Sherman Lewis, Michigan State football All-American, ex-Lions OC, dies
Sherman Lewis, an All-American running back and former assistant coach at Michigan State and with the Detroit Lions, has died. He was 83.
Sherman Lewis , one of the greatest Michigan State football players and a former Detroit Lions offensive coordinator, died on Friday, May 15, an MSU spokesman confirmed. He was 83. Lewis, an All-American running back for the Spartans and a longtime assistant coach at MSU and in the NFL, had been in an assisted living facility in recent years according to reporter and historian Tom Shanahan .
โSherm Lewis is a Giant in his death as he was a Giant his life,โ former MSU star and College Football Hall of Famer Clinton Jones told Shanahan. Born June 29, 1942 in Louisville, Ky. , Lewis arrived at MSU to play for Duffy Daugherty in football and to run track for the Spartans and became a captain of both teams.
In 1962, Lewis earned honorable mention All-American honors and second-team All-Big Ten, then a year later was a first-team All-American and the 1963 Football News Player of the Year after rushing for 577 yards on 90 carries catching 11 passes for 303 yards. Lewis ran for 1,566 yards and 23 touchdowns, was a Big Ten champion in the long jump and 300-yard dash, and he was inducted into the MSU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001. Lewis played professionally with Toronto of the Canadian Football League (1964-65) and the New York Jets (1966) of the AFL before returning to MSU as an assistant coach from 1969-82 under Daugherty, Denny Stolz, Darryl Rogers and Frank โMuddyโ Waters.
He then went on to an accomplished career coaching in the NFL, spending nine seasons with San Francisco from 1983-91 and helping lead the 49ers to three Super Bowl wins while serving as a mentor to Roger Craig as running backs coach and then Jerry Rice and John Taylor as wide receivers coach. In 1992, Lewis became offensive coordinator in Green Bay, a role he held for eight years from 1992-99. Lewis helped Brett Favre, former MSU star Andre Rison and the Packers win the 1996 Super Bowl.