Contents
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
The American Heart Association (AHA) Paul "Bear" Bryant Awards are an annual awards banquet that is hosted each year in January, in Houston, Texas, by the AHA. There are two awards. One of them—the Paul "Bear" Bryant Coach of the Year Award—has been given annually since 1986 to NCAA college football's national coach of the year. The Award was named in honor of longtime Alabama coach Bear Bryant after he died of a heart attack in 1983, just four weeks after he retired as the Alabama Crimson Tide coach. The award is voted on by the National Sports Media Association (formerly the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association) and proceeds from the awards ceremony benefit the Houston chapter of the American Heart Association, which is the organizing sponsor—since 1986, at the request of the Bryant family —and which obtains a "presenting sponsor" (currently Marathon Oil Corporation). The College Football Coach of the Year Award began in 1957 and was renamed for Bryant in 1986. Bryant himself won the AFCA Coach of the Year award in 1961, 1971, and 1973. According to the official website: The Paul Bear Bryant College Football Coaching Awards is an exclusive event that honors a college football coach whose great accomplishments, both on and off the field, are legendary. The award recognizes the masters of coaching and allows them to take their deserved place in history beside other legends like Bear Bryant. Unlike many college football head coaching awards, it is presented after each season's bowl games. In 2000, the AHA began presenting a second award, the Paul "Bear" Bryant Lifetime Achievement Award. A third award, the Paul "Bear" Bryant Newcomer Coach of the Year Award, was added in 2023, honoring the top coach in his first season as a head coach in Division I FBS.
Winners
Lifetime Achievement Award winners
2000 – Darrell Royal 2001 – Charles McClendon 2002 – Bill Yeoman 2003 – Frank Broyles 2004 – Gene Stallings 2005 – Lou Holtz 2006 – Jack Pardee 2007 – Bo Schembechler 2008 – Tom Osborne 2009 – Barry Switzer 2010 – Vince Dooley 2011 – Bobby Bowden 2012 – Hayden Fry 2013 – LaVell Edwards 2014 – R. C. Slocum 2015 – Jimmy Johnson 2016 – Mack Brown 2017 – Barry Alvarez 2018 – Steve Spurrier 2019 – Frank Beamer 2020 – Bill Snyder 2021 – Howard Schnellenberger 2022 - John Robinson 2023 - Lloyd Carr
Newcomer Coach of the Year Award winners
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.