It just a very sad news day in Wolfpackland.
We extend our deepest condolences to the families of Dennis Byrd and Kaye Cowher. God bless you call.
North Carolina State football legend Dennis Byrd, who was recently selected to be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in December, has died at the age of 63.
Byrd suffered a heart attack last week while undergoing back surgery, and never regained consciousness.
Byrd, a defensive tackle, was the first two-time All-America selection in N.C. State football history, and the only Wolfpack defensive player to have his jersey (No. 77) retired.
A member of the famed “White Shoes” defense under coach Earle Edwards, Byrd was a three-time All-ACC selection and helped N.C. State to a share of the 1965 ACC championship. He was a consensus All-America selection in 1966 and 1967.
In his senior season, Byrd suffered a knee injury that limited his professional career to two seasons. Byrd went on to spend 30 years as a high school teacher and football coach, retiring in 2004.
Byrd is survived by his wife, Kim, and four children.
Kaye Cowher, the wife of former Steelers football coach Bill Cowher, died Friday in her native North Carolina after losing a battle with skin cancer. She was 54.
The Cowhers moved to Raleigh, N.C., in 2006, Mr. Cowher’s final season coaching the Steelers, and continued to make it their home.
The Cowhers met when they were classmates at North Carolina State University in 1976. Mr. Cowher was on the football team and Mrs. Cowher, the former Kaye Young, and her twin sister, Faye, played basketball.
Tall at 5-foot-11, Mrs. Cowher displayed an inside power game that made her one of the first young women in her home state to receive a college athletic scholarship.
Her teams at North Carolina State went 21-3 and 29-5, respectively, winning the inaugural Atlantic Coast Conference women’s basketball title in 1978 with a 9-0 record and ranking No. 3 nationally.
Faye and Kaye later played for the Women’s Professional Basketball League, where Mrs. Cowher was among the pioneers in the early days of Title IX. They played one season with the New York Stars and two with the New Jersey Gems, competing against notable stars Carol Blazejowski and Nancy Lieberman.
After the league folded in 1981, she married Mr. Cowher, who was then playing for the Cleveland Browns.
From Bunn, N.C., where her father initially refused to let his twin daughters play the rough sport of basketball, Mrs. Cowher’s mother made it happen.
“The reason we played is because of my mother,” Kaye Cowher told the Post-Gazette in 2002. “She said that absolutely, these girls are going to have the opportunity to play.”
She also appeared in a Wrigley Doublemint gum commercial with her twin sister.
Mrs. Cowher spent two years at Peace College in Raleigh before transferring to North Carolina State, where she graduated with a bachelor’s in sociology in 1978.
At the time of her death she was a member of the North Carolina State Board of Visitors, an honorary body that advises the chancellor and board of trustees.
The Cowhers have three daughters, Meagan, Lauren, and Lindsay, all of whom have been standout basketball players. The oldest two, Meagan and Lauren, played together at Princeton University, where Meagan was the fourth-highest scorer in the program’s history and Lauren was a co-captain finishing the 2008-09 season as the team’s leading scorer.
The parents often took in their daughters’ Tigers games.
“The girls get all their skills from their Mom — she started to teach them at an early age,” Bill once told The Daily Princetonian. “I’m just a spectator who loves the game.”
Mrs. Cowher was a constant presence in the press box on Steelers game days and was considered as resolute and steely as her more famous husband.
She was the driving force behind her husband’s retirement in 2007, pressing him to move with her and their youngest daughter to North Carolina, help with the commute to basketball games, reunite the nuclear family before their final daughter left the nest. Lindsay last winter completed her freshman season at Wofford College in Spartanburg, S.C., where she played sparsely in 14 games.
For the last three years, Mr. Cowher, a Crafton native who attended Carlynton High School, has worked as a studio analyst for CBS Sports on its “NFL Today” show.
The family has requested privacy and has released no information on Mrs. Cowher’s death. Services will be held in North Carolina on Monday.
The following is a link to nice read on How Kay & Bill Cowher met