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Joe Restic

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1959–1961
  
Colgate (assistant)

Alma mater
  
Villanova

Name
  
Joe Restic


1952–1953
  
Philadelphia Eagles

Role
  
American football player

1956–1958
  
Brown (assistant)

Positions
  
End

Joe Restic mediaoregonlivecomwilsonvillephotodrjosephr

Born
  
July 21, 1926 Emeigh Run, Pennsylvania (
1926-07-21
)

1962–1967
  
Hamilton Tiger-Cats (assistant)

Died
  
December 8, 2011, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Education
  
Villanova University, Saint Francis University

Joe Restic On Tim Murphy Surpassing His Record


Joseph William "Joe" Restic (July 21, 1926 – December 8, 2011) was an American gridiron football player and coach. He served as the head coach for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League (CFL) from 1968 to 1970 and as the head football coach at Harvard University from 1971 to 1993. He was known as a coaching innovator, devising a complex offense known as the multiflex while in Canada and taking it to Harvard.

Contents

Joe Restic Joe Restic a coaching giant in Harvard football lore at

Playing career

Joe Restic Football Coach Joe Restic Dies at 85 News The Harvard

Restic played college football at Saint Francis University and Villanova University and graduated in 1952. He played two seasons as a end in the National Football League (NFL) for the Philadelphia Eagles. He played professional baseball in the Philadelphia Phillies' farm system.

Coaching career

Joe Restic Joe Restic 85 an Innovator in Football at Harvard Dies

From 1956 to 1958, he served as an assistant coach at Brown University. He was an assistant coach at Colgate University from 1959 to 1961. He joined the Hamilton Tiger-Cats as an assistant coach and later offensive coordinator. In 1968, he became the fourth head coach of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, replacing Ralph Sazio. As head coach, he posted a 22–17–3 record.

Joe Restic Joe Restic Harvard coach Cambria County Sports Hall of Fame

On January 5, 1971, he became the head coach of Harvard. He was head coach for 23 years amassing a record of 117–97–6. He led Harvard to five Ivy League championships. When he retired in 1993, the 23 years that he coached at Harvard was the longest tenure in the school's 124 year football history.

Restic had a friendly rivalry with Yale coach Carmen Cozza who served as the Bulldogs coach for all of Restic's time at Harvard. During their period of the college football rivalry, known as The Game, Yale won 13 times to Harvard’s 10.

Restic served as president of the American Football Coaches Association in 1988.

Multiflex offense

While coaching in Canada, Restic devised the multiflex offense, which encompassed numerous formations, blocking strategies and pass patterns, sometimes with shifts at the last moment. The idea was to confuse the opponents. Restic explained that it was designed to "create doubt in the best athletes." For example, he would line-up three receivers on one side of the field, and then have them sprint to the opposite side just before the snap.

In 1979, a professor and former Harvard quarterback, Larry Brown, created a class titled Fundamentals of Multiflex Offense to explain the maneuvers of the strategy. Some of the students included the Crimson's defensive players.

Personal life

Restic was one of ten children. His father, Louis, was a coal miner. Restic married Marian, known as Bea, who died in 2008. He had three children, his son Joe was a punter and safety for the Notre Dame in the 1970s. In his later years he lived in Milford, Massachusetts and died in Boston after several years of declining health.

References

Joe Restic Wikipedia