<center>Tom Botts</center><center>Tom Botts</center>
Track & Field

Tom Botts Dies at 94

March 2, 1999

From the Columbia Missourian, 3/2/99

Whenever Tom Botts III met any of the athletes his grandfather had coached, he always was moved by the bond that existed between the athlete and the coach.

"The devotion and love that these men, some of them in their 60s, showed is truly incredible and a testament to the ideals of this man," he said.

Thomas Botts, who coached the MU track and field team for more than 25 years, died Monday. He was 94.

During his tenure as head coach, which ran from 1947 to 1972, Mr. Botts led the Tigers to eight conference championships as well as a national indoor championship in 1965. He coached 48 conference champions, 23 All-Americans, five national champions and t wo Olympians in his time at MU.

He was named to the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1983 and the track at Westminster College bears his name.

Mr. Botts' former athletes remember him as a man who earned the respect and admiration of everyone he coached.

"He was a person that you looked up to and admired," said Jean Madden, who ran track for Botts during the late 1940s. "He had the capacity to bring out the best in you without putting any pressure on you."

A hurdler himself for Westminster in the 1920s, he learned every aspect of the sport and attempted to share this knowledge with those who ran for him.

"He was a student of all the events and he passed this knowledge to us very well," said former athletic director Mel Sheehan, who earned All-American honors while competing under Mr. Botts.

Mr. Botts' influence on his athletes was not just limited to the track. Many of his athletes considered him a surrogate father and went to him for advice and guidance.

"He was very much a father figure and a mentor," Madden said.

Mr. Botts' accomplishments on the track can be found in the record books. His greatest achievements, however, cannot be listed in terms of times and distances or wins and losses.

"As a young coach, it was great to see how much Botts was respected by everyone," MU assistant track coach Jeff Pigg said. "He was a man of tremendous character and great values."

Mr. Botts is survived by one brother, James Botts of Mexico; two sisters, Elizabeth Botts of Fulton and Francis Bybee Botts of Mexico; a son, Tom Botts Jr. of Virginia Beach, Va.; and two grandsons.

His wife, Virginia, died in 1994.

Funeral arrangements for Mr. Botts are pending.