Cover for Terry Don Phillips's Obituary
Terry Don Phillips Profile Photo
1947 Terry Don 2026

Terry Don Phillips

August 29, 1947 — May 26, 2026

Seneca

Dr. Terry Don Phillips, who made some of the most significant coaching hires in Clemson history during his 10 years (2002-12) as athletic director, passed away early Tuesday morning in Clemson, SC. Phillips, 78, had been in hospice care after being diagnosed with dementia over a decade ago.

Among the coaches he hired are current football coach Dabo Swinney, current men’s basketball coach Brad Brownell and current men’s soccer coach Mike Noonan.

Swinney is the winningest football coach in Clemson history and Brownell is the winningest men’s basketball coach. Clemson is the only Division I school in the nation where the current men’s basketball and football coaches are the winningest in school history.

Noonan has won two national championships (2021 and 2023) and Swinney has won two national championships (2016 and 2018). Those are four of the six national titles in school history. A fifth, the 2003 golf national championship under Larry Penley, was earned in Phillips first year as athletic director.

Over his 10 years as Clemson athletic director, Clemson won 13 ACC Championships in eight different sports, including five different women’s sports. Clemson athletic programs had 57 top 25 national finishes, 37 top 20s, and 14 top 10s during his time leading the program. Fifteen different sports had a top 25 finish, including six different sports that recorded a top 10 finish in that time frame.

Clemson went to the Final Four of national tournaments in three different sports during this time, Baseball, women’s tennis and men’s soccer.

A major facility enhancement took place in every program over his 10 years with an investment over $140 million with just $25 million of debt. The combined unrestricted fund reserve grew approximately 90 percent between 2002-12.

Phillips was inducted into the Clemson Athletic Hall of Fame in 2019 and was also made an Honorary Alumnus of Clemson University by the Clemson Alumni Association on August 22, 2019.

Phillips came to Clemson after serving as the athletic director at Oklahoma State from 1994-2002. During his career in Stillwater, Oklahoma State won a pair of national championships in men ’s golf, reached the Final Four in men’s basketball and made two trips to the College World Series. Additionally, Oklahoma State won 13 Big 12 Championships and had 11 individual national champions across various sports.

Phillips began his 42-year career in college athletics as a graduate assistant coach at the University of Arkansas, his alma mater, in 1970. He then became an assistant coach at Virginia Tech from 1971-78 where he worked with former Clemson head coaches Danny Ford and Charley Pell.

He then moved into administration and became the athletic director at Liberty University in 1980-81, then at Southwestern Louisiana from 1981-88.

Phillips returned to his alma mater as a senior associate athletic director under Frank Broyles in 1988 and remained there until 1994 when he became the athletic director at Oklahoma State.

Phillips was a three-year letterman as a defensive lineman at Arkansas under Broyles and played in the famous Arkansas vs. Texas game of 1969. He lettered in 1966, 1968 and 1969 and the Razorbacks posted a 27-5 record.

Phillips was inducted into the University of Arkansas Hall of Honor in 2010.

Phillips earned his undergraduate degree from Arkansas in 1970, earned a Master’s degree from Virginia Tech in 1974 and his Ph.D from Virginia Tech in 1978. He earned his J.D. degree from Arkansas in 1996.

He continued to teach a sports law class while he was the athletic director at Clemson.

Born in Longview, Texas, Phillips was the third son to Verna (Zimmerman) and Loyd Fay Phillips, and raised in east Texas with his two brothers, David Neal and Loyd Wade.

When Terry Don was diagnosed with an unspecified type of dementia after his 2012 retirement, he and Tricia were determined to “make the best of a journey nobody wants.” Their intentionality to find joy in every day brought laughter, traveling backroads across the U.S. with their beloved yellow lab, Atticus, and a lot of ice cream. It also created an opportunity for friends and family across the country to share visits, fond memories and special words of affirmation when it meant the most to Terry Don.

Phillips is survived by his wife Tricia Brown Phillips, beloved children, Sarah-Jane Mayer, Fayetteville, Ark.; husband Jonathan; John Dennis Phillips, Phoenix, Az. Meagan Stone, Duncan, SC; Marshall Stone, Carrollton, Ga; wife Ashley; Madison Archer Stone, Jupiter, Fla. and grandchildren Shelby and Will Mayer, both students at The University of Arkansas; Darcy and Derek Schall; Ozzy Stone.

A private burial and service will be held at a later date in Quitman, Texas.

Any memorials may be made to one of two programs that support and provide a variety of services to people with disabilities, mental health challenges or special needs.

Joseph Generation, 5961 W. Myrtle Ave. #4, Glendale, AZ 85301

Gateway, P.O. Box 4241, Greenville, SC 29608




Quotes on Dr. Terry Don Phillips

Dabo Swinney

“This a sad day, but it is a blessing because Terry Don is no longer suffering. My thoughts are with his wife, Trish, and how she has cared for him until the very end.

“I have had two great mentors in my life who were born in Texas, Terry Don Phillips and Gene Stallings.

“It is impossible for me to quantify his impact on my life. I am so thankful that God put him in my path. He was a man of integrity, faith and love of his family.

“When he hired me as the interim head coach in October of 2008, then as the head coach in December of 2008, it was a bold move. He had to put up with a lot of criticism because I had not been a coordinator.

“I will always remember his last game as athletic director when we beat Les Miles and LSU. We went for it on fourth-and-16 on the last drive that won the game. In many ways he had gone for it on fourth-and-16 when he hired me.

“My other vivid memory with Terry Don was at the rally in Death Valley after we won the 2016 National Championship. We hugged and cried.

“I am so thankful for Terry Don Phillips. He is on the Mount Rushmore of my life.”

Brad Brownell

“Paula and I are saddened by the loss of Terry Don Phillips, and we wish to extend our sincere condolences to his wife Tricia and the entire Phillips family.

“I will forever be grateful to Terry Don for the chance to coach at Clemson. His leadership and influence helped shape my career and I am one of many at Clemson, and other institutions, who will say the same thing

“ I look at the fact that he hired Coach Swinney, Coach Noonan and myself and we are all still here. He had a unique ability to find coaches with the values that fit Clemson.”

Clemson Head Men’s Soccer Coach Mike Noonan

“Terry Don Phillips changed my life and the lives of so many others. He gave me the opportunity to pursue a dream I had carried for years—but after the dream came true in 2021 (winning the national championship), I realized his impact was greater than championship trophies and rings.

“Terry Don believed in me before I had proven it here. That unwavering belief has stayed with me every day. He had a rare ability to see what people could become and to give them the platform to chase their dream.

“He built the Clemson program on trust, integrity and a deep care for others. I will always be grateful for the opportunity he gave me, and I hope we’ve honored his belief in us. His legacy lives on in all of us who were fortunate enough to be given a chance because he believed.”

Visit RobinsonFuneralHomes.com or Duckett-Robinson Funeral Home & Cremations, Central-Clemson Commons.

Guestbook

Visits: 328

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the
Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Service map data © OpenStreetMap contributors