FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Football Championship Subdivision discussions
Post Reply
User avatar
SACCAT
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 1437
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2009 1:27 pm
I am a fan of: Montana State

FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by SACCAT »

It is Officially 100 days till BOBCAT GOLD RUSH!!! Against Western Illinois.

Image

Jeff Choate--- Head Coach

An Idaho native who graduated from UM Western in 1993 and has spent most of his 24 seasons in coaching within a 10-hour drive of Bozeman, Choate realized his professional goal. “This is what I’ve worked my entire career for,” Choate said, “to lead a college football program.”

Choate played football at Montana-Western in Dillon, graduating with a BS degree in Secondary Education. His coaching career began with the Bulldogs in 1991-93 before he began a high school career coaching career in Idaho. He became head football and track coach at Challis High School (1994-96), was an assistant football, wrestling and baseball coach at Twin Falls High School (1996-97), and was Athletic Director and Head Football Coach at Post Falls High School (1997-2002).

The Division I chapter of Choate’s coaching career began in 2002 at Utah State, where he coached the defensive line (2002) and specials teams and safeties (2003-04). He coordinated special teams and coached safeties at Eastern Illinois in 2005-06 before returning to Idaho. Choate worked as special teams coordinator from 2006-11, also coaching running backs (2006-08) and linebackers (2009-11). He was defensive run game coordinator and linebackers coach at Washington State in 2012, and after a brief time at UTEP in the spring of 2013 moved to Florida, where he coordinated special teams and coached outside linebackers. The next season he took over special teams and defensive line duties at Washington, where he coached in 2014-15.
User avatar
dbackjon
Moderator Team
Moderator Team
Posts: 45610
Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 9:20 am
I am a fan of: Northern Arizona
A.K.A.: He/Him
Location: Scottsdale

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by dbackjon »

Sadly...



JEROME SOUERS

Image

2003 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Finalist

1999 Big Sky Conference Coach of the Year

• Head coach Jerome Souers is tied for seventh in the FCS in tenured coaches this upcoming season, as he begins his 20th year in 2017. He is the winningest coach in the Big Sky history, having received that title last season with 112 career victories.
• Last year, Souers and the Lumberjacks were picked to win the Big Sky in both preseason polls, but injuries hindered the Lumberjacks’ chances of making that prediction come true. Despite a 5-6 season, NAU had 11 players honored with all-conference accolades, with three picking up first team nods.
• In 2015, NAU positioned itself for a run at the conference crown in the final game, but it came up just short finishing 7-4, 5-3 in Big Sky play and just narrowly missing a spot in the FCS Playoffs.
• With a new offensive scheme in place, Souers became the Big Sky’s all-time leader in conference wins with 72. The Lumberjacks averaged 50.8 points per game at home, never scored less than 41 points, and went undefeated at the Walkup Skydome in regular season play for the second time in three years.
• NAU had four players earn All-American accolades, while 14 players earned a total of 15 All-Big Sky honors. The Lumberjacks had six first team selections, while Cookus went on to become the FCS STATS Freshman Player of the Year and the Jerry Rice Award winner. Cookus finished fifth in national offensive player of the year voting, as he was the only freshman on the final ballot.
• In Souers’ 17th season with the Lumberjacks, he earned career win No. 100 on November 8, 2014 in a 23-21 defeat over UC Davis at home. Souers became the second coach in Big Sky history to amass 100 victories while coaching in the league.
• Souers, the longest tenured football coach in the history of NAU Football, became the 15th active FCS coach to win 100 games at his current institution.
:thumb:
User avatar
Silenoz
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 3848
Joined: Fri Nov 13, 2009 10:10 am
I am a fan of: Montana

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by Silenoz »

Coach Choade. The ego of and hubris of a Bobby Hauck, but with losing records


I'll go with the Cats in this one
User avatar
SACCAT
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 1437
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2009 1:27 pm
I am a fan of: Montana State

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by SACCAT »

Silenoz wrote:Coach Choade. The ego of and hubris of a Bobby Hauck, but with losing records


I'll go with the Cats in this one
The wins will come...We are by far the best team that has ever put cleats on feets. Now Choate has his players, so we can't be beats...
User avatar
Gil Dobie
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 30939
Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:45 pm
I am a fan of: Norse Dakota State
Location: Historic Leduc Estate

