U.S. President Donald Trump presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz in the Oval Office on December 3, 2020.

Govind Tekale

Lou Holtz Dies at 89: Notre Dame’s 1988 Champion Had 249 Wins at 6 Schools — Skip Holtz Says He Was “Significant”

Achievement, American Football, College, death, Sports News

Lou Holtz: A Coach’s Journey — 1937–2026

College Football · In Memoriam

Lou Holtz
1937 – 2026

Coach. Mentor. Champion. He taught far more than football.

Lou Holtz, the College Football Hall of Fame coach who led Notre Dame to its last national championship in 1988, passed away on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, in Orlando, Florida, surrounded by his family. He was 89. His son, Skip Holtz, confirmed the news, describing his father as someone who was “successful” — but above all, “significant.”

Holtz had spent his final months in hospice care after a period of declining health. His family released a statement noting that he “rose from humble beginnings to become one of the most respected figures in college athletics,” emphasizing values of faith, family, service, and an unwavering belief in the potential of others. For those who follow sports legends on CruxBuzz, this loss echoes the kind felt with other Hall of Famers before him.

Born on January 6, 1937, in Follansbee, West Virginia, Holtz grew up in East Liverpool, Ohio, the son of a Navy veteran. He played linebacker at Kent State University before beginning a coaching career that spanned 33 years and six college programs. His 249-132-7 record places him among the top coaches in FBS history.

A Life in Four Acts

Explore his career, stats, coaching stops, and the voices he left behind — tap any tab to navigate.

1937

Born in Follansbee, West Virginia

Lou Holtz was born on January 6, 1937, in Follansbee, West Virginia. His father served as a Navy veteran during World War II and the family later moved to East Liverpool, Ohio, where Holtz grew up. He attended Sisters of Notre Dame at St. Aloysius Grade School, where he marched to the Notre Dame victory march every day at noon, recess, and dismissal — planting a lifelong devotion to the Irish.

1959

Kent State & Early Coaching

After playing linebacker at Kent State University, Holtz entered the coaching profession. In 1968, he joined Woody Hayes’ staff at Ohio State — a mentorship he later called “the greatest influence on my life with the possible exception of my wife.”

1969

First Head Coaching Job: William & Mary

Holtz took over at William & Mary, beginning a head coaching career that would eventually span six college programs. He won a conference title there before moving on to NC State.

1976

The NFL Detour: New York Jets

Holtz tried the professional game, going 3-10 in one season with the New York Jets before resigning with one game left. He famously quipped: “God did not put Lou Holtz on this Earth to coach in the pros.”

His heart remained in collegiate football. He returned to the college game and never looked back.
1977

Arkansas: Where the Legend Grew

Holtz joined the Arkansas Razorbacks, going 60-21-2 in seven seasons — still third-winningest in program history. His debut at Arkansas was stunning: No. 6 Arkansas defeated No. 2 Oklahoma 31-6 in the 1978 Orange Bowl despite three suspended starters. He won the 1977 FWAA Coach of the Year award.

1984

Minnesota and the Notre Dame Clause

Holtz took over at University of Minnesota, but had a rare “Notre Dame Clause” in his contract — he could only leave for one job: head coach of Notre Dame. He fulfilled the condition by taking the Gophers to a bowl game in 1985.

1986

Arriving at Notre Dame

Holtz was hired by Notre Dame to revive a program that had stumbled under Gerry Faust. At his introductory press conference, he said: “I could not possibly turn down the opportunity to come to Notre Dame. I just felt this was the dream of a lifetime.” Quarterback Steve Beuerlein recalled Holtz’s first team meeting: he told players to get their feet on the floor, sit up straight, take their hats off. “We knew right away it was a whole new deal.”

1987

Tim Brown Wins the Heisman

In Holtz’s second season, receiver Tim Brown won the Heisman Trophy. Notre Dame finished 8-4 and went to the Cotton Bowl. The stage was being set.

1988

National Champions — The Defining Season

Notre Dame went 12-0. The defining moment: No. 4 Notre Dame hosted No. 1 Miami in “Catholics vs. Convicts.” Holtz distributed T-shirts to his players reading “From these ashes, Notre Dame will rise.” The Irish won 31-30, ending Miami’s 36-game regular-season winning streak, when Pat Terrell batted down a 2-point conversion attempt. Notre Dame then defeated No. 2 USC and No. 3 West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl to claim the national title.

Holtz also won his second FWAA Coach of the Year in 1988. Notre Dame’s 23-game winning streak that followed remains a school record.
1996

Retiring from Notre Dame

After 11 seasons and a 100-30-2 record, Holtz stepped away from Notre Dame and moved into broadcast work with CBS Sports. His departure was quiet. He later told the Associated Press: “I was tired of maintaining.”

1999

South Carolina: One Last Rebuild

Holtz took over a South Carolina program that went 0-11 in his first season. He turned it around, going 33-26 in five seasons and leading the Gamecocks to consecutive January 1 bowl appearances — the first in school history.

2008

College Football Hall of Fame

Holtz was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, cementing his place among the game’s all-time greats. He remains the only coach in NCAA history to lead six different programs to bowl games.

