Mike McGee

Football

College Football Hall of Famer Mike McGee Passes Away

The 1990 inductee from Duke was 80.

Mike McGee, a 1990 College Football Hall of Fame inductee from Duke University, passed away Friday (Aug. 16) at his home in Montrose, Colorado. The 1959 Outland Trophy recipient who later served as a college football head coach was 80 years old.

Born December 1, 1938 in Washington, D.C., and raised in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, McGee lettered three seasons on the gridiron at Duke from 1957-59, twice earning both All-ACC (First Team in both 1958 & 1959) and All-America (Honorable Mention in 1958 & First Team in 1959) honors. He capped his outstanding collegiate career by receiving the ACC Player of the Year accolade in addition to the Outland Trophy as the nation's top interior lineman. 
 
Named to both the Silver Anniversary and 50th Anniversary All-ACC teams, McGee also garnered the McKevlin Award as the ACC's Male Athlete of the Year in 1960. He was elected captain of the College All-Stars for their annual game in Chicago, and he also played in the Hula Bowl and the East-West Shrine Game. A second round pick of St. Louis in the 1960 NFL Draft, McGee played three seasons with the Cardinals, starting 36 games.
 
McGee's storied gridiron coaching career included assistant coaching stops at Duke (1963-65), Wisconsin (1966) and Minnesota (1967-69) before head coaching stints at East Carolina (1970) and Duke (1971-78).

After serving at Duke, McGee earned his Ph.D. in higher education/business administration at the University of North Carolina. He then transitioned into administration and later served as the athletics director at Cincinnati (1980-84), Southern California (1984-93) and South Carolina (1993-2005).

In 1980, he was named AD at the University of Cincinnati. Three years later, the Bearcat football team defeated defending national champion Penn State. 

McGee then became the AD at the University of Southern California (USC) (1984-93). During his tenure at Southern Cal, fundraising and overall revenue doubled, USC won at least one national championship each year and participated in four Rose Bowls. 

In 1993, McGee joined the University of South Carolina just after the university moved to the Southeastern Conference. His tenure at South Carolina was perhaps his best as the Gamecock program experienced an era of success and accomplishment that was unprecedented in school history. In his final eight years at South Carolina, 13 Gamecock head coaches earned either national or SEC Coach-of-the-Year titles.    

In 1985, he founded and directed for 17 years, the prestigious Sports Management Institute, the leading in-service training academy for professional staff in intercollegiate athletics.
 
McGee also holds membership in the Duke Sports Hall of Fame (1983), North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame (1991) and NACDA Hall of Fame (2010). He was the recipient of the prestigious Homer Rice Award in 2016 from the LEAD1 Association, given each year to a former athletics director who had made a significant and meaningful contribution to intercollegiate athletics. In 2005, McGee received the Order of the Palmetto, the highest honor a civilian can receive in the state of South Carolina. 

McGee is survived by his wife of 56 years, Ginger, and together they had four children – Kathy, Michael Jr., Matthew and Jerry – as well as 19 grandchildren and four great grandchildren.

Services and burial for Dr. McGee will be held at Sonrise Mountain Ranch in Cimarron, Colorado, and his hometown of Elizabeth City, North Carolina.
 
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