Jim Dew Explained

Jim Dew
Player Sport1:Football
Player Years2:1963–1966
Player Team2:Mayville State
Player Years3:1967–1969
Player Team3:Racine Raiders
Player Sport4:Baseball
Player Team5:Mayville State
Player Positions:Quarterback (football)
Catcher (baseball)
Coach Sport1:Football
Coach Years2:1970
Coach Team2:Bemidji State (assistant)
Coach Years3:1971–1973
Coach Team3:Wisconsin–La Crosse (off. backfield)
Coach Years4:1974–1993
Coach Team4:Valley City State
Coach Sport5:Baseball
Coach Years6:1971
Coach Team6:Bemidji State (assistant)
Coach Years7:1972–1973
Coach Team7:Wisconsin–La Crosse (pitching)
Coach Years8:1974–1991
Coach Team8:Valley City State
Overall Record:116–65–2 (football)
275–323 (baseball)
Tournament Record:Football
1–3 (NAIA D-II playoffs)
Championships:Football
8 NDCAC (1976–1978, 1980, 1982–1984, 1988)

Baseball 5 NDCAC (1978, 1981–1982, 1985, 1987)

Jim Dew is an American former football and baseball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Valley City State University in Valley City, North Dakota from 1974 to 1993. Dew was also the head baseball coach at Valley City State from 1974 to 1991, tallying a mark of 275–323.[1]

Dew attended Mount Saint Joseph High School in Baltimore. He played four years of football as a quarterback at Mayville State University in Mayville, North Dakota, and also lettered in baseball. He was drafted in 1966 as a catcher by the San Francisco Giants, but did not sign with the team. After graduating from Mayville State in 1967, Dew played for three seasons with the Racine Raiders of the Central State Football League. During that time, he was also a teacher at Gifford Junior High School in Racine, Wisconsin.[2]

Dew was hired in 1970 as an assistant coach in football and baseball at Bemidji State College—now known as Bemidji State University—in Bemidji, Minnesota. He then coached at the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse as offensive backfield coach in football and pitching coach in baseball before he was hired as the head football coach at Valley City State in 1974.[3]

Dew compiled a record of 116–65–2 in 20 seasons as head football coach at Valley City State. His football teams won eight North Dakota College Athletic Conference (NDCAC) titles—in 1976, 1977, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984 and 1988, and qualified for the NAIA Division II Football National Championship playoff three times, in 1976, 1980, and 1988. Drew was dismissed from his post as head football coach in 1994 and reassigned as coordinator of special activities at the Valley City State campus.[4]

Head coaching record

Football

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . Jim Dew (2022) - Hall of Fame . . February 13, 2024 .
  2. News: Papara . Carm . Jim Dew Leaves Raider QB Void . . . June 14, 1970 . 3C . February 13, 2024 . .
  3. News: . UW-La Crosse Coach Dew Take North Dakota Post . . . February 8, 1974 . 8 . February 13, 2024 . .
  4. News: Pursely . Scooter . Dew relieved of Valley City football job . . . May 25, 1994 . 1D . February 13, 2024 . .