Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Son of Colts coach Tony Dungy found dead of apparent suicide

Associated Press

LUTZ, Fla. – James Dungy, the 18-year-old son of Indianapolis Colts coach Tony Dungy, was found dead of an apparent suicide early Thursday, the sheriff’s office said.

James Dungy’s girlfriend found him when she returned to the Campus Lodge Apartments at about 1:30 a.m., Hillsborough County Sheriff’s spokeswoman Debbie Carter said.

“Based on evidence at the scene, indications are that this death appears to be a suicide,” Carter said. She said an autopsy was pending.

Dungy wasn’t breathing when he was found, Carter said. A sheriff’s deputy performed CPR before an ambulance took him to University Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Tony Dungy took the team plane from Indianapolis to Tampa, Fla., where he had coached the Buccaneers from 1996 to 2001.

The Colts (13-1) travel to Seattle for a game Saturday, and team president Bill Polian said assistant head coach Jim Caldwell will take over “for however long Tony will be away, and however long he will be away is entirely up to him.”

“The thoughts and prayers of everyone in this building are with Tony and (wife) Lauren, their children and their extended family, and for the repose of James’ soul,” Polian said at a news conference at the team’s training facility in Indianapolis. “This is a tragedy for the Dungy family, and by extension for his football family here with the Colts.”

Owner Jim Irsay and Polian met with team officials and players to break the news. “It was not easy, and it was somber, to say the least,” Polian said.

“I don’t think there’s anyone here that would wish to play a football game under these circumstances, but it’s our obligation, and we’ll fulfill that obligation because that’s what Tony wants us to do,” Polian said.

The Dungys have four other children: daughters Tiara and Jade and sons Eric and Jordan. James Dungy spent his senior year at North Central High School in Indianapolis and graduated this year.

C.E. Quandt, the school’s principal, said Dungy was a personable student who never flaunted his father’s position, and had recently visited North Central. He said the death surprised and saddened everyone at the school.

“It kind of diminishes our school family,” he said.

New York Jets coach Herman Edwards, one of Dungy’s closest friends, called James a “very, very good kid.

“The whole family is good people. You know Tony, how he raised a family,” Edwards said from Jets training camp in Hempstead, N.Y. “A tragedy. I know the prayers of the National Football League go out to him and his family.”