/ Stars that died in 2023: Tony Knap, American college football coach, died from Alzheimer's disease he was 96.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Tony Knap, American college football coach, died from Alzheimer's disease he was 96.


Anthony Joseph "Tony" Knap was an American college football coach. He was the head coach at Utah State (1963–66), Boise State (1968–75), and UNLV (1976–81), compiling a career college football record of 143–53–4.

(December 8, 1914 – September 24, 2011)

Early years and college

The oldest son of Polish immigrants, Knap was raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and graduated from Riverside High School, where he as an All-City selection in football in 1934.[2] He accepted a scholarship to the University of Idaho, and played three varsity seasons for the Vandals for head coach Ted Bank. Among his UI teammates were future head coaches and administrators Lyle Smith[3] and Steve Belko.[4] Knap was a second-team All-Coast selection at end as a senior in 1938, the only Vandal to make any of the three teams.[1] The Vandals broke to an early 3-0-1 start in 1938 and there was early talk of the Rose Bowl in the national press.[5] Three conference losses later, the Vandals finished the season at 6-3-1, which would be Idaho's last winning season for a quarter century;[6] not improved upon until 1971.
Knap was also a pitcher and utility player for three seasons on the varsity baseball team.[7][8][9]

High school coach

After graduation in 1939, Knap became a high school teacher and coach in Bonners Ferry for three years,[10] and while waiting for his military commission, spent a fall at Lewiston High School in 1942 as an assistant under former Vandal teammate Steve Belko.[11][12] During World War II he served in the U.S. Navy, then returned to coaching after the war back in Idaho at Potlatch, where he stayed with the Loggers through 1948.[13] He attended a summer coaching clinic in 1949 in the Bay Area and was offered a head coaching position at Pittsburg High School in Pittsburg, California. Knap accepted and moved his family south to northern California. He stayed at the East Bay school for ten years, through the 1958 season. His overall record as a high school coach was 109-22-6 (.818).[2]

College coach

Utah State

Knap left Pittsburg to become an assistant coach at Utah State in 1959 under new coach John Ralston.[14][15] He was credited with developing the big, agile lines which contributed to the Aggies' rise to national prominence.[2] One of those lineman was Merlin Olsen, a future hall of famer in the NFL. (Olsen selected Knap for his presenter at the enshrinement ceremonies in 1982.)[16]
After posting a 26-3-1 regular season record in his final three years at USU, Ralston left Logan for Stanford after the 1962 season and Knap was quickly promoted to head coach,[10] where he compiled a 25-14-1 (.637) record in four seasons, from 1963 to 1966. His 1965 team was 8-2, but the Aggies slipped to 4-6 in 1966. With mixed support from his administrators, Knap resigned in January 1967 to accept a position with the BC Lions in the Canadian Football League.[17]
In rivalry games, his Utah State teams were 3-1 against BYU for The Old Wagon Wheel and 2-2 against Utah in the Battle of the Brothers.

Boise State

After one season as an assistant with the BC Lions in 1967, he succeeded Lyle Smith as head coach at Boise College in 1968, soon to become "Boise State College" (and BSU in 1974). Smith had just stepped down as head coach and as the athletic director, hired his former Vandal teammate. It was Boise's first year as an NAIA independent; it had previously competed in the junior college ranks. Two years later in 1970 the Broncos began play in the NCAA in Division II (then the "College Division") and the Big Sky Conference. Knap led the Broncos to a 71–19–1 (.788) record in eight years, including three ten-win seasons and three consecutive Big Sky titles (1973–75).[18]
He led the Broncos to a 3-1-1 record against his alma mater in the first five games of the Boise State–Idaho rivalry.

UNLV

His success in Boise led him south to Las Vegas in 1976, where he coached UNLV for six seasons and compiled a 47–20–2 record (.695), stepping down at age 67 after the 1981 season. UNLV made the Division II playoffs in his first season and moved up to Division I-A in 1978, his third season at the school. While Knap was head coach, the Rebels played as an independent; UNLV joined the PCAA the following season in 1982. He was inducted into UNLV's hall of fame in 1989.[19]
He led the Rebels to a 3-1 record over Nevada in the rivalry game for the Fremont Cannon. The game was not played in 1980, 1981, or 1982.

Personal

Knap met and married his wife, the former Mickey McFarland of Bonner's Ferry, during his first year as a teacher. They were wed in April 1941 and had three daughters: Jacqueline, Angeline, and Caroline.[20] In addition to his bachelor's degree, he also earned a master's degree, completing it in 1953 while in California.[10] Following his retirement from coaching, Knap and his wife moved to Walla Walla, Washington in 1982.[12] They were married over 70 years when he died in September 2011 at Bishop Place Retirement Center in Pullman; he had suffered for several years from Alzheimer's disease.[21]

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Utah State Aggies (Independent) (1963–1966)
1963 Utah State 8–2


1964 Utah State 5–4–1


1965 Utah State 8–2


1966 Utah State 4–6


Utah State: 25–14–1

Boise State Broncos (NAIA Independent) (1968–1969)
1968 Boise State 8–2


1969 Boise State 9–1


Boise State Broncos (Big Sky Conference) (1970–1975)
1970 Boise State 8–3 2–2 T–3rd
1971 Boise State 10–2 4–2 2nd W Camellia
1972 Boise State 7–4 3–3 T–3rd
1973 Boise State 10–3 6–0 1st L NCAA Division II Semifinal (Pioneer)
1974 Boise State 10–2 6–0 1st L NCAA Division II Quarterfinal
1975 Boise State 9–2–1 5–0–1 1st L NCAA Division II Quarterfinal
Boise State: 71–19–1 26–7–1
UNLV Rebels (Div. II Independent) (1976–1977)
1976 UNLV 9–3

L NCAA Division II Quarterfinal
1977 UNLV 9–2


UNLV Rebels (Div. I-A Independent) (1978–1981)
1978 UNLV 7–4


1979 UNLV 9–1–2


1980 UNLV 7–4


1981 UNLV 6–6


UNLV: 47–20–2

Total: 143–53–4
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title



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