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Steve Spurrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve Spurrier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve Spurrier
Spurrier in March 2007
Spurrier in March 2007
Title Head coach
College South Carolina
Sport American football
Team record 21–16
Born April 20, 1945 (1945-04-20) (age 63)
Place of birth Miami Beach, FL
Annual salary $1,750,000 [1]
Career highlights
Overall 163–56–2 (NCAA)
12–20 (NFL)
Bowls 7–7
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Championships
1996 National Championship
1989 ACC Championship
1991, 1993-1996, 2000 SEC Championships
Awards
1966 Heisman Trophy
1988, 1989 ACC Coach of the Year
1990, 1991, 1994-1996, 2005 SEC Coach of the Year
Playing career
1963-1966 Florida
Position QB
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1978
1979
1980-1982
1983-1985
1987-1989
1990-2001
2002-2003
2005-present
Florida (QB coach)
Georgia Tech (QB coach)
Duke (Assist.)
Tampa Bay Bandits
Duke
Florida
Washington Redskins
South Carolina
Steve Spurrier
Position(s):
Quarterback
Jersey #(s):
11
Born: April 20, 1945 (1945-04-20) (age 63)
Miami Beach, Florida
Career Information
Year(s): 19671976
NFL Draft: 1967 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3
College: Florida
Professional Teams

Playing career

Coaching career

Career Stats
TD-INT     40-60
Yards     6,878
QB Rating     60.1
Stats at NFL.com
Career Highlights and Awards
College Football Hall of Fame

Stephen Orr Spurrier (born April 20, 1945 in Miami Beach, Florida) is a former American football player and currently the head coach of the University of South Carolina football team. He was a two-time All-American and is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame as a player. He is well known for winning the Heisman Trophy in 1966, and for coaching the University of Florida football team to six SEC championships in the decade from 19912000 including one National Championship in 1996.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Spurrier was a multi-talented athlete in high school starring not only in football but also baseball and basketball at Science Hill High School in Johnson City, Tennessee. A strong competitor, Steve played quarterback for the University of Florida, where he won the Heisman Trophy. Steve finished his playing career at Florida with 4,848 yards passing and 36 touchdowns. At UF, Spurrier was inducted into the University of Florida Hall of Fame, the UF Athletic Hall of Fame, and Florida Blue Key. He is a brother of the Florida Alpha Omega Chapter of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.

In 1967, Spurrier was drafted during the first round by the San Francisco 49ers. Spurrier spent nine years with the 49ers before playing his last NFL season in 1976 with the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers. During his ten year career, Spurrier played in a total of 106 games, accumulating 597 completions, including 6,878 yards and 40 touchdowns, in 1,151 pass attempts.

[edit] Coaching career

[edit] Early career

After retiring from the NFL, Steve Spurrier began his coaching career as a quarterbacks coach at the University of Florida. After serving as assistant coach at Duke University and Georgia Tech, Spurrier received his first head coaching job with the Tampa Bay Bandits of the United States Football League in 1983, where he compiled a record of 35-21. The team had significant success before the league dissolved after its third season. In 1987, Spurrier became head coach of the Duke Blue Devils. There he led the team to highs it had not reached in many years, including the ACC title in 1989. Coach Spurrier received the ACC Coach of the Year award in 1988 and 1989. For giving him his first college head coaching job, Spurrier annually votes Duke at #25 on his preseason Coaches Poll ballot and on every weekly poll until they lose their first game.

[edit] Florida Gators

On December 31, 1989, Spurrier accepted the head coaching job at the University of Florida, his alma mater. Known as the "Ol' Ball Coach" or "The Visor" due to his preference for and tendency to throw it during games. Spurrier helped guide the team away from a period of scandal and captured the school's first ever Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship in 1991. The Gators won the SEC Title in 4 of the next 5 years. The 1996 season saw the team capture its first ever National Championship with a 52-20 win over Florida State in the Sugar Bowl, avenging the Gators' sole loss of the season in which Florida State beat Florida 24-21 in the regular season. However, Spurrier's finest hour as a coach may have been the game in 1997 versus undefeated and national title game-bound Florida State. Spurrier used a QB-shuttle strategy that brought Doug Johnson and Noah Brindise in and out of the game and confused the FSU defense, giving Spurrier an endless amount of counsel with both QBs without having to use time-outs. Florida upset the heavily-favored Seminoles 32-29.

Along with winning 122 games in 12 seasons at Florida, Spurrier is also credited with changing the way the SEC played offense. Spurrier employed a pass-oriented offense in contrast to the ball control, rush-oriented offenses that were traditionally found in the SEC. His innovative offensive scheme forced many in the conference to change their offensive and defensive playcalling.

Other memorable feats during Spurrier's tenure at the University of Florida 1990-2001 were:

  • Six SEC titles (1991, 1993-1996, 2000)
  • 5-time SEC Coach of the Year
  • Became the first person to have both won a Heisman Trophy and to have coached a Heisman Trophy winner (Danny Wuerffel)
  • Won at least nine games in each of his 12 seasons at Florida, one of only three coaches in major college history with that record.
  • Averaged 10 wins per season.
  • Ranked in the top 15 nationally in each of his 12 seasons at Florida, including nine Top 10 finishes, five Top 5s and an average final ranking of 6.8.
  • Spurrier's Gators appeared in the weekly polls 202 of a possible 203 weeks, including each of his last 202 consecutive weeks. From 1990-2001, the Gators were ranked number one in the polls 29 times, appeared in the top five for 117 weeks and among the nation's top 10 for 179 weeks.
  • Appeared in a bowl game in each of his last 11 seasons, one of only five schools with that record.
  • Spurrier is the only major college coach to win as many as 120 games in his first 12 seasons at one school (122-27-1 (.817) at Florida from 1990-2001).
  • One of only two coaches in major college history to win 10 or more games in six consecutive seasons (1993-98).

Under his leadership, the Gator offense became the only collegiate unit to score at least 500 points, including bowl games, for four straight years (1993-96) since the NCAA started keeping statistics in 1937.

Spurrier is also credited with creating the nickname "The Swamp" for Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, the Gators' home field.

When signing with the University of Florida he insisted the artificial turf in the stadium be replaced with grass. The Swamp remains a grass field today.

Spurrier also became known for his gamesmanship while at UF, doing such things as giving much-derided Georgia coach Ray Goff the nickname of "Ray Goof" and intentionally running up the score against not only lesser teams, but also conference rivals such as UGA and Kentucky. His rivalry with Tennessee and their coach Phillip Fulmer became highly publicized, as Spurrier would often tell the media after UF wins over the Vols that "you can't spell 'Citrus' without 'UT'", a reference to the Citrus Bowl, which second-place teams in the SEC would often go to in the postseason.

On January 4, 2002, Spurrier abruptly resigned his University of Florida coaching position stating, "I simply believe that 12 years as head coach at a major university in the SEC is long enough."[2]

Before Spurrier's return to coach the Gamecocks against the Gators on November 11, 2006, his most recent visits to Gainesville were on September 2, 2006, to take part in the Gators' celebration of the 10-year anniversary of their 1996 championship season and on September 30, 2006, when he was one of the first four inductees into the Gator Football Ring of Honor, alongside Danny Wuerffel, Emmitt Smith, and Jack Youngblood. At both appearances, Spurrier received standing ovations from the crowd.[3][4]

Spurrier is known to hold a deep love for his alma mater. In April 2007, after Florida beat Ohio State's teams in both the football and basketball national championship games, Spurrier was quoted as saying "We've kind of turned Ohio State into Runner-up U., haven't we?"[1] The royal "we" in this statement was partially in reference to the Gators' recent dominance of Ohio State, as well as South Carolina's back-to-back wins over Ohio State in the Outback Bowl in 2001 and 2002.

[edit] Washington Redskins

Ten days after Spurrier resigned his position at the University of Florida, Spurrier became head coach of the NFL's Washington Redskins. Spurrier's five-year, $25 million contract with the Redskins was the most lucrative coaching contract in the history of the league at the time.[5]

In his first NFL season he put up a respectable 7-9 mark for a first-year head coach.

The defense created a modest amount of pressure and interceptions, but gave up 4.4 yards a carry and blew several leads during the season, including a 23-10 lead against the Miami Dolphins in week 12 and a 13-7 late 3rd quarter lead against Tampa Bay in week 6 that resulted in a 35-13 blowout.

One bright spot on his staff was his son, Steve Spurrier, Jr., who helped wide receivers Laveranues Coles and Rod Gardner reach their finest seasons thus far in the NFL, including Coles' only Pro Bowl appearance to date.

Another bright spot was in Week 4 of the 2003 season. Washington defeated the New England Patriots 20-17; it would be New England's last loss until Week 7 of the 2004 season. The Redskins went 5-11 in that season.

Spurrier's offensive line troubles resulted in quarterback Patrick Ramsey being one of the most sacked and hurried quarterbacks in the league. Spurrier would often bench him mid-game during a bad performance in favor of Danny Wuerffel or Shane Matthews, who both played under Spurrier at Florida. Both combined for 14 touchdowns and 12 interceptions in 15 games played. (TD/INT Wuerffel 3-6 with 7 games, Matthews 11-6 with 8 games).

Spurrier's last game as an NFL head coach was a 31-7 blowout at the hands of the Eagles. In their last three games, the Redskins were outscored 85-31 including a 27-0 loss to the Dallas Cowboys.

On December 30, 2003, Spurrier resigned as the Redskins coach.

