Rich Rodriguez

 
Wikipedia:

Rich Rodriguez

Rich Rodriguez
Title Head Coach
College West Virginia University
Sport Football
Team record 53-24
Born May 24 1963 (1963--) (age 44)
Place of birth Grant Town, WV
Career highlights
Overall 100-61-2
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Playing career
1981-84 WVU Mountaineers
Position Defensive back
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1988
1990-96
2001-Present
Salem
Glenville State
West Virginia

Rich Rodriguez (b. May 24, 1963 in Grant Town, West Virginia) is the current head football coach at West Virginia University. Rodriguez is the 31st head football coach of the WVU Mountaineers and is also a 1986 alumnus of the University. He is one of only a handful of coaches that are coaching the school from which they are alumni.[citation needed]

Playing career

Rodriguez graduated from North Marion High School in 1981 where he had played four sports and was an all state football and basketball player. After high school, Rodriguez attended WVU where he first walked on to the football team and later earned a scholarship under coach Don Nehlen. Playing as a defensive back, Rodriguez recorded 54 career tackles over three seasons.

Coaching career

Early Coaching Career

During the 1985-1986 season, Rodriguez served as a student assistant coach under Nehlen and graduated with a Physical Education and Safety degree. In 1986, he moved to what was then Salem College (now Salem International University) where he served as special teams coordinator and secondary coach. In 1987 he became Salem’s defensive coordinator and in 1988 took over as head coach. At 24 years old, he was the youngest college head coach in the country.

Glenville State, Tulane, and Clemson

When Salem's football program was disbanded, Rodriguez returned to WVU as a volunteer coach for the 1989 football season but left again to take over as head coach at Glenville State College. During his stay from 1990 to 1996, the team earned three consecutive West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championships and competed in the 1993 NAIA national championship. While at Glenville, Rodriguez compiled a record of 43-28-2 and was named WVIAC Coach of the Year in 1993 and 1994, NAIA National Coach of the Year in 1993, and West Virginia State College Coach of the Year in 1993 by the West Virginia Sports Writers Association.

Rodriguez left Glenville State at the end of the 1996 season to serve as assistant coach, offensive coordinator, and quarterback coach for Tulane University from 1997 to 1998, under head coach Tommy Bowden. When Bowden was hired as the head coach at Clemson University, he retained Rodriguez on his staff. Rodriguez served as the offensive coordinator and associate head coach until the end of the 2000 season.

While at Tulane and Clemson, Rodriguez was renowned for his ability to mentor quarterbacks, particularly Shaun King and Woodrow Dantzler. [1]

Return to West Virginia

On November 26, 2000, WVU's athletic department announced that Rodriguez would again return to WVU, this time as head coach to replace the retiring Don Nehlen. With a contract until at least 2014, Rodriguez has brought his unique offensive style to WVU and after a disappointing first year, has led the Mountaineers to four straight winning years, three of which (2003, 2004, & 2005), the Mountaineers have won outright or shared the Big East Conference championship. Rodriguez' turn-around of the 2002 team is the greatest turn-around in Big East history with a 9-4 record,[citation needed] Big East runner-up finish, and back-to-back road wins against ranked Virginia Tech and Pitt. Rodriguez has led the team to five straight bowl appearances (the 2002 Continental Tire Bowl the 2003 and 2004 Gator Bowl, the 2005 Nokia Sugar Bowl, and the 2006 Gator Bowl). In 2003, the Mountaineers started the season 1-4, and after losing to #2 Miami 22-20, the Mountaineers posted a 6-1 Big East record and tied for the Big East championship with Miami, earning a Gator Bowl berth. In 2004, the Mountaineers posted a 8-4 record with a talented team of seniors and juniors, but were ranked as high as sixth during the regular season.

In 2005, Rodriguez and the Mountaineers won the Big East title with freshman tandem Steve Slaton and Patrick White, thus claiming the conference's automatic berth in the Bowl Championship Series (BCS), where they defeated The Georgia Bulldogs in the Nokia Sugar Bowl and a final Associated Press ranking of fifth, tying the highest in school history (other in 1988). In 2006, the highly-ranked Mountaineers ended the season 11-2, with losses to Louisville and a shocker to USF. The Mountaineers won a classic comeback in the Gator Bowl against Georgia Tech 38-35, led by Pat White without Slaton.

