RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The name E. Wayne Cooley is synonymous with girls high school sports in Iowa. His vision and leadership is viewed by contemporaries as essential in advancement of the female athlete. The longtime Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union Executive Secretary died Saturday at the age of 90. Edward Wayne Cooley was born in Mercer, Mo., on Sept. 16, 1922 to Reverend O.E. and Mae Cooley. After marrying Gertrude “Gerry” Konkol in 1944, the couple had two children, Craig and Denise. After Gerry’s death in 1982, he married Wendy Wykoff in 1987. Cooley was raised in Coon Rapids, earned a degree from Buena Vista University and later received honorary doctorates from Morningside College and Buena Vista. A commissioned naval officer during World War II, he returned to Iowa, coaching football and track at Nevada. In 1950, he served as an instructor for one year at Grinnell College and next served as assistant to the president at Grinnell for three years. In 1954, Cooley accepted the assignment as executive secretary of the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union, which, at the time, embraced a single interscholastic activity, basketball. In 48 years under Cooley’s leadership until his 2002 retirement, the IGHSAU expanded to include track and field, cross-country, softball, golf, swimming, tennis, volleyball and soccer, with many of those programs flourishing well before the implementation of Title IX legislation. During his tenure, the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union became the nation's trailblazer in the development of girls interscholastic athletic programs. A 1973 three-part Sports Illustrated cover story on the limited access girls had in athletics during the wake of the Title IX passage used Iowa and the IGHSAU as a model of proof to the viability of equality for girls and women in sports. With the success of all of Iowa's girls programs, it is the popularity of the Iowa Girls State Basketball Tournament that Cooley is most synonymous with Cooley's name. Called by contemporaries "the P.T. Barnum of hoops," Cooley turned the six-day March tournament into one of Iowa's most beloved annual events. The tournament has been televised since 1951 and was seen in as many as nine states by 1968. The tournament's popularity and tremendous fan following was featured in two different photo essays by Sports Illustrated in 1969 and 1988. The tournament has also been the subject of features stories by USA Today, The Chicago Tribune, Newsday, ESPN and National Public Radio. In addition to his IGHSAU duties, Cooley also served as executive vice president to the Iowa High School Speech Association, a position he held from 1963 to his retirement in 2002. Cooley was active in many other endeavors, both in athletics and in the community. He was a longstanding member of the Drake Relays Executive Committee, a member of the board of directors of the Women's College Basketball Hall of Fame, a director for three banking institutions, the Buena Vista College Board of Trustees and his family church. He also served as a vice chairman for the Iowa Games and was chairman of the Iowa Heart Association. He also served as national president of the United States Track and Field Federation, and was a major leader in resolving two decades of conflict over control of the nation's amateur track and field administration by successfully merging the two parties into the Athletics Congress of the United States. For his efforts, he was inducted into the United States Track and Field Federation's Hall of Fame. His efforts promoting and advancing girls high school basketball led to his induction into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000. Cooley is survived by his wife, Wendy, a son, Craig (Elizabeth), of Prescott, Ariz., a daughter, Denise (Roger) Brode, of Chicago, grandchildren Amanda and Andrew, and one sister, Rosalee Johnson of Waterloo. He was preceded in death by his parents and first wife, Gerry. [KCCI.com/Twitter]

Cooley