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by Gil Dobie »

Image

Chris Klieman
Head Coach

* AFCA Board of Trustees 2018-present
* 2017 Bruce Craddock MVFC Coach of the Year
* 2014, 2016, 2017 Eddie Robinson Award Finalist
* 2014 Rawlings Football/American Football Monthly FCS Coach of the Year
* 2012 Football Scoop FCS Coordinator of the Year

Chris Klieman has won four conference championships and three national championships in his first four years as the head football coach at North Dakota State. He has a 54-6 record at NDSU since 2014 while finishing 7-1 atop the Missouri Valley Football Conference all four years.

Klieman has been part of all six FCS national championship teams in his seven years since coming to NDSU in 2011 as the defensive backs coach. He was the defensive coordinator in 2012 and 2013 and was elevated to head coach in 2014.

After winning an unprecedented five consecutive national championships from 2011 to 2015, the Bison bounced back from a semifinal loss in 2016 to win another national title in 2017. Klieman was named the Bruce Craddock MVFC Coach of the Year in 2017 after leading NDSU to its third outright league crown.

Klieman signed a six-year contract effective January 2016 that will keep him at North Dakota State through the 2021 football season. He was elected to the American Football Coaches Association Board of Trustees in 2018.

North Dakota State didn't skip a beat in Klieman's first year despite losing 23 seniors and welcoming seven new assistant coaches. The Bison scored 34 unanswered points to beat Big 12 member Iowa State in the season opener as part of an FCS-record 33-game winning streak that extended into November.

NDSU replaced seven starters on defense in 2015 and won eight straight games under freshman quarterback Easton Stick after a midseason injury to senior starter Carson Wentz. The Bison defense continually improved from a season-opening loss at Montana and held four playoff opponents to just 217 yards and nine points per game.

The Bison went 12-2 against the toughest schedule in school history in 2016, beating two Top 10 non-conference opponents at home and rallying for a 23-21 win over the 11th-ranked Iowa Hawkeyes. NDSU faced 10 nationally ranked opponents and earned a No. 1 overall seed for the FCS playoffs before falling in the FCS semifinals.

Klieman credits NDSU’s administration and community support for their role in keeping North Dakota State among the best college football programs in Division I. NDSU offers full cost of attendance with its scholarships and recently completed renovations of the team’s locker room and strength training facilities.

NDSU has also attracted and retained top assistant coaches providing great continuity during Klieman’s tenure. Since hiring his first staff in January 2014, only two of Klieman’s assistant coaches have left NDSU and both took jobs with Football Bowl Subdivision teams.

North Dakota State is 33-5 against FCS Top 25 teams under Klieman. NDSU has had 21 players named to All-America teams, including Buck Buchanan Award-winning defensive end Kyle Emanuel, and five CoSIDA Academic All-America® selections.

A three-time finalist for the STATS FCS Eddie Robinson Award presented to the FCS Coach of the Year, Klieman was named the 2014 Rawlings Football/American Football Monthly FCS Coach of the Year. His 9-0 start in 2014 was the best by any first-year head coach in NDSU and Missouri Valley Football Conference history.

Klieman came to NDSU following a nine-year stay at Northern Iowa where he was the defensive coordinator, co-defensive coordinator and secondary coach from 2006-10 under head coach Mark Farley and 1991-93 under head coach Terry Allen.

North Dakota State led the nation in scoring defense each of Klieman's three years on NDSU’s defensive staff, including a low of 11.3 points per game in 2013. He was named the 2012 Football Scoop FCS Coordinator of the Year and coached a two-time Buck Buchanan Award finalist in cornerback Marcus Williams, a four-year NFL veteran.

NDSU is Klieman's second head coaching job. He was the head coach for one season at Division III member Loras College where he went 3-7 in an injury-plagued 2005 season. He had been the defensive coordinator at Loras the previous three seasons and transformed the Duhawks into one of the Iowa Conference's most feared defensive units. Klieman took Loras from ninth in the league in defense to leading the league in rushing defense, passing defense and total defense.

A native of Waterloo, Iowa, he was inducted into Columbus Catholic High School’s inaugural Athletic Hall of Fame class in 2017 and was a 2016 inductee of the Waterloo Optimist Club’s Baseball Hall of Fame.

Klieman was a three-time All-Gateway Conference defensive back at Northern Iowa and a four-year letterwinner from 1986-90. He graduated from UNI in 1990 with a bachelor's degree in health education and earned a master's degree in physical education from UNI in 1992.

Following his playing career, Klieman was an assistant coach for the Panthers from 1991-93. He also had assistant coaching stints at Western Illinois (1994-96), Kansas (1997), Missouri State (1999) and Loras (2002-04).

Klieman and his wife, Rhonda, are the parents of two sons, Devin and Colby, and one daughter, Haley.

Year Team Position Overall Conference NCAA Playoffs
1991 Northern Iowa Graduate Assistant
1992 Northern Iowa Graduate Assistant
1993 Northern Iowa Assistant Coach
1994 Western Illinois Assistant Coach
1995 Western Illinois Assistant Coach
1996 Western Illinois Assistant Coach
1997 Kansas Graduate Assistant
1999 Missouri State Assistant Coach
2002 Loras Defensive Coordinator
2003 Loras Defensive Coordinator
2004 Loras Defensive Coordinator
2005 Loras Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator
2006 Northern Iowa Assistant Coach
2007 Northern Iowa Assistant Coach
2008 Northern Iowa Co-Defensive Coordinator
2009 Northern Iowa Defensive Coordinator
2010 Northern Iowa Defensive Coordinator
2011 North Dakota State Assistant Coach 14-1 7-1 MVFC (1st, tie) FCS Champion
2012 North Dakota State Defensive Coordinator 14-1 7-1 MVFC (1st) FCS Champion
2013 North Dakota State Defensive Coordinator 15-0 8-0 MVFC (1st) FCS Champion
2014 North Dakota State Head Coach 15-1 7-1 MVFC (1st, tie) FCS Champion
2015 North Dakota State Head Coach 13-2 7-1 MVFC (1st, tie) FCS Champion
2016 North Dakota State Head Coach 12-2 7-1 MVFC (1st, tie) FCS Semifinalist
2017 North Dakota State Head Coach 14-1 7-1 MVFC (1st) FCS Champion
Record at NDSU: 54-6 (4 seasons)
Career Head Coaching Record: 57-13 (5 seasons)
Image
kalm
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 59305
Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2009 3:36 pm
I am a fan of: Eastern
A.K.A.: Humus The Proud
Location: Northern Palouse

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by kalm »

SACCAT wrote:It is Officially 100 days till BOBCAT GOLD RUSH!!! Against Western Illinois.

Image

Jeff Choate--- Head Coach

An Idaho native who graduated from UM Western in 1993 and has spent most of his 24 seasons in coaching within a 10-hour drive of Bozeman, Choate realized his professional goal. “This is what I’ve worked my entire career for,” Choate said, “to lead a college football program.”

Choate played football at Montana-Western in Dillon, graduating with a BS degree in Secondary Education. His coaching career began with the Bulldogs in 1991-93 before he began a high school career coaching career in Idaho. He became head football and track coach at Challis High School (1994-96), was an assistant football, wrestling and baseball coach at Twin Falls High School (1996-97), and was Athletic Director and Head Football Coach at Post Falls High School (1997-2002).

The Division I chapter of Choate’s coaching career began in 2002 at Utah State, where he coached the defensive line (2002) and specials teams and safeties (2003-04). He coordinated special teams and coached safeties at Eastern Illinois in 2005-06 before returning to Idaho. Choate worked as special teams coordinator from 2006-11, also coaching running backs (2006-08) and linebackers (2009-11). He was defensive run game coordinator and linebackers coach at Washington State in 2012, and after a brief time at UTEP in the spring of 2013 moved to Florida, where he coordinated special teams and coached outside linebackers. The next season he took over special teams and defensive line duties at Washington, where he coached in 2014-15.
Why are you guys playing down a division in your opener?
Image
Image
Image
Mvemjsunpx
Level5
Level5
Posts: 13702
Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:44 pm
I am a fan of: Montana

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by Mvemjsunpx »

Oh sure, a guy whose team plays a Thursday game starts the countdown. :roll:
User avatar
SACCAT
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 1437
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2009 1:27 pm
I am a fan of: Montana State

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by SACCAT »

