.”
Homer Cranston Rice was born Feb. 20, 1927, in Bellevue, Kentucky, the son of a Methodist minister and a second-grade teacher. And, true to his bloodlines, he would be for all his years a preacher and teacher.
He often told the story of being preternaturally interested in the idea of personal success, ruminating on that subject at an age when most boys are just obsessing over the various eruptions of acne and body hair. His father had given him a book on goal-setting when Rice was only 12, entitled “I Dare You.” Wrote Rice in his “Leadership Fitness” book: “It stimulated me to search for the secrets to successful living.”
As with most coaches, Rice had the athletic part of the program pretty well covered. In high school in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, and at Centre College (Danville, Kentucky), he was the star quarterback. He could play just about any sport, and did just that back in high school.
The games were interrupted, however, by WWII. At just 17, Rice joined the Navy near the end of the war, just in time to hop a supply ship to the Philippines and dodge Japanese sniper fire while running goods to troops there. Not all the mementos of his life are football related.
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