Photo: Lee Pellegrini

WHAT I'VE LEARNED

Barry Gallup '69

After graduating Ļć½¶Šć a star football player, Barry Gallup spent more than forty years building the program, first as an assistant coach, then as director of football operations. Newly retired, he reflects on the journey.Ā 

For more than forty years, Barry Gallup was synonymous with Boston College football. A star player, Gallup graduated with a number of Ļć½¶Šć receiving records, then served for eighteen years as an assistant coach with the team. He departed in 1991 to become head coach at Northeastern University, but returned to Ļć½¶Šć in 2000 and spent the next twenty-two years as director of football operations and, eventually, senior associate athletic director. He retired last July.

Go ahead and branch out a little. It was very unusual to play two sports, but my first two years at Ļć½¶Šć, I played basketball in addition to football. Bob Cousy, the Celtics star, was the basketball coach. He was here for six years, and Ļć½¶Šć went to a tournament in five of themā€”three NIT tournaments and two NCAA tournaments. Back then, freshmen werenā€™t eligible for the varsity team, so I played on the freshman team. Coach Cousy was great to me, and he saved me a spot on the varsity team the next year. We went to the Elite Eight in the 1967 NCAA tournament. I canā€™t say I played a lot, but I was on the team that went to the Elite Eight. It was a thrill just being a part of it. I still keep in touch with Coach. Heā€™s ninety-four years old, and every year except the Covid year, weā€™ve gone out to visit him at his homeĀ in Worcester.

Play the long game. After I graduated from Ļć½¶Šć, the Patriots offered me a contract to play in the old AFL but I turned it down. Pro football wasnā€™t like it is today, in salary or opportunities. The AFL and the NFL had not merged yet into the modern NFL.Ā They werenā€™t even sure that the AFL was going to survive. I decided I wanted some stability. It was a good decision. I have no regrets about that.Ā 

Sometimes the short gameā€™s okay, too. I spent a year as a teacher after Ļć½¶Šć, at the Hadley Elementary School in Swampscott, where I went myself. I was there only one year, but it was a great year.

A coach is a coach. When I started as an assistant at Ļć½¶Šć in 1972, I coached the defensive line. Everyone laughs about that because I played receiver and tight end and I was always on offense. But thatā€™s where the opportunity was, and Head Coach Joe Yukica felt that a coach is a coach. He was right.

Itā€™s not really about positions, itā€™s about people. You learn about the game of football. Coaching defense helped prepare me to become a head coach.

You canā€™t predict a Heisman. I got to know Doug Flutie very well during the recruitment process. Can I tell you that I knew he was going to win the Heisman Trophy? No. But I could see that he was a great competitor, a great leader, and he was a team player. Those are things that young people either have or they donā€™t have.

Actually, you can go home again. I was the head coach of the Northeastern football team from 1991 to 1999. We played Ļć½¶Šć that final year, and after the game, I walked across the field to shake hands with Ļć½¶Šćā€™s coach, Tom Oā€™Brien. Tom says, ā€œBarry, I want to talk to you about coming back to Ļć½¶Šć.ā€ It was good timing. I came back to Ļć½¶Šć in 2000. My wife Victoria and I had three young children at the time, and the position gave me more security. Victoriaā€”we met at Ļć½¶Šć when she was working with the basketball programā€”asked if I really wanted to give up coaching. I said, ā€œitā€™s not that I want to give up coaching. I want more time to be with you and our family.ā€

Rivalries make the heart grow fonder. Our youngest son, Barry, played football at Notre Dame. He returned kickoffs for them during his junior year right here in Alumni Stadium. People would ask me, ā€œWho are you rooting for?ā€ I would say, ā€œI have a job and Iā€™m rooting for Ļć½¶Šć, but I hope my son does well.ā€ My wife would answer very quickly, ā€œIā€™m rooting for Barry Gallup, Jr.ā€

Every once in a while, things will just work out. My experience at Ļć½¶Šć was everything I hoped it would be, and even more, as a student, an athlete, and an employee. I met my wife here. I worked for nine head football coaches, raised a wonderful family, and made great memories here.Ā 


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