Mvemjsunpx wrote:Oh sure, a guy whose team plays a Thursday game starts the countdown. :roll:
Start your own...
Mvemjsunpx
Level5
Level5
Posts: 13702
Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:44 pm
I am a fan of: Montana

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by Mvemjsunpx »

Montana HC:

Image


Bobby Hauck
1st. Season (2nd. stint—8th. season total)
53 Years Old (54 @ season start)
Montana '88 (B.A.)
UCLA '91 (M.S.)
Big Timber, MT
Big Timber HS


Overall Record (total): 95-67 (.586)
Overall Record (@ UM): 80-17 (.825)
Big Sky Record: 47-6 (.887)
FCS Playoff Record: 11-7 (.611)


Coaching Experience

DB/DL - Montana (1988-89)
Grad Assistant - UCLA (1990-92)
OLB - Northern Arizona (1993-94)
S/OLB/ST Coordinator - Colorado (1995-98)
DB/ST Coordinator - Washington (1999-02)
Head Coach - Montana (2003-09)
Head Coach - UNLV (2010-14)
ST Coordinator/Associate HC - San Diego St. (2015-17)
Head Coach - Montana (2018-present)
User avatar
BDKJMU
Level5
Level5
Posts: 27896
Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 6:59 am
I am a fan of: JMU
A.K.A.: BDKJMU
Location: Philly Burbs

Re: FYI!!! 100 days!!!

Post by BDKJMU »

Mike Houston, JMU
Image
Mike Houston was hired as James Madison University’s seventh head football coach on January 18, 2016.

In his two seasons at the helm, he has guided the Dukes to a 28-2 overall record, with back-to-back 14-1 seasons in 2016 and 2017. The 14 wins set a program record for single-season victories. JMU set a CAA- and program-record 26-game win streak between the two seasons, which ranks second all-time in FCS history.

In his first season, Houston and the Dukes won the NCAA Division I Football Championship with a 28-14 win against Youngstown State. JMU made a return trip to the national title game in 2017, falling 17-13 to North Dakota State.

In year two at JMU, Houston led the team to its first-ever undefeated and untied regular season, going 11-0, which included its second straight 8-0 Colonial Athletic Association record to earn a second straight outright championship and a program-record third consecutive CAA title. The Dukes earned the No. 1 seed for the FCS Playoffs for just the second time and earned home playoff wins against Stony Brook (26-7), Weber State (31-28) and South Dakota State (51-16) before falling in the title game to NDSU.

The Dukes led the country in scoring defense, holding teams to just 11.1 points per game. They also paced the FCS in interceptions (31), takeaways (44) and team pass efficiency defense (83.12 rating).

JMU ranked in the top 10 nationally in 14 categories, as it was also third in total defense (252.0), turnover margin (1.47), defensive touchdowns (5) and first downs (325), fourth in punt-return defense (3.33), fifth in sacks (3.4), seventh in rushing defense (90.5), eighth in fumble recoveries (13), ninth in completion percentage (64.9%) and net punting (38.77) and 10th in passing defense (161.5), third-down defense (30.1%), punt-return average (13.0) and blocked punts (2).

Eight players were voted All-Americans in 2017, including Andrew Ankrah, who was named a Consensus All-American after being tabbed to six different All-America First Teams. Ankrah won the FCS ADA Defensive Player of the Year award and finished third for the STATS FCS Buck Buchanan Award.

Joining Ankrah on the All-America list were Aaron Stinnie, Jordan Brown, Rashad Robinson, Raven Greene, Kyre Hawkins, Jahee Jackson and Harry O’Kelly. The Dukes also had 16 All-CAA honorees, which included three players garnering top-league awards. Ankrah was voted Defensive Player of the Year, John Miller tabbed Special Teams Player of the Year and Bryan Schor became JMU's first winner of the Chuck Boone Leadership and Excellence Award.

Following the season, Houston was voted state coach of the year from three organizations. He was voted Touchdown Club of Richmond Bobby Ross Coach of the Year, Virginia Sports Information Directors University Division Coach of the Year and the J. Roy Rodman Award from the Norfolk Sports Club, marking the second straight season he garnered each award. The team was also presented with its second straight ECAC Lambert FCS Division Cup.

