Remembering Red Raven National Champion Head Football Coach Skip Foster (1960-2024)
[Coffeyville, KS ]- With the passing of Richard "Skip" Foster, Red Raven Nation remembers the unbelievable career of a great man and coach.
No other player and head
coach had the success Skip had with the Coffeyville Red Ravens. As a player, he started every game in 1979
and 1980 at center and was selected second-team All-American by the Grid Wire
his sophomore year. Skip was selected as
one of the team captains for the undefeated 1980 Raven football team. From CCC, Skip went to Missouri Western State
University where he played both guard and center. After his player career, he became a student
assistant at Missouri Western University and later served as a graduate
assistant at the University of Memphis. He returned to Coffeyville to join the CCC football staff in 1985 and
was named head coach in June 1989.
Skip led the Coffeyville
Community College Red Ravens to an overall record of 83-39-2, including the
1990 National Junior College Athletic Association and J.C. Grid-Wire
Championships. In the 12 years Foster
was at the helm of the Red Ravens, his teams played for six conference
championships, and he coached 58 first-team All-Conference players, the most of
any program in the Jayhawk Conference. His peers selected him as the Kansas Jayhawk Community College
Conference Coach of the Year in both 1990 and 1991. The undefeated 1990 season was capped by a
58-20 Raven victory over Montgomery County, Maryland in the Mid-America Bowl
game played in Tulsa, OK. The 1991 team
claimed another national title when six starters were named Academic
All-Americans, the most of any one school in a single sport. This feat was duplicated again in 1995 with
six more Red Ravens selected to the Academic All-American team, with three of
them receiving Distinguished status.
In 1992, Foster led the
Ravens to the Shrine Bowl held in Tyler, Texas, and two starters were named
Distinguished Academic All-Americans, while two more were All-Americans. In 1993, the Ravens played in the Dixie Rotary
Bowl in St. George, Utah and posted a 60-36 win over the host team. In 1996, the Ravens were 9-2, winning the
conference title and a shot at the National Championship playing in the Mineral
Water Bowl in Excelsior Springs, Missouri. The Ravens lost to two-time National Champions Blinn Community College.
In 1997, Foster led the
Ravens to a 9-3 record, dropping a 26-22 decision to Snow College in a return
appearance to the Mineral Water Bowl. Skip also served as the President of the NJCAA Football Coaches
Association in 1997-98.
In 2001, his first season
as head coach of the Tulsa Talons in the Arena Football League (2), his team
went 13-3 in the regular season and advanced to the first round of the
playoffs. The highlight was the upset
victory over the Quad City Steamwheelers. The Talons were the only team to defeat Quad City that season.
Following his stint with
Tulsa, Skip went on to coach in the Arena Football League (1) with the Austin
Wranglers, Arizona Rattlers, and the San Jose Sharks.
Skip is survived by his
wife, Gay, two sons, Spencer and Gage, and daughter, Shelby.