2020

Presidential Medal of Freedom

President Donald Trump awarded Holtz the Presidential Medal of Freedom — the nation’s highest civilian honor. His wife, Beth, who had been his partner through every chapter of his career, passed away the same year at age 82.

2025

Final Public Appearance

Despite being unable to walk, Holtz appeared at the Orlando Touchdown Club in November 2025 alongside longtime friend Lee Corso. For nearly an hour, he shared stories and filled the room with laughter before a capacity crowd of 250. In January 2025, he had also expressed hope of attending the Notre Dame-Ohio State national championship game in Atlanta.

2026

Passing, March 4, 2026

Lou Holtz passed away in Orlando, Florida, surrounded by his children: Luanne, Skip, Kevin, and Elizabeth. Three of his four children are Notre Dame graduates. He was 89.

“He was successful, but more important he was Significant.” — Skip Holtz

Hover or tap any card for context.

249
Career Wins
12th all-time in FBS history across his 33-season career with six programs.
132
Career Losses
Career record: 249-132-7. A winning percentage of .649 across six collegiate programs.
100
Wins at Notre Dame
100-30-2 in 11 seasons at Notre Dame — third-winningest in Irish history behind Brian Kelly and Knute Rockne.
12–0
1988 Season
Notre Dame’s perfect 1988 season remains the program’s most recent national championship.
23
Consecutive Wins
Notre Dame’s 23-game winning streak spanning 1988–89 remains a school record.
9
Straight Bowl Appearances
Nine consecutive January bowl appearances at Notre Dame — a feat that has never been matched by another Irish coach.
6
Bowl Programs
The only coach in NCAA history to lead six different programs to bowl games: William & Mary, NC State, Arkansas, Minnesota, Notre Dame, and South Carolina.
33
Seasons Coaching
33 years on college sidelines, plus one NFL season with the New York Jets in 1976 (3-10).

Tap any card to see his impact at each school.

1969 – 1971
Won a conference title. Launched his head coaching career.
1972 – 1975
NC State
Won a conference title. Established reputation as a program builder.
1976 (NFL)
New York Jets
3-10 record. Resigned with one game remaining, citing a mismatch with professional football culture.
1977 – 1983
60-21-2. Third-winningest coach in program history. Won the 1977 FWAA Coach of the Year. Famous 1978 Orange Bowl upset of No. 2 Oklahoma (31-6).
FWAA CoY
1984 – 1985
Held a rare “Notre Dame Clause” in his contract. Took the Gophers to a bowl game in 1985, fulfilling the condition to leave for Notre Dame.
1986 – 1996
100-30-2. 1988 National Champions. Nine consecutive January bowl appearances. Introduced “Play Like A Champion Today” sign. Removed player names from jerseys.
Champion
1999 – 2004
33-26. Took program from 0-11 (1999) to back-to-back January 1 bowl games — the first in school history. Coached alongside son Skip Holtz.

God did not put Lou Holtz on this Earth to coach in the pros.

— Lou Holtz, on his one NFL season with the New York Jets (1976)

Coaching is nothing more than eliminating mistakes before you get fired.

— Lou Holtz

No one has ever drowned in sweat.

— Lou Holtz, on pushing players to work hard

Thank God we didn’t get invited to the Gator Bowl.

— Lou Holtz, after clinching an Orange Bowl berth at Arkansas and being pelted with oranges on the field

I could not possibly turn down the opportunity to come to Notre Dame. I just felt this was the dream of a lifetime.

— Lou Holtz, at his Notre Dame introductory press conference (1986)

I was tired of maintaining. What I should have done was set dreams and goals and ambitions for this university and the football program that nobody thought was possible.

— Lou Holtz, to The Associated Press in 2002, on why he left Notre Dame in 1996

When I die and people realize that I will not be resurrected in three days, they will forget me. That is the way it should be.

— Lou Holtz, from his book Wins, Losses, and Lessons

Throughout his career, Holtz distilled his philosophy for life and coaching into three rules. He taught them to every player he coached — and lived by them himself. Source: National Football Foundation

01
Do What Is Right
Integrity and character above all else. He emphasized this to every player, from Walk-ons to Heisman winners.
02
Do Everything to the Best of Your Ability
“No one has ever drowned in sweat.” Excellence wasn’t optional in Holtz’s programs — it was the minimum standard.
03
Show People You Care
From recruiting visits to halftime talks, he made people — players, their mothers, fans — feel seen and valued.

Current Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman cited these values — “love, trust and commitment” — as the core of what Holtz passed on to him personally.

Catholics vs. Convicts and the Road to a Perfect 12-0

The 1988 Notre Dame season is not just a chapter in Fighting Irish history — it is one of the most closely studied coaching achievements in college football. Holtz inherited a program that had lost badly to Miami the season before, prompting him to distribute T-shirts to his players reading “From these ashes, Notre Dame will rise.”

