Long before the University of Mary had packed stands, playoff runs, and a full slate of varsity sports, it had something even more important: people who believed in what athletics could mean for a student’s whole life.
One of the most influential of those people was Father Blaine Cook.
A native of Minot, North Dakota, Fr. Cook was more than a priest on campus. He was a coach, chaplain, educator, administrator, and one of the quiet architects of student life and athletics at Mary.
Fr. Blaine’s story in Catholic education and athletics began long before he ever set foot on the UMary campus.
Not long after, he was assigned to St. Mary’s Parish in Bismarck, where he proved that his gifts went beyond the pulpit. In 1951, he coached St. Mary’s Saints to the North Dakota State Class A basketball championship, an early sign of how seriously he took the formation of young people through sports.
For Fr. Cook, coaching wasn’t separate from ministry—it was an extension of it.
Over the next several decades, Fr. Blaine played key leadership roles in Catholic education across North Dakota:
In each place, he carried a consistent vision: faith, education, and athletics can and should work together to form the whole person.
In 1977, Fr. Cook moved into a role that would bind his legacy closely to the University of Mary. For the next 10 years, he served as director of religious life and education at what was then Mary College.
Around the same time, the college’s athletic programs were beginning to take shape and grow.
For many early-era Marauders, Fr. Blaine was a steady presence: on the sideline, in the chapel, and around campus. He understood that victories and losses are fleeting, but the people you become through sport lasts a lifetime.
Fr. Cook officially retired in 1989, but his connection to Mary didn’t end there. He continued to live on campus until 1997, a quiet witness to the growth of the university and its athletics.
He passed away in 2000, but the seeds he helped plant—in student life, in athletics, and in the spiritual formation of countless students—are still bearing fruit.
For today’s Marauder student-athletes and alumni, Father Blaine Cook’s life is a powerful reminder of what makes UMary different:
As we cheer on today’s Marauders, we also stand on the shoulders of servant-leaders like Fr. Cook—men and women who saw in sports not just competition, but a path to virtue, discipline, and grace.