Rodriguez is already considered one of the greatest coaches in West Virginia history.[citation needed] Rodriguez has been credited with the first back-to-back Top 10 finishes in school history, four consecutive New Year's bowl appearances (joining USC as the only program at the time to do so), the school's first BCS bowl win, three Big East championships, eight wins over Top 25 teams, twenty-six straight weeks in the Top 25, a 30-6 record from 2005-2007, and a home-attendance average of 98% of capacity rank him among the great WVU coaches.[citation needed]

Rodriguez has been considered the pioneer/creator of the spread option offense,[2][3][4] while at Glenville State, which he has refined through his stops at Tulane, Clemson and now West Virginia. This strategy features frequent use of the shotgun formation where Rodriguez uses his quarterback, Pat White, and running back, Steve Slaton.

On December 7, 2006, Rodriguez received an offer from the University of Alabama to be the next Alabama Crimson Tide head coach. Despite reports that he had agreed in principle to coach at Alabama,[5] which Rodriguez described as totally incorrect,[6][7] on December 8, 2006, Rodriguez announced he would remain as head coach at West Virginia.[8]

Rich Rodriguez picked up his 100th career win against Syracuse as the Mountaineers beat the Orangemen 55-14.

Coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Game Bowl Opponent Outcome Rank#
Salem Tigers (WVIAC) (1988)
1988 Salem 2-8 2-5 5-T
At Salem: 2-8 2-5
Glenville State Pioneers (WVIAC) (1990 — 1996)
1990 Glenville State 1-7-1 1-5 6-T
1991 Glenville State 4-5-1 3-4 5-T
1992 Glenville State 6-4 5-2 3
1993 Glenville State 10-3 6-1 1
1994 Glenville State 8-3 5-1 1-T
1995 Glenville State 8-2 6-1 1-T
1996 Glenville State 6-4 6-1 1-T
At Glenville State: 43-28-2 32-15
West Virginia Mountaineers (Big East) (2001 — present)
2001 West Virginia 3-8 1-6 7
2002 West Virginia 9-4 6-1 2 Continental Tire Bowl Virginia L, 22-48 25
2003 West Virginia 8-5 6-1 1-T Gator Bowl Maryland L, 7-41
2004 West Virginia 8-4 4-2 1-T Gator Bowl Florida State L, 18-30
2005 West Virginia 11-1 7-0 1 Sugar Bowl Georgia W, 38-35 5
2006 West Virginia 11-2 5-2 2-T Gator Bowl Georgia Tech W, 38-35 10
2007 West Virginia 5-1 1-1
At West Virginia: 54-25 30-13
Career: 100-61-2
     National Championship          Conference Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final AP Poll of the season.


Preceded by
Don Nehlen
West Virginia Head Football Coach
2001
Succeeded by
Current

References

  1. ^ Bruce Feldman. Top QB Mentors. ESPN.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-06.
  2. ^ Lang, Arne. College Coaching Award. Retrieved on 2006-10-18.
  3. ^ Davie, Bob. Football 101: Mountaineers spread the wealth. Retrieved on 2006-10-18.
  4. ^ May, Tim. College football: Spread option remains in vogue. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  5. ^ Rapoport, Ian. "Rodriguez agrees to become Alabama's next football coach", The Birmingham News, 2006-12-07. Retrieved on 2006-12-09.  The article stated, "University of Alabama officials and West Virginia’s Rich Rodriguez have reached an agreement in principle for Rodriguez to become the Crimson Tide’s next head football coach, two sources close to the search told The Birmingham News tonight."
  6. ^ Barnhart, Tony. "Rodriguez leaves Alabama red-faced", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 2006-12-09. Retrieved on 2006-12-29. 
  7. ^ Hickman, Dave. "Rich, Alabama still talking", The Charleston Gazette, 2006-12-08. 
  8. ^ News, ESPN. "Rodriguez turns down 'Bama, will stay in Morgantown", ESPN.com, 2006-12-08. 

External links


EmoryRaneMcCroryTrenchardKrebsAndersonYeagerHillTroutChezForkumRussellLeuderEdmundsSweetlandMetzgerMcIntyreSpearsRodgersNealeTallmanGlennKernDeGrootLewisCorumCarlenBowdenCignettiNehlenRodriguez


Search unanswered questions...
Search our library...
Questions Reference
Best of the Web:

Rich Rodriguez

Some good "Rich Rodriguez" pages on the web:


ESPN Players
sports.espn.go.com
 
 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Rich Rodriguez" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rich Rodriguez" Read more

 

Mentioned in