By: SOU Sports Information
ASHLAND – Chuck Mills, a Southern Oregon University Sports Hall-of-Famer who had an unforgettable run as the Raiders' head football coach from 1980-88 and also served as athletic director, died Monday in Hawaii. He was 92.
Upon taking over a floundering Southern Oregon program that had turned in four consecutive losing seasons, Mills' influence in Ashland turned into tangible results almost immediately. His 1983 team won the NAIA District II championship – going 9-2 for program's first nine-win season and top-10 national ranking – and Mills was named district coach of the year as a result. Under his watch in 1987, the 15th-ranked Raiders captured their first-ever NAIA Championship Series victory with an upset of eighth-ranked Central Washington.
Mills left with a 48-40-1 record and six winning seasons, but his legacy at SOU outside of coaching is perhaps even more profound.
Within a year of his arrival, Mills dropped both the school's offensive Native American mascot and "Red" from the Red Raiders moniker that was introduced in 1946. A Mills-led fundraising drive later produced a new grandstand that debuted in 1983 and still stands today, transforming Raider Stadium into one of the top small-college venues in the country. Additionally, he helped the Raiders become charter members of the Columbia Football Association.
In Tuesday's edition of The Japan Times, Mills was remembered as "one of the fathers of American football in Japan." The 1971 Utah State University Aggies, of which he was head coach, was the first college team to play in Japan, competing against a collegiate all-star squad in Tokyo. He came back three years later as head coach of Wake Forest University, and in 1985 he brought Southern Oregon to Kobe, Japan to play against Kwansei Gakuin University. A year later, KGU became the first Japanese team to compete on American soil when it traveled to Ashland.
Since 1974, the Chuck Mills Trophy has been awarded annually to the top college player in Japan.
Mills was a Chicago native and an alumnus of Illinois State University. His well-traveled career included a stint as administrative assistant for the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl I and ended with a 9-2 mark in his lone season at Coast Guard in 1997.
He was inducted to the SOU Sports Hall of Fame in 2019.
Individuals can donate to the SOU Foundation in Mills' name. Contributions will support the SOU football program.