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John P. Metras

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John P. Metras

John Pius Metras (April 8, 1909 – April 13, 1982) was an American coach of Canadian football and basketball. He led Western Mustangs football from 1940 to 1969, winning 110 games, eight Yates Cups, and three Churchill Bowls. He coached 157 players who graduated to play in the Canadian Football League, including his son John. Metras was the first college coach inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame, and is honored by the annual J. P. Metras Trophy for the outstanding U Sports lineman. Prior to coaching the Mustangs, he was a player-coach for St. Michael's College, and was named an all-American as captain of the Detroit Titans.

As the athletic director at University of Western Ontario from 1945 to 1972, Metras also coached basketball and ice hockey. His straightforward and gruff demeanor earned him the nickname, "The Bull". Never having a losing basketball season in 19 years, his teams won 14 Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association championships, won 134 of 164 league games, and were the first university team to compete in the Canadian Olympic team trials. He was posthumously inducted into the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

John Pius Metras was born April 8, 1909, in Berrien County, Michigan, and grew up in Dowagiac, Michigan. He was a four-sport athlete in high school and an all-state halfback. After graduating from Dowagiac High School, he played football and basketball at Western State Teachers College. Originally playing left tackle, Metras was captain of the Detroit Titans in 1932, when he was named an all-American playing center. After graduation from University of Detroit, he tried out for the Detroit Lions.

Metras came to Canada with teammate Bill Storen in 1933, to play in the senior Ontario Rugby Football Union division for St. Michael's College. As a player-coach and center, he earned CA$100 per week plus room and board. The Canadian Press named him an Eastern Canada second-team all-star at centre in 1933, and an Eastern Canada first-team all-star at centre in 1934. At the end of his playing career, he was 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) and 195 pounds (88 kg).

Metras joined University of Western Ontario as an assistant coach to Storen for Western Mustangs football from 1935 to 1939, then succeeded Storen as the team's head coach from 1940 to 1969. During 35 years coaching the Mustangs, he accumulated a lifetime head coach record of 110 wins, 77 losses, and 11 ties, won nine Senior Intercollegiate Football League championships, and once had a 29-game undefeated streak. His Mustangs won the Yates Cup as league champions in 1939, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1957, and 1959; and were Churchill Bowl champions versus the UBC Thunderbirds in 1956, 1957, and 1959. He coached 157 players who graduated to play in the Canadian Football League. Metras felt that Joe Krol was the most well-rounded athlete he had coached. Other notable former players of Metras include politicians Don Getty and John Robarts, and justice Coulter Osborne. Metras was succeeded by his protege Frank Cosentino in 1970. Metras set a career record for wins by a Canadian university coach which stood until broken by Larry Haylor in 1998.

In addition to football, Metras coached the Western Mustangs basketball team from 1945 to 1964, and was a member of the US–Canada basketball rules committee. His basketball team played annual home-and-home exhibition games versus Assumption College in Windsor. He regularly recruited athletes from the Windsor Area which had no university football, and limited academic options at the time. He booked suites of rooms at the Prince Edward Hotel, filled a bathtub full of ice and beer, and held all-night recruitment parties for local high school football and basketball coaches. Metras never had a losing basketball season in 19 years of coaching, and won 14 Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association championships. He twice took his team to the Canadian Olympic team trials in 1947–48 and 1951–52, becoming the first university team to compete in the trials. The Western Mustangs won 134 of 164 league games under his leadership.

Metras stressed fundamentals while coaching, and did not place winning above an education. He opposed athletic scholarships since the money came from donors who prioritized winning over education. He also coached Western Mustangs men's ice hockey, and was the athletic director from 1945 to 1972, when succeeded by Bob Barney. As of 1969, Metras was the only remaining person in the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association to have the combined roles of athletic director and head coach of football. He felt the workload too much to do justice to both positions. In retirement, he was named to the university's board of governors as chairman of the intercollegiate athletic program, was a secondary school liaison, and assistant manager of the Thompson Recreation and Athletic Centre. As of 1983, he worked on a fundraising program to refurbish J. W. Little Memorial Stadium, the Mustangs' home football field.

Metras and his family were council members of the Knights of Columbus in Dowagiac. He was married to Shirley, and had two sons and a daughter. His son, John, played football for him with the Mustangs, won the 1965 Grey Cup playing center for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and later became a lawyer.

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