Legendary college football coach and Arkansas icon Frank Broyles will be remembered this week in a new documentary that showcases his accomplishments in life, on and off the field.

Arkansas associate athletic director and head of public relations Kevin Trainor served as the executive producer for the project, and he sat down with Pig Trail Nation to discuss the documentary and what Broyles meant to Arkansas.

“We really started with this project prior to coach’s passing in fact, it was voiced over the day that he passed away,” said Trainor. “We really wanted to capture some of the many legacies that Coach Broyles left behind. Many people know about his coaching career, but he really left behind a legacy contributing to Alzheimer’s caregiving. In the fourth quarter of his life, he spent time raising money, raising awareness and using his notoriety and the things he built in his professional career to advance health care and Alzheimer’s caregiving.”

Broyles meant a lot of different things to different people, and one of the major points of this film as Trainor explained, is to cover everything that Broyles was and how his passion influenced everything he did.

“It’s an opportunity to tell the many sides of coach Frank Broyles. Many people know him as the SEC Athlete of the Year at Georgia Tech, or a coach, or an administrator or a great broadcaster alongside Keith Jackson. To tell the many facets and the many ways in which he impacted people and people in this state. The way he represented this state, the way he always wore Arkansas front and center in everything that he did truly is inspirational. There’s something for everyone in this film.”

Broyles went 144–58–5 during his time as the Razorbacks’ head coach and won a national title in 1964.

The documentary is set to debut on Tuesday, Aug. 14. The following video segment was shared on YouTube by Pig Trail Nation: