Ritchie decides to pack it in
Former Lions coach not upset to be passed over for Roughriders' top job
Mike Beamish Vancouver Sun
Thursday, February 07, 2008
Former Lions defensive coordinator Dave Ritchie and his wife Sharon are moving to Pennsylvania to focus on being grandparents.
After moving 18 times in the 47 years he spent coaching football, Dave and Sharon Ritchie really didn't have the stomach for relocation No. 19.
The news Wednesday that Dave Ritchie, the former defensive coordinator of the B.C. Lions, had been passed over as head coach of the Roughriders in favour of Ken Miller was surprisingly greeted with some relief in the Ritchie household.
When Ritchie, 69, heard that Miller was Saskatchewan GM Eric Tillman's choice, he told The Vancouver Sun of his official decision to pack it in. Which means no more unpacking. Time for the Ritchies, who married as college sweethearts in 1957, to embrace their AARP cards and become full-time grandparents.
"I'm happy for Ken Miller," Dave said of the Roughriders' 66-year-old offensive coordinator. "He's been in coaching a long time [41 years] and he hasn't caught a break. Eric spoke to me a week or so ago. I kind of had the feeling he liked Ken. I think it's wonderful to see an organization promote from within."
Ritchie secretly told Lions head coach Wally Buono before the start of the 2007 season that it would be his last in the CFL. Many of his players thought he was joking. How can somebody, marinated in the game over six decades, simply walk away from a job and a lifestyle that had become his life?
Easier than you think.
Sharon Ritchie began preparations for the exodus in the middle of last season when she bought a home in McDonald, Pa., about 30 kilometres southwest of Pittsburgh, and began moving crates of football memorabilia to the couple's retirement home.
Four of their eight grandchildren live in the small Pennsylvania community where NFL coaches Marty Schottenheimer and Marvin Lewis grew up.
Dave Ritchie had never seen the home before he and his wife moved in two months ago following the Lions' elimination in the West Division final by the Roughriders. When Ritchie's name was mentioned as a possible replacement for Saskatchewan head coach Kent Austin, after the latter joined the University of Mississippi in January, the timing was hardly fortuitous.
"He didn't seek the job. He didn't go after it," Sharon Ritchie said. "If it came up that Dave was going to be offered the Saskatchewan job, we really would have had to talk about it. It really would have confused our lives. Right now, Dave's tired. We've been unpacking. He hasn't had a break."
The Ritchies spent 25 years in Canada, 11 of which Dave was the head man, amassing 108 wins to rank him as the CFL's seventh all-time winningest coach. He led the Lions to victory in the first Canada-U.S. Grey Cup game, in 1994, over the Baltimore Stallions, and was named coach of the year in 2001 with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.
It is the small things, however -- the enduring friendships with players, their families, and their affection for the burly, avuncular coach with the soft chuckle and impish smile -- that mark Ritchie's legacy of great humanity.
After years in which the Ritchies operated as surrogate grandparents for a host of CFL players, Dave and Sharon are thrilled to be re-connecting with their own grandkids, in backyard games of touch football and in the cheering sections of high-school basketball games.
"I'm getting accustomed to retirement now," Dave Ritchie says. "I've probably gone to more high school games in the past week than I did in the last 25 years. It's a time of life to visit friends and family and take it easy. Six months from now, who knows?"
He leaves without fanfare, another Grey Cup ring or a farewell press conference, in the ordinary manner of a clergyman, salesman or military man.
Old soldiers, as the saying goes, never die. They just fade away. So do the decorated generals of football.
END ZONE: The Lions announced Wednesday that defensive backs Korey Banks and Dante Marsh have signed contract extensions. Marsh, whose 2007 season was interrupted with a knee injury, is going into his fifth season with the Lions; Banks is entering his third.
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Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
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Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
41 years coaching.
69 years old.
25 years coaching in Canada.
108 wins as a Head Coach in the CFL, 7th all-time.
1994 Grey Cup with the B.C. Lions.
CFL Coach of the Year in 2001 with the Blue Bombers.
Thanks for all the memories, Dave.
Enjoy your retirement.
The 1994 Grey Cup win was the sweetest one of them all.
69 years old.
25 years coaching in Canada.
108 wins as a Head Coach in the CFL, 7th all-time.
1994 Grey Cup with the B.C. Lions.
CFL Coach of the Year in 2001 with the Blue Bombers.
Thanks for all the memories, Dave.
Enjoy your retirement.
The 1994 Grey Cup win was the sweetest one of them all.

