Red McCombs

Miscellaneous

Birthday October 19, 1927

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Spur, Texas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2023-2-19, San Antonio, Texas, U.S. (95 years old)

Nationality United States

#55756 Most Popular

1927

Billy Joe "Red" McCombs (October 19, 1927 – February 19, 2023) was an American businessman.

He was the founder of the Red McCombs Automotive Group in San Antonio, Texas, a co-founder of Clear Channel Communications, a past chairman of Constellis Group, a onetime owner of the San Antonio Spurs, San Antonio Force, Denver Nuggets, the Minnesota Vikings, and the namesake of the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin.

In 2022, Forbes placed the value of McCombs' fortune at $1.7 billion.

McCombs was born in rural Spur in Dickens County in West Texas, United States.

His nickname "Red" came from his hair color.

His father was a mechanic who earned $25 per week but tithed through the First Baptist Church of Spur each week.

McCombs recalled having seen his parents "share with those who had less, and the joy of giving never ceased to amaze me."

1958

In 1958, McCombs and his fellow salesman, Austin Hemphill, moved to San Antonio to create Hemphill-McCombs Ford, which was the foundation for what ultimately became the Red McCombs Automotive Group.

McCombs served as chairman of the trustees at Southwestern University and chairman of the University of Texas's M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

1968

He contacted Lee Iacocca, then president of the Ford Motor Company, to seek funding for the arena to correspond with the 1968 World's Fair.

At first, Iacocca offered only $250,000 for the purchase of an art object, and he scolded McCombs and ridiculed San Antonio as "that little old dusty ass town of yours down there [with] no political or economic significance to the Ford Motor Company."

McCombs persisted and asked U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson to contact Henry Ford II, and in a continued heated exchange even told Iacocca that Ford needed to improve the quality of its 1968 vehicles.

1973

McCombs located other investors, and the Dallas Chaparrals came to San Antonio five years later in 1973.

McCombs realized the importance of television to sports events and saw the opportunity to bring San Antonio to a national stage.

Under the McCombs administration, the Spurs had their first superstar in George Gervin, called "The Iceman", who was recruited from the Virginia Squires.

Two years after taking the Spurs into the NBA, McCombs sold off his stake in the Spurs and bought another former ABA team, the Denver Nuggets.

1978

He held onto the team from 1978 until 1985, when he sold it to Sidney Shlenker.

1986

His particular interest in M.D. Anderson was accentuated in 1986, when he visited a dying friend undergoing treatment there.

He expressed how he was overcome by the kindness of every employee he met at the hospital.

The workers, he found, had been trained to offer compassion and solace to all who come through the doors.

1989

He then bought the Spurs in 1989 and ran them until he sold them in 1993.

1998

McCombs had established McCombs Energy in Houston in 1998 by merging his 50 percent interest in his partnership with William Forney with other assets purchased from Forney.

McCombs claimed that his former associates, however, lowered the proper payout that he was due from his investments.

McCombs said that the former executives shattered personal relationships of some four decades.

McCombs attributed the construction of the HemisFair Arena as the essential development to the success of the San Antonio Spurs.

In 1998, McCombs bought the Minnesota Vikings for US$250 million.

2005

He joined the Anderson board and in 2005 donated $30 million to the hospital.

The business school at the University of Texas at Austin was renamed the Red McCombs School of Business in recognition of his $50 million donation to the institution.

The $50 million actually yielded $100 million in matching funds for new faculty positions, fellowships, and scholarships.

He was the board chairman of Academi.

After an unsuccessful attempt to replace the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, McCombs sold the team to new (and current) owner Zygi Wilf before the 2005 NFL season.

McCombs was also actively involved in thoroughbred racing and breeding for many years as a major partner in Walmac Farm, a leading American breeding farm, in Lexington, Kentucky.

McCombs was one of the first investors of the Circuit of the Americas.

2017

In 2017, McCombs filed a $1 million civil suit against seven of his former executives who he alleged took "trade secrets" from McCombs' company to begin a competing firm in Houston, F4 Resources.

Defendants in the suit include William "Bill" Forney Jr., who worked with McCombs for forty-four years, former chief financial officer Ricky Halkin, vice president of operations Larry Wyont, vice president of land Charles Forney, and the vice president of geology, Philip Forney.

2020

In December 2020 he got his 'own' corner called 'Big Red'.

McCombs owned a piece of property surrounded by National Forest near Wolf Creek ski area, a resort in southern Colorado owned by the Pitcher family.

McCombs had long wanted to develop a resort community on his property, a plan that has drawn opposition and lawsuits from environmentalists and surrounding communities.

McCombs had been unsuccessful in his attempts to convince the court to remove a key roadblock preventing his proposed development.

McCombs then attempted to build a 50000 acre casino resort at Navajo Canyon on Lake Powell.