The reckoning came on October 15, 1988. No. 4 Notre Dame hosted No. 1 Miami — a team riding a 36-game regular-season winning streak. In the “Catholics vs. Convicts” game, Holtz’s defense forced seven Miami turnovers. With the score 31-30 and Miami attempting a 2-point conversion in the final seconds, Notre Dame’s Pat Terrell batted down quarterback Steve Walsh’s pass to seal a victory that stopped the Hurricanes’ streak.

Notre Dame closed with wins over No. 2 USC and No. 3 West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl to complete a 12-0 season and a national championship — the program’s most recent. Among the key players Holtz developed: Tim Brown (1987 Heisman Trophy), future NFL Hall of Famer Jerome Bettis, and Raghib “Rocket” Ismail. The national championship remains Notre Dame’s last.

“I think what he did was he made that job look so easy that some people took it for granted and thought anybody could do it.”

— Autry Denson, former Notre Dame running back

The traditions Holtz introduced during this period endure. The “Play Like A Champion Today” sign, first placed in the Fighting Irish locker room during his tenure, is still touched by players before every game. He also removed player names from the back of jerseys to stress team unity — a tradition that continued through the regular season throughout his time in South Bend and beyond.

Tributes from Football & Beyond

Official statements and confirmed tributes following the announcement on March 4, 2026.

Marcus Freeman
Current Notre Dame Head Coach · Official Statement
“Lou’s impact at Notre Dame has gone well beyond the football field. He and his wife, Beth, are respected across campus for their generous hearts and commitment to carrying out Notre Dame’s mission of being a force for good.”
Skip Holtz
Son & Former Coaching Assistant · Official Post
“He was successful, but more important he was Significant.”
Rev. Robert A. Dowd
President, University of Notre Dame
“We will remember him above all as a teacher, leader and mentor who brought out the very best in his players, on and off the field, earning their respect and admiration for a lifetime.”
Archie Manning
NFF Chairman, National Football Foundation
“Lou Holtz was a true giant in our game, not just because of the championships he won, but because of the lives he shaped. He stood for discipline, faith, education and doing things the right way.”
Greg Sankey
SEC Commissioner
“Lou Holtz was a giant of college football whose influence on the game is matched only by the impact he had on people. Coach Holtz built championship programs, transformed young men into leaders, and brought passion and discipline to every sideline he paced.”
Jerome Bettis
Former Notre Dame RB / NFL Hall of Famer
“He looked her in the eye and promised that I would be taken care of at Notre Dame. That moment meant everything to us, and it’s something I’ve carried with me my entire life.”
Tom Coughlin
Longtime NFL Head Coach
“His wit was razor-sharp, his timing impeccable — he could set you up for a punchline better than anyone. But beyond the humor was a man of deep conviction and character who supported his peers and led with integrity.”
Don Nehlen
Former West Virginia Head Coach
“He not only was a great coach, he was a great person. We need more people like Lou Holtz. It’s hard to put a tag on Lou Holtz. He did everything so well.”
Irv Smith Sr.
Former Notre Dame Tight End
“Coach Holtz, he was the father of all of us. I tell people all the time, ‘we’d fight you for Lou.'”
Rick Mirer
Former Notre Dame Quarterback
“Lou Holtz was more than a football figure. He was a true leader. One of one. He consistently encouraged others in life. The message never changed. Trust, Love, Commitment.”
The Holtz File
Category Detail
BornJanuary 6, 1937 — Follansbee, West Virginia; grew up in East Liverpool, Ohio
DiedMarch 4, 2026 — Orlando, Florida, aged 89
College Playing CareerLinebacker, Kent State University
Career Record249-132-7 (33 college seasons + 1 NFL season)
Notre Dame Record100-30-2 (3rd all-time in Irish history)
National Championships1 — 1988 Notre Dame (12-0 season)
College Coaching StopsWilliam & Mary, NC State, Arkansas, Minnesota, Notre Dame, South Carolina
NFL CoachingNew York Jets, 1976 — 3-10
Major HonorsCollege Football Hall of Fame (2008), Presidential Medal of Freedom (2020)
FWAA Coach of the Year1977 (Arkansas), 1988 (Notre Dame)
Key TraditionsIntroduced “Play Like A Champion Today” sign; removed names from jerseys at Notre Dame
Broadcasting CareerCBS Sports (1997–1998), ESPN (2005–2015)
Survived ByChildren Luanne, Skip, Kevin, and Elizabeth
A Career Recalled

The coverage of Lou Holtz’s passing centered on his 33 seasons as a college head coach, including the 1988 national championship at Notre Dame, a 249-132-7 career record, and coaching tenures across six programs. Statements from the University of Notre Dame, family members, former players, and institutional leaders followed the announcement of his death in Orlando on March 4, 2026.

His honors — including the College Football Hall of Fame induction in 2008 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2020 — along with his coaching record at Notre Dame, his program turnarounds at Arkansas and South Carolina, and the traditions he introduced in South Bend were noted across reporting about his life and career. For readers interested in other sports figures CruxBuzz has covered, see our tributes to Franco Harris and Pete Rose, as well as our coverage on sports leadership and legacy.

Lou Holtz was 89. He is survived by his four children.

Leave a Comment