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UGA to dedicate Vince Dooley Athletic Complex

UGA to dedicate Vince Dooley Athletic Complex

Athens, Ga. – The University of Georgia will dedicate the Vince Dooley Athletic Complex, Saturday, Nov. 29 at 9:30 a.m., before UGA’s football game with Georgia Tech. The ceremony will be held in the Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall, 1 Selig Circle, and will be followed by a ribbon cutting for the complex and unveiling of a statue depicting a victorious Dooley being hoisted on the shoulders of players from his 1980 national championship team.

The dedication ceremony program will include remarks by Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, UGA President Michael F. Adams and Billy Payne, chairman of the Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament, and a former football player under Dooley who served as chairman and CEO of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games. Other program participants include UGA Director of Athletics Damon Evans, swim coach Jack Bauerle, former gymnast Heather Stepp McCormick and the two student-athlete representatives to the UGA Athletic Association board, Maria Taylor and Michael Green.

The athletic complex on the southwest end of campus includes Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall, Spec Towns Track, the Woodruff Practice Fields, Stegeman Coliseum, the Coliseum Training Facility, the Rankin M. Smith, Sr. Student-Athlete Academic Center, Foley Baseball Field, the Dan Magill Tennis Complex including the Henry Feild Tennis Stadium and the Lindsey Hopkins Indoor Tennis Courts.

A garden and sculpture commemorating Dooley has been constructed at the corner of Pinecrest Drive and Lumpkin Street, adjacent to the Butts-Mehre Heritage Hall.

The UGA Athletic Association funded the costs related to the garden and a group of donors provided funding for the sculpture, which was created by Athens sculptor Stan Mullins.

Earlier this year, UGA proposed naming the sports complex on the southwestern end of campus for Vincent J. Dooley, football coach from 1963 to 1988 and athletics director from 1979 to 2004.

The board of the UGA Athletic Association and the UGA Cabinet approved the naming and UGA President Michael F. Adams formally recommended the naming action to the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, which gave approval at its meeting last February.

Dooley’s football teams won 201 games and six Southeastern Conference titles during his 25-year tenure, along with a national championship and national Coach of the Year honor in 1980. The Bulldogs won a total of 23 national championships and 78 SEC crowns during Dooley’s time as director of athletics, which also featured more than 100 Georgia student-athletes being named first-team Academic All-Americans; more than 50 receiving postgraduate scholarships from the NCAA; seven winning Boyd McWhorter Scholar-Athlete of the Year awards; seven were named recipients of the NCAA Today’s Top Eight award; three being named NCAA National Woman of the Year, and two winning the Walter Byers Award from the NCAA. In addition, Georgia student-athletes earned 89 berths in Olympic Games competition from 1980-2004. He has been inducted into numerous Halls of Fame including the College Football Hall of Fame and State of Georgia Sports Hall of Fame.