Eddie Crowder


Eddie Crowder was an American football player and coach. He was an All-American quarterback and safety at the University of Oklahoma in the early 1950s and a successful head coach and athletic director at the University of Colorado in the 1960s and 1970s.
He is quoted as saying "Life is boring for someone trying to achieve greatness."

Early years

Born in Arkansas City, Kansas, Crowder was raised in Muskogee, Oklahoma. He played quarterback at Muskogee Central High School and won the state championship in 1948.

Playing career

Crowder was a member of Oklahoma's first National Football Championship team in 1950, and led Oklahoma to two Big Seven titles as quarterback in 1951 and 1952 and was selected all-conference the same years. Oklahoma was during his three years as a player. He was 61 for 110 with 11 touchdowns for 1189 yards passing.
He was selected in the second round of the 1953 NFL Draft by the New York Giants, but declined due to a nerve problem in his throwing arm and served in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as quarterback of the Fort Hood team for 1953. His jersey number was 16 and was listed at and.
Although selected by the Giants, Crowder went to Canada in 1953 and played the first half of the season with the Edmonton Eskimos, alternating starts at quarterback with Claude Arnold. He was cut by head coach Darrell Royal because of limitations on the number of American players that a team could carry past a certain date. Crowder led the Eskimos to victory in all four of his games, but Royal decided to stick with the veteran Arnold. In a game in Calgary on September 5, Crowder played the full game at quarterback without throwing a single pass; all the passes were thrown by halfbacks Rollie Miles and Billy Vessels. "Easy Ed" was one of many Oklahoma grads to play for the Eskimos in the 1950s.

Coaching career

Crowder was an assistant coach under Red Blaik at Army in 1955 and for Bud Wilkinson back at Oklahoma for eight seasons He became the head coach of the Buffaloes in January 1963 and restored the program's respectability and earned national respect while rebuilding the program. His initial contract was for five years at $15,000 per year.
In 1971, CU was third in the nation at 10–2, behind only Big Eight rivals Nebraska and Oklahoma. This was the first time that two teams from the same conference topped the final poll, and it remains as the only time that a conference had the top three.
Crowder currently has the third best record as head coach at Colorado at. His teams went to five bowl games while he was head coach: the 1967 Bluebonnet, 1969 Liberty, 1970 Liberty, and 1971 Astro-Bluebonnet, 1972 Gator. He assumed the athletic director duties in 1965, retired from coaching in 1973, and hired his three replacements: Bill Mallory, Chuck Fairbanks, and most importantly, Bill McCartney, CU's all-time winningest coach at.
Crowder stepped down as AD in 1986.

Later years

With his wife Kate, Crowder resided in Boulder after his retirement from CU. He maintained ties to both Oklahoma and Colorado football programs, and assisted in the selections of Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops and Colorado head coach Dan Hawkins. He was also a voter in the Harris College Football Poll. Crowder battled Hodgkin's lymphoma in 2003, and died of leukemia in 2008.

Head coaching record

Awards and honors