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Cougar Mom
By Shane Roe

What do you call a woman who has hundreds of children, cares for them, waits on them, is named “Mother of the Week,” and yet has no offspring of her own?  For the past 23 years, Brigham Young University football coaches and players have called her ‘Shirley.’

Since 1980, Shirley Johnson has served as secretary to two BYU head football coaches: LaVell Edwards, and, currently, Gary Crowton.  Her memories from the past 23 years include the glory years, and the (thankfully few) losing seasons.  

As I spoke with Shirley, it became evident that it wasn’t “they” who lost or won, but “we.”  She considers herself a part of the team, and indeed she is.

During her time in the Cougar football office, she has seen coaching evolve from the Stone Age when scouting reports, game plans, diagrams, tests and reminders were all done by hand, to the high-tech world of today where coaches plug numbers and plays into a computer which then spits out the diagrams.  In spite of technology, Shirley’s responsibilities haven’t changed much – the same tests, scouting reports and reminders are necessary to help the coaches and athletes keep up with all that needs to be done.

Beginnings

Shirley grew up in the Avenues area of Salt Lake, with her parents, “Dub” and Ruby, and her older brother Boyd.  As a teen, she worked at the Woodland Drive-In Theater, and, after graduation from West High, went south to BYU.  Subsequent to earning a degree in English, she became the Department Secretary for Educational Psychology where she met former assistant football coach Norm Chow while he was working on his doctorate degree.  A couple of years later, when Edwards was completing his doctorate, Chow suggested to him that he work with Shirley in completing his dissertation.  Edwards was so impressed with her, that when his secretary retired, he asked Shirley to join the football program. She’s been there ever since.

A Tale of Two Coaches

Shirley fondly remembers working with Edwards, with whom she still keeps in touch.  “He is laid-back, funny, wise and knowledgeable.  Sometimes, it was hard getting his attention because his mind was going a hundred different directions,” she says.  

She recalls one day hearing hysterical laughter coming from Edwards’ office.  When she went to see what was so funny, he had in his hand a cancelled check that had been made out to “Holy Ghost.”  Though it was supposed to have been made out to Holy Cross Hospital, it had been paid anyway.

Crowton on the other hand, is anything but laid-back.  “He’s always got a full-head of steam,” Shirley says.  “He’s always moving at a hundred miles per hour.  LaVell kept abreast of what his assistants were doing, but left it up to them for the most part.  Gary is very involved in everything that’s going on, which is good because it helps him expend his energy.  One thing that’s really impressed me about Gary is his upbeat attitude, win or lose – and, of course, his smile.”

Church Callings

Shirley has served in many capacities in the Church including: ward and stake Relief Society presidency member, magazine director, speech director, chorister, pianist, and as secretary for both a bishop and a stake president. “Right now I probably have the best job in the ward for me,” she says.  “I teach the lesson at Enrichment Night, so I have a whole month to prepare for a 15-minute presentation.”

Reality Check

Cancer.  It’s a word that all of us dread to hear.  Shirley heard that word about her own life several years ago when doctors discovered she had breast cancer.  Surgery was performed to remove the lump and lymph nodes and radiation therapy followed.  It was a difficult time, yet her family and friends contributed a lot of support.  

“(Former University of Utah coach) Ron McBride was one of my biggest supporters, always asking after my health and giving me a big hug when he saw me,” she recalls.  

Recently, she passed the five-year mark since her last radiation treatment – cancer-free.  “I learned not to take life for granted,” she says.  “Now I empathize with people instead of just sympathizing with them.”

Career Highlights

Throughout her career in the Cougar football office, Shirley says that it’s the people she has met and worked with that have been the most memorable.  She fondly recalls working with the coaches, players, scouts, fans, and even the media.  She mentions working with the players as the highlight of working in the office.  

“I love my ‘boys’ dearly,” says Shirley, who is single.  “I’ve had the joy of seeing them make great strides in their lives, academically, personally and spiritually.  I’ve attended hundreds of baptisms, weddings, sealings, missionary farewells, and homecomings.  It’s wonderful when they call or come back and we can catch up.  When I started out, I was an older sister to them, but time has caught up with me and I’ve been the football mom for many years.”

She also likes the chance that her job gives her to talk about the gospel.  “Just the other day, a couple of pro scouts asked me many questions about the gospel,” she says.  The Church comes up frequently among coaches and scouts who aren’t familiar with the gospel.

Then there are the fans, many of whom she’s become friends with.  She remembers a group of retired people that would always come to watch practice no matter what.  She recalls a 15-year-old girl who sat on the office couch for hours waiting for Robbie Bosco to walk through.

Of the 1980 Holiday Bowl win over Southern Methodist University (which BYU trailed, 38-19, after three quarters before going on to win, 46-45), she recalls: “We received stacks of mail and hundreds of phone calls from fans telling us where they were the last 3:51 of the game.  Many were mad at us because they left after the third quarter and didn’t know we had won until the next morning.”

The Future … and Present

When asked what she’d like to do when her tenure in the football office ends, she says, “I’d like to help out with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.  Or maybe work for FARMS (Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies) or some other research group like that.”  

In her spare time, she likes to attend The Utah Shakespearean Festival, go to movies, opera, theater, read, and spend time with family and friends.

When asked about her philosophy of life, Shirley replied: “It would include trying to keep my life Christ-centered and to represent Him to the best of my ability; trying to find joy in life everyday; not letting anger, hurt or unforgiving thoughts drag me down; and trying to serve others.  If I live by that, I am going to be one happy lady!”

She should be happy – she deserves it.

The updated LDS athlete list

  

 

Ed. Note – Shirley Johnson has been instrumental in helping to secure interviews for past Meridian Sports articles on Gary Crowton, Todd Christensen, Vai Sikahema, Greg Clark and Andy Reid.  Her willingness to help has earned this sports editor’s deepest gratitude. -- KLM

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© 2003 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

 

 
About the Author:

Shane Roe is a freelance writer who has written for such magazines as "Outdoor Life" and "Bow and Arrow Hunting". He has recently completed a novel which is yet to be published. Shane lives in Kearns, Utah, with his wife Ann and two sons, Ben (18), and Sam (16). He also has a married daughter, Rebecca. Shane serves as the gospel doctrine instructor in his ward.

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