Hope College will formally name its football stadium in honor
of longtime coach Ray Smith and his wife, Sue,
on Saturday, Sept. 14, as part of the college's 48th
annual Community Day festivities.
During pre-game festivities at approximately 1:15 p.m.,
President Emeritus Jim Bultman will be
joined by alumni football players and current team members
in recognizing the Smiths.
Before the game, football alumni will be guests of the college
at the Community Day picnic on Windmill Island Gardens.
The Flying Dutchmen will host Millikin, Ill. for their second
game of the season. Kickoff will be 1:30 p.m.
Holland Municipal Stadium was the home of Hope College football
from 1979 to 2011. The stadium was purchased by the college
from the City of Holland in 2012.
Ray Smith coached Hope football for a quarter
of a century (1970-94). He is the winningest football coach
in the history of the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic
Association (MIAA) and his 25-year tenure remains the longest
of any football coach in America's oldest college athletic
conference.
"Ray Smith has left a winning-with-integrity legacy in
intercollegiate sport at Hope, in the MIAA, and nationally at
the Division III level of the NCAA," said Dr. Bultman when
announcing the stadium naming last spring. "As a
coach
and athletic director he inspired an exemplary
athletics program and he did it the right way – with
humility, fair play and wholesome balance within the
spiritual, academic and social aspects of college life."
Ray and Sue have been married for 51 years. Their family
consists of a son, Randy, and his wife, Chris, and their
children, Brianna and Chandler; a son, Jeff; and a daughter,
Jennifer, and her husband, Brian, and their children,
Hezekiah, Rebecca and Abigail.
"It is most appropriate that the stadium be named in honor of
both Ray and Sue. No coach achieves success to this
degree without an understanding and supportive spouse. Sue has
been this for Ray throughout his long illustrious career
in sport," Bultman said. "Together they have made a difference
at Hope and in the Holland community."
Smith was a football All-American at UCLA, playing at
both fullback and defensive back. He was captain and most
valuable player of the Bruins his senior year.
A member of the Hope faculty until 2009, he mentored hundreds of
Hope students through his work both in the classroom and on
the athletic field. His football teams earned an overall
record of 148-69-9, including nine MIAA championships. In 1984
he was named the NCAA Division III Co-Coach of the Year. At
the time of his retirement as football coach in 1994 he was
the eighth-winningest coach in NCAA Division III history.
During his tenure he also served as golf coach, wrestling
coach and assistant baseball coach. He was the director
of athletics from 1980-2009. During that time, Hope won 24
MIAA All-Sports awards.
In 1999 he received the "Lifetime Achievement Award" at the
West Michigan Sports Awards banquet, and in 2006 his hometown
of Riverside, Calif., inducted him into its Sports Hall of
Fame. Honors from Hope have included the 2002
"Vanderbush-Weller Development Fund" award in
recognition of his personal integrity and the modeling of
the Christian faith in his work with students, and having the
weight room in the DeVos Fieldhouse named for him and Sue in
2005.