JMU finished the 2016 season with a 14-1 record, setting a program record for wins. The Dukes won their final 12 games to end the year with the longest active win streak in all of Division I. During the regular season, Houston led JMU to a perfect 8-0 mark in Colonial Athletic Association play to clinch the outright conference title. It was the second time the Dukes went unbeaten in league play and won the CAA outright.

After going 10-1 in the regular season, JMU earned the No. 4 seed for the FCS playoffs and a first-round bye. The Dukes notched convincing victories at home against New Hampshire (55-22) and previously-unbeaten Sam Houston State (65-7) before conquering five-time defending national champion North Dakota State (27-17) in the national semifinals in Fargo, N.D. The win at NDSU ended the Bison’s 22-game playoff win streak and a string of 18 straight home playoff wins.

On Jan. 7, 2017, JMU completed its title run with a 28-14 triumph against Youngstown State in the national championship game at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas. Khalid Abdullah was named the Most Outstanding Player for the championship, and the Dukes limited a strong run team in YSU to only 21 rushing yards in the win.

Houston reeled in numerous accolades in 2016, as he was named the American Football Coaches Association FCS National Coach of the Year. He also earned AFCA Region 1 Coach of the Year for the second straight year and was voted Colonial Athletic Association Coach of the Year, marking the fifth time in his six-year head coaching career that he was tabbed his conference’s top coach. Houston reeled in a trio of state coach of the year accolades, as he was named the Bobby Ross Coach of the Year, voted VaSID Coach of the Year and was presented the J. Roy Rodman Award. He was also presented with the Bob Ford FCS Coach of the year from the Metro New York Football Writers and the Washington Metro College Coach of the Year from the DC Touchdown Club.

He coached 14 players to All-CAA status, which included Bryan Schor being named CAA Offensive Player of the Year and Rashard Davis being recognized as CAA Special Teams Player of the Year. JMU had 10 of those 14 make the All-CAA First Team, while seven of the 14 eventually became All-Americans. That list included Abdullah, Schor, Davis, Raven Greene, Mitchell Kirsch, Taylor Reynolds and Aaron Stinnie.

JMU set several conference records, including marks for scoring (700), rushing offense (4,125), total offense (7,612) and first downs (380). Nationally, JMU led the FCS in winning percentage (93.3%), completion percentage (70.8%), team pass efficiency (181.69), first downs (380), defensive interceptions (21) and punt return average (26.65).

The Dukes also ranked second in scoring (46.7), fourth in third down conversions (50%), fifth in both rushing (275.0) and turnovers gained (30), sixth in fumbles lost (4), eighth in turnover margin (1.13) and 10th in turnovers lost (13). Offensively, JMU produced 18 100-yard rushing performances from it strong rushing attack, including Abdullah, who had a team-high 11 games with more than 100 yards.

Defensively, JMU saw a drastic improvement from the previous two seasons, as it ranked 17th in scoring defense (21.2) and 30th in total defense (344.3). The Dukes allowed 7.5 fewer points per game this season and nearly 60 yards fewer per outing from 2015 to 2016. JMU forced seven more turnovers and nearly doubled its interception production, going from 11 in 2015 to a nation-leading 21 in 2016.

During conference play, JMU completed its road gauntlet with victories at Maine, New Hampshire, Richmond and Villanova. Those four teams finished second through fifth in the CAA standings and three made the postseason in UNH, UR and VU. It was JMU’s first win at New Hampshire since 2006 and the first at Villanova since 2008.

Possessing 10 years of collegiate coaching experience, including five as a head coach, Houston came to Harrisonburg after serving two years as head coach at The Citadel (2014-15). He led the Bulldogs to a 14-11 record in his two seasons and is the only coach in The Citadel's history to win a Southern Conference championship within his first two seasons.

Houston’s offense produced 27 individual 100-yard rushing performances, including a program-record 14 in 2015. The 27 100-yard rushers was a two-year record for The Citadel.

In 2015, he guided the Bulldogs to the program’s fourth winning season since 1995 with a 9-4 record and a share of the 2015 SoCon title. The Citadel boasted a conference-best +117 scoring margin, including a +100 edge during league play, and Houston went on to be named SoCon Coach of the Year and AFCA Region 2 Coach of the Year. They also defeated Southeastern Conference member South Carolina 23-22 in the regular-season finale and advanced to the second round of the FCS playoffs after upsetting ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina.

