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Lions to win a S<strong>up</strong>er Bowl. Mr. Ford under<strong>st</strong>ands that with competitive<br />

realities of today’s NFL, reaching <strong>the</strong> game’s pinnacle takes a<br />

concerted organizational effort both on and off <strong>the</strong> field. While<br />

everyone appreciates <strong>the</strong> importance of <strong>the</strong> coaching <strong>st</strong>aff and <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>front</strong> offi ce <strong>st</strong>aff , you also need <strong>the</strong> proper infra<strong>st</strong>ructure, such as<br />

<strong>st</strong>ate-of-<strong>the</strong>-art <strong>st</strong>adium and practice facilities.<br />

Mr. Ford’s commitment was evident in <strong>the</strong> Lions’ return “home” to<br />

a new downtown Detroit <strong>st</strong>adium, Ford Field, in 2002. The $500 million<br />

<strong>st</strong>adium enhanced <strong>the</strong> Lions’ ability to compete in several facets of<br />

<strong>the</strong> game. In this NFL age, <strong>the</strong> revenues produced from Ford Field help<br />

level <strong>the</strong> economic playing fi eld with <strong>the</strong> Lions’ NFL counterparts.<br />

The Ford Family and Ford Field were <strong>the</strong> overwhelming factors<br />

in Detroit being awarded <strong>the</strong> right to ho<strong>st</strong> S<strong>up</strong>er Bowl XL in February<br />

2006. That championship game clearly added to <strong>the</strong> city’s economic<br />

landscape in numerous ways, including a $260 million boo<strong>st</strong> to Metro<br />

Detroit, and <strong>the</strong> impact <strong>the</strong> Ford family had on bringing <strong>the</strong> S<strong>up</strong>er Bowl<br />

to Detroit was apparent.<br />

“We wouldn’t be here if it were not for <strong>the</strong> Ford family, who led<br />

<strong>the</strong> way in developing Ford Field as a cataly<strong>st</strong> for <strong>the</strong> redevelopment<br />

of downtown Detroit, including <strong>the</strong> return of <strong>the</strong> S<strong>up</strong>er Bowl to<br />

Detroit,” former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue pronounced in<br />

2006 during his annual <strong>st</strong>ate of <strong>the</strong> league press conference held ju<strong>st</strong><br />

prior to S<strong>up</strong>er Bowl XL.<br />

“And <strong>the</strong> Ford family’s leadership has certainly been a big part,<br />

not ju<strong>st</strong> of <strong>the</strong> NFL and NFL hi<strong>st</strong>ory, but of Detroit and our nation’s<br />

hi<strong>st</strong>ory.”<br />

Ford Field has been a key cog in shaping fur<strong>the</strong>r revitalized growth<br />

for <strong>the</strong> city of Detroit. The <strong>st</strong>adium’s eff ect on <strong>the</strong> city continues to<br />

be comprehensive with its contributions as it ho<strong>st</strong>s several events<br />

besides Lions’ games.<br />

In May 2003, <strong>the</strong> Detroit News honored Mr. Ford as a Michiganianof-<strong>the</strong>-Year,<br />

an annual tribute to select citizens who made signifi cant<br />

contributions to <strong>the</strong> <strong>st</strong>ate or local community, as he had brought <strong>the</strong><br />

Lions “back home” and opened Ford Field’s doors to reap benefi ts<br />

for Detroit. In September 2005, he was inducted into <strong>the</strong> Michigan<br />

Sports Hall of Fame.<br />

Additional confi rmation of his <strong>st</strong>eadfa<strong>st</strong> dedication to <strong>the</strong> team<br />

was <strong>the</strong> completion of <strong>the</strong> team’s $36 million Headquarters and<br />

Training Facility in Allen Park, Mich., that opened in April 2002 as <strong>the</strong><br />

NFL’s premier training center.<br />

Thanks to Mr. Ford’s addition of <strong>the</strong> Lions Headquarters and<br />

