Former Vanderbilt Commodores vice chancellor and athletic director David Williams has died, the university announced Friday. He was 71.
Williams, the SEC’s first black athletic director, announced his retirement in September, and a party to celebrate his retirement had been planned for Friday night.
“David Williams stood tall on this campus, in this city and in college athletics nationally as an incomparable leader, role model and dear friend to me and so many others,” Vanderbilt chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos said in a statement. “We are devastated by this loss. His impact on our community is immeasurable and will be felt for generations to come. We offer our deepest condolences to [wife] Gail, his children and the entire Williams family on this immense loss.”
I love U DW ❤️ my family and I will miss you. You believed in me…your wisdom and guidance forged a bond that will never be forgotten. The Williams family loved on my family, as well as our football family. There will never be another #Goldfather #RTI RIP my friend 💫⚓️⬇️ pic.twitter.com/ReLyVFcwY2
— Derek Mason (@CoachDerekMason) February 8, 2019
Williams oversaw Vanderbilt athletics for 15 years and officially left his position on Jan. 31, making way for new athletic director Malcolm Turner.
On Williams’ watch, the Commodores won four national championships — in bowling (two), baseball and women’s tennis. Williams also hired James Franklin as head football coach, and Franklin led Vanderbilt to back-to-back nine-win seasons in 2012 and 2013, which had previously never been done at Vanderbilt.
Franklin, who now coaches at Penn State, was scheduled to fly in for Williams’ retirement party.
The Vanderbilt football team also played in six bowl games during Williams’ tenure and broke a 25-year postseason drought in 2008 under then-head coach Bobby Johnson.
“David authored a remarkable legacy at Vanderbilt, one defined by blazing trails and championing the student-athlete,” Turner said in a statement. “In my short time at Vanderbilt, I was fortunate to have cultivated a friendship with David, who most proudly coveted his role as a husband and father. All of Commodore Nation mourns the loss of David.”