In the first-round playoff victory, Houston’s run game broke a school record with four 100-yard rushers as it piled up 524 yards on the ground, the most in a NCAA playoff game since 2012 and the second-highest in 2015 for FCS, only behind the Bulldogs’ nation-best 535 rushing yards in the season opener.

The Citadel broke school records for all-purpose yards, total offense, rushing yards and interception return yards. The Bulldogs led the nation with a school-record 515 interception return yards and five interception return touchdowns. The Citadel led the Southern and ranked second nationally with 346.9 rushing yards per game, an average of 17.21 yards per completion and just 0.62 sacks allowed per game. The Bulldogs also led the league in interceptions, tackles for loss allowed, turnovers forced, yards per rush, rushing touchdowns, punt return defense, passing touchdowns allowed, fumble recoveries, third-down defense, tackles for loss and kickoff return defense.

Four players earned All-America status and 13 garnered All-Southern Conference honors. Senior defensive lineman Mitchell Jeter was named the SoCon Defensive Player of the Year and junior defensive lineman Joe Crochet was The Citadel’s first CoSIDA First Team Academic All-American since 1989.

In his first season at the helm, he led the Bulldogs to a 5-7 record, which was tied for the second-highest win total for a first-year coach at The Citadel. Three of the Bulldogs’ losses came by a total of nine points, including two in the final seconds. The Citadel rushed for over 4,166 yards, ranking third-best in single-season program history, and their 347.2 rushing averaged led the SoCon and ranked second nationally.

Prior to The Citadel, Houston was head coach at Lenoir-Rhyne, an NCAA Division II school in the South Atlantic Conference, for three seasons. He accumulated a 29-8 record at the helm and directed the Bears to three consecutive SAC championships, a stretch that included a school-record 13 wins in his final year. Houston was named SAC Coach of the Year each season and was also the Don Hansen Super Region II Coach of the Year in 2013. In his final season at LRU, the Bears advanced to the Division II national championship game and ranked No. 2 in the final polls.

Before his elevation to head coach, Houston served as Lenoir-Rhyne's defensive coordinator and secondary coach from 2007-10. He spent the 2006 year as associate head coach and defensive coordinator at Brevard College.

Houston began his coaching career in the high school ranks. He coached for a decade at T.C. Roberson High School in Ashville, N.C., including the last five as head coach, where he went 42-18 and guided the team to its first-ever conference championship. He spent his first five seasons at T.C. Roberson as the defensive coordinator after leading the defense at Forbush High School in East Bend, N.C. in his first two years out of college.

Houston is a 1994 graduate of Mars Hill University, where he played tight end for the Lions and earned a bachelor's degree in biology. In 2014, Houston was inducted into the Franklin High School Athletic Hall of Fame.

He is married to the former Amanda Owen and they have two sons, Owen Michael and Reid Wilson.

Mike Houston Collegiate Coaching File:
James Madison – Head Coach – 2016-pres.
The Citadel – Head Coach – 2014-15
Lenoir-Rhyne (D2) – Head Coach – 2011-13
Lenoir-Rhyne (D2) – Defensive Coordinator – 2007-10
Brevard College (D2 Transitional) – Defensive Coordinator – 2006

YEAR SCHOOL POSITION RECORD CONF FINISH POSTSEASON
2011 Lenoir-Rhyne Head Coach 7-3 (6-1) Tied 1st SAC
2012 Lenoir-Rhyne Head Coach 9-3 (6-1) 1st SAC NCAA DII Second Round
2013 Lenoir-Rhyne Head Coach 13-2 (7-0) 1st SAC NCAA DII Championship Game
2014 The Citadel Head Coach 5-7 (3-4) 5th SoCon
2015 The Citadel Head Coach 9-4 (6-1) Tied 1st SoCon FCS Playoffs Second Round
2016 James Madison Head Coach 14-1 (8-0) 1st CAA NCAA Division I National Champions
2017 James Madison Head Coach 14-1 (8-0) 1st CAA NCAA Division I Championship Game
..peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard..
..But you have to go home now. We have to have peace…
..I know how you feel, but go home, and go home in peace.
JMU Football: 2022 & 2023 Sun Belt East Champions.
Post Reply