In 1982, the Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL) held the first Prep Bowl at the Metrodome. The idea for playing five championship football games on a single day in the former downtown Minneapolis stadium was one that Marv Helling helped bring to fruition.
As an associate director for the league from 1972 to 1985, Helling oversaw football and worked with the Minnesota Football Coaches Association to create a playoff system that gave all member schools a chance to play in the postseason. Section champions advanced to the state tournament, with title games played during the Prep Bowl.
"He was absolutely a visionary that produced not only the playoffs, but so many things that happen in high school football," said Ron Stolski, executive director of the coaches' association and longtime head football coach at Brainerd High School. "He moved the game forward. We lost an icon and a great friend of high school athletics."
Helling, of Englewood, Fla., and previously of Shoreview, died Nov. 30 at age 91. He had suffered a small stroke in September, said his wife of 67 years, Marcia.
Athletics had been a part of Helling's life since childhood. At Luverne High School in southwestern Minnesota, he played football and basketball and was runner-up in the hurdles at the 1941 state track meet. At Macalester College, where he earned bachelor's and master's degrees in education, he was a fullback, co-captain of the Scots' 1947 MIAC championship team and an all-conference selection.
His teaching and football coaching career in Minnesota included Jackson, Detroit Lakes and Minneapolis Washburn high schools. With an overall record of 72-14-1 and several conference championships, he jumped to the collegiate ranks in 1957 when he became the head coach at the University of North Dakota.
In his 10 years at the helm, the team won two bowl games and three North Central Conference championships. Several of his players won all-conference honors and nine were named All Americans. Some went on to play in the National Football League, including former Viking Dave Osborne. Helling was inducted into the school's athletic Hall of Fame in 1988.
"Coach Helling left a lasting legacy with the program and remained a strong supporter throughout his lifetime," said UND's current head football coach, Bubba Schweigert. "His efforts and contributions to UND football will always hold a special place in our hearts."