Last edited by WestCoastJoe on Thu Feb 07, 2008 11:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
thats a great article. farewell, dave ritchie. the cfl needs more people like him.
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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
Good health in your retirement Dave. Thanks for the memories.
Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
Loved the guy as our Leos defensive coordinator and more than any other Leo I credit him most for our 2006 Grey Cup season!!
"When I went to Catholic high school in Philadelphia, we just had one coach for football and basketball. He took all of us who turned out and had us run through a forest. The ones who ran into the trees were on the football team". (George Raveling)
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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
A total class act!
Dave Ritchie leaves the game that he loved for 47 years with two Lion’s championship rings, loosing the head coaching vacancy in Saskatchewan to Ken Miller, (someone who has been involved with football nearly as long as himself and never got a chance until now) saying “I’m happy for Ken.”
He will be missed most sorely by Lions fans everywhere, but never more acutely than by the players that went to war for him.
A player’s coach by reputation, a leader they’d follow into hell if he led them.
Time to enjoy some quality family time well earned Dave.
Thanks for everything Coach!
Dave Ritchie leaves the game that he loved for 47 years with two Lion’s championship rings, loosing the head coaching vacancy in Saskatchewan to Ken Miller, (someone who has been involved with football nearly as long as himself and never got a chance until now) saying “I’m happy for Ken.”
He will be missed most sorely by Lions fans everywhere, but never more acutely than by the players that went to war for him.
A player’s coach by reputation, a leader they’d follow into hell if he led them.
Time to enjoy some quality family time well earned Dave.
Thanks for everything Coach!
"Just Win Baby" ~ Al Davis
Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
He also won this too.PigSkin_53 wrote:Dave Ritchie leaves the game that he loved for 47 years with two Lion’s championship rings

Let's see if he will be inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame someday.
祝加拿大加式足球聯賽不列颠哥伦比亚卑詩雄獅隊今年贏格雷杯冠軍。此外祝溫哥華加人隊贏總統獎座·卡雲斯·甘保杯·史丹利盃。還每年祝溫哥華白頭浪隊贏美國足球大联盟杯。不要忘記每年祝溫哥華巨人贏西部冰球聯盟冠軍。
改建後的卑詩體育館於二十十一年九月三十日重新對外開放,首場體育活動為同日舉行的加拿大足球聯賽賽事,由主場的卑詩雄獅隊以三十三比二十四擊敗愛民頓愛斯基摩人隊。
祝你蛇年行大運。
恭喜西雅图海鹰直到第四十八屆超級盃最終四十三比八大勝曾拿下兩次超級盃冠軍的丹佛野馬拿下隊史第一個超級盃冠軍。
改建後的卑詩體育館於二十十一年九月三十日重新對外開放,首場體育活動為同日舉行的加拿大足球聯賽賽事,由主場的卑詩雄獅隊以三十三比二十四擊敗愛民頓愛斯基摩人隊。
祝你蛇年行大運。
恭喜西雅图海鹰直到第四十八屆超級盃最終四十三比八大勝曾拿下兩次超級盃冠軍的丹佛野馬拿下隊史第一個超級盃冠軍。
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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
Thanks Robbie for your ever watchfull eye.Robbie wrote:He also won this too.PigSkin_53 wrote:Dave Ritchie leaves the game that he loved for 47 years with two Lion’s championship rings
Let's see if he will be inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame someday.
Over Edmonton that's right.
"Just Win Baby" ~ Al Davis
Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
I showed Dave all of the posts and he sends his thanks. While Dave and Sharon were in town this past week we had Harold Nash and family over for dinner.
Lions Roaring Back in 2005
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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
Very nice. Glad Dave got to see how Lionbackers feel about him and his time with the Lions.Sidelines wrote:I showed Dave all of the posts and he sends his thanks. While Dave and Sharon were in town this past week we had Harold Nash and family over for dinner.

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Re: Farewell to Dave Ritchie - Mike Beamish
Great Coach and it is unfortunate he couldn't go out on top.