Training Facility, <strong>the</strong> entire organization develops year-round in a<br />

world-class environment. Both <strong>the</strong> short-term and long-term impacts<br />

are signifi cant as <strong>the</strong> team trains under conditions second-to-none.<br />

This joint venture between <strong>the</strong> Lions and Ford Land Development<br />

Corporation provides <strong>st</strong>ate-of-<strong>the</strong>-art facilities for players’ off -<strong>season</strong><br />

workouts, training camp, and in-<strong>season</strong> meetings and practices.<br />

Throughout his tenure as owner, William Clay Ford has guided<br />

<strong>the</strong> Detroit Lions organization with a sense of balance, integrity and<br />

hone<strong>st</strong> leadership. Never one to seek <strong>the</strong> limelight, Mr. Ford has not<br />

sought public accolades for his many contributions to football, <strong>the</strong><br />

automotive indu<strong>st</strong>ry and his community.<br />

Known as Bill Ford to his friends and business associates, his<br />

relationship with <strong>the</strong> Lions began during his childhood when his fa<strong>the</strong>r,<br />

Edsel Ford, took him to <strong>the</strong> University of Detroit Stadium to see <strong>the</strong><br />

fi r<strong>st</strong> Lions team play in <strong>the</strong>ir maiden <strong>season</strong> in <strong>the</strong> Motor City in 1934.<br />

He became a club director in 1956 and was asked by <strong>the</strong>n-Lions’<br />

President Edwin J. (Andy) Anderson to become <strong>the</strong> Lions’ president<br />

in 1961.<br />

In November 1963, Mr. Ford purchased <strong>the</strong> team outright for $4.5<br />

million and offi cially took over <strong>the</strong> club January 10, 1964. The 2012<br />

<strong>season</strong> will mark <strong>the</strong> 49th year of Mr. Ford’s sole ownership of <strong>the</strong> club.<br />

Of course, Mr. Ford’s o<strong>the</strong>r passion in life is <strong>the</strong> automotive<br />

indu<strong>st</strong>ry, he being <strong>the</strong> only surviving grandson of inventor and auto<br />

pioneer Henry Ford, founder of <strong>the</strong> Ford Motor Company.<br />

For <strong>the</strong> entire Ford family, 2003 marked a year of great pride and<br />

celebration as Ford Motor Company commemorated its hi<strong>st</strong>oric 100<br />

years as an icon in American indu<strong>st</strong>ry.<br />

In May 2005, Mr. Ford retired from <strong>the</strong> Board of Directors of Ford<br />

Motor Company a er nearly 57 years of service. He remains director<br />

emeritus on <strong>the</strong> Board of Directors. Mr. Ford mo<strong>st</strong> recently served as<br />

a member of <strong>the</strong> Board of Directors and was on <strong>the</strong> company’s Finance<br />

Committee, and in years pa<strong>st</strong> served on its Governance Committee.<br />

He had been a board member since 1948 and was chairman of <strong>the</strong><br />

company’s Design Committee from its inception in 1957 until his<br />

retirement as vice chairman in March 1989.<br />

Utilizing his expertise in design, Mr. Ford was also on special<br />

assignment as a design consultant focusing on <strong>the</strong> Jaguar.<br />

During his career with <strong>the</strong> company, Mr. Ford gained special<br />

EXECUTIVES & COACHING<br />

Detroit<<strong>st</strong>rong>lions</<strong>st</strong>rong>.com<br />

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satisfaction and acclaim as <strong>the</strong> executive in charge of <strong>the</strong> design,<br />

development and subsequent introduction of <strong>the</strong> Continental Mark<br />

II, <strong>the</strong> successor to <strong>the</strong> classic Lincoln Continental that had been<br />

developed and introduced by his fa<strong>the</strong>r Edsel in 1939. In 1973, Mr.<br />

Ford was appointed vice president-Product Design.<br />

Mr. Ford was elected to <strong>the</strong> Board of Directors in 1948 and began<br />

his employment at Ford following graduation from Yale University.<br />

He served several executive positions before appointment as vice<br />

president and general manager of <strong>the</strong> Continental Division in 1954.<br />

In 1956, he assumed responsibility for corporate product planning<br />

and design.<br />

When <strong>the</strong> Design Committee of Ford’s Policy and Strategy<br />

Committee was formed in 1957, Mr. Ford became <strong>the</strong> committee’s<br />

fi r<strong>st</strong> chairman, a po<strong>st</strong> he held until retirement in 1989.<br />

In 1978, Mr. Ford was elected chairman of <strong>the</strong> Executive Committee<br />

and appointed a member of <strong>the</strong> Offi ce of <strong>the</strong> Chief Executive. He<br />

was elected vice chairman of <strong>the</strong> Board in 1980 and chairman of <strong>the</strong><br />

Finance Committee in 1987. He retired as chairman of <strong>the</strong> Finance<br />

Committee in 1995.<br />

The younge<strong>st</strong> of Edsel’s four children, William Clay Ford was born<br />

March 14, 1925. Following a tour of duty with <strong>the</strong> U.S. Naval Air Corp<br />

in World War II, he enrolled at Yale, where he lettered in both tennis<br />

and soccer at <strong>the</strong> Ivy League school. As a collegian, he won league<br />

tennis titles in singles and doubles, and he earned All-American<br />

honorable mention honors in soccer. In fact, he was a nationally-ranked<br />

tennis player until two Achilles tendon surgeries relegated him to <strong>the</strong><br />

sidelines. Mr. Ford’s athletic participation today includes golf, a game<br />

in which he became nearly a scratch performer, while regi<strong>st</strong>ering a<br />

remarkable seven (7) holes-in-one over <strong>the</strong> years.<br />

He graduated from Yale with a bachelor of science degree in<br />

economics and <strong>the</strong>n joined Ford’s sales and advertising <strong>st</strong>aff . He<br />

later served on <strong>the</strong> indu<strong>st</strong>rial relations <strong>st</strong>aff where he was a member<br />

of <strong>the</strong> committee that negotiated <strong>the</strong> hi<strong>st</strong>oric 1949 contract with<br />

<strong>the</strong> UAW-CIO.<br />

Mr. Ford also is chairman emeritus of <strong>the</strong> Board of Tru<strong>st</strong>ees of The<br />

Henry Ford. He is an honorary life tru<strong>st</strong>ee of <strong>the</strong> Eisenhower Medical<br />

Center, is a national tru<strong>st</strong>ee for <strong>the</strong> Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs of America<br />

and honorary chair of <strong>the</strong> United Way Community Services. He is<br />

also on <strong>the</strong> Texas Heart In<strong>st</strong>itute National Advisory Council. Mr. Ford<br />

received an honorary doctor of science degree from <strong>the</strong> Art Center<br />

College of Design in Pasadena, Calif., in 1981.<br />

Mr. Ford’s generosity as a benefactor was again recognized in<br />

1997, as <strong>the</strong> outdoor courts of <strong>the</strong> University of Michigan’s new tennis<br />

center were named in his honor. Also, a new addition to Detroit’s<br />

Henry Ford Hospital (which bears <strong>the</strong> name of Mr. Ford’s grandfa<strong>the</strong>r)<br />

opened in 1996 - The William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine<br />

- which is one of <strong>the</strong> leading sports medicine treatment and research<br />

in<strong>st</strong>itutions in <strong>the</strong> country.<br />

He is married to <strong>the</strong> former Martha Fire<strong>st</strong>one of Akron, Ohio.<br />

They are <strong>the</strong> parents of three daughters— Martha, Sheila and<br />

Elizabeth— and a son, William Clay Ford, Jr., who serves as <strong>the</strong><br />

Lions Vice Chairman, in addition to his role as Executive Chairman<br />

of Ford Motor Company.

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