[edit] South Carolina Gamecocks

Throughout the 2004 football season, Spurrier openly discussed coaching for a college team in the Southeast. The University of Florida had announced that they would be looking for a new coach when Spurrier's successor at Florida, Ron Zook, was fired after three seasons, but after their athletic director, Jeremy Foley, said that Spurrier would have to go through the interview process like anyone else, Spurrier removed his name from consideration to coach the Gators. Rumors began circulating that Spurrier was considering the University of South Carolina. On November 22, South Carolina coach Lou Holtz officially announced his retirement. In his speech, Holtz hinted that Spurrier would replace him. The next day, months of rumors were put to rest as Spurrier was introduced as South Carolina's new head coach, signing a seven-year deal that paid him $1.25 million per year.

In 2005, his first season at the helm, Spurrier led the South Carolina football program to several notable successes. The Gamecocks, who were not expected to have a winning season by most pundits, rattled off a five-game SEC winning streak for the first time in school history. Included among those victories were historic wins at Tennessee (16-15) -- the program's first win in Knoxville -- and against then 12th-ranked Florida (30-22), who South Carolina had not beaten since joining the SEC. Spurrier was named SEC Coach of the Year by the Associated Press, and the Gamecocks finished with a 7-5 record for the 2005 season.

Two days prior to South Carolina's 2006 season opener, Spurrier announced that he would kick off the athletics department's capital campaign with a $250,000 donation over five years. [2] He then followed with a 15-0 win over Mississippi State in Starkville, Mississippi, where he was 0-2 while coaching the Florida Gators. With the victory, he reached 150 wins for his college coaching career. On September 30, Spurrier was inducted into the Gator Football Ring of Honor in a pre-game ceremony at Gainesville.[6] Later in the season on November 11, Spurrier returned to "The Swamp" to face off against his former team, who were ranked #6 at the time. Trailing 17-16, the Gamecocks had a chance to win with a 48-yard field goal attempt on the last play of the game. However, Ryan Succop's kick was blocked as time expired in a repeat of an earlier blocked extra-point attempt. In the final game of the regular season, Spurrier led the Gamecocks to victory over in-state rival Clemson at Death Valley. Trailing 28-14 in the 3rd quarter, South Carolina scored 17 unanswered points to lead 31-28. With 8 seconds left in the game, Clemson's field goal attempt missed wide left as USC celebrated their first victory over Clemson in five years. On December 2, amid speculation he was a candidate for head coaching jobs at Miami or Alabama, Spurrier received a contract extension through 2012 and a raise from $1.25 million to $1.75 million annually. [3] Spurrier and the Gamecocks went on to defeat the Houston Cougars in the Liberty Bowl on December 29, to finish the season 8-5. All five losses were to ranked opponents. Spurrier became the first coach in USC Football history to take a South Carolina team to a bowl game in his first two seasons as head coach.

In the 2007 football season, Spurrier's third as USC head coach, the Gamecocks got off to a quick start start winning 16-12 on the road over SEC rival #11 Georgia early in the season, as well as beating then undefeated #8 Kentucky 38-23, and climbed to #6 in the National and BCS rankings. South Carolina stumbled down the stretch however, dropping their final five games. The 6-6 (3-5 SEC) season record marks the first non-winning season for Spurrier since his first season at Duke in 1987.

[edit] The Ladies Clinic

A popular tradition, started during the Sparky Woods era at USC, occurs on the last Saturday of July when the University of South Carolina athletics department hosts the annual Steve Spurrier Ladies Football Clinic at USC. Only female fans are invited to attend the clinic where both the football staff and players discuss the X's and O's to fans who want to understand the game better. The attendees get to ask the coaches and players questions and go through demonstrations in the morning session at the Colonial Center and a luncheon. All attendees get a tour of the football facilities and finish the day running onto the football field at Williams-Brice Stadium through the players' tunnel into the artificial smoke and theme music to "Also sprach Zarathustra" the same way the team does during the season. The event has been hosted by both Steve Spurrier and his wife Jerri.

[edit] Head coaching record

[edit] College

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Coaches# AP°
Duke Blue Devils (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1987 – 1989)
1987 Duke 5-6 2-5 7
1988 Duke 7-3-1 3-3-1 6
1989 Duke 8-4 6-1 1 (t) All-American Bowl
Duke: 20-13-1 11-9-1
Florida Gators (Southeastern Conference) (1990 – 2001)
1990 Florida 9-2 6-1 1 (*) Ineligible (*) (*) 13
1991 Florida 10-2 7-0 1 Sugar Bowl 8 7
1992 Florida 9-4 6-2 1 - East (t) Gator Bowl 11 10
1993 Florida 11-2 7-1 1 - East Sugar Bowl 4 5
1994 Florida 10-2-1 7-1 1 - East Sugar Bowl 7 7
1995 Florida 12-1 8-0 1 - East Fiesta Bowl 3 2
1996 Florida 12-1 8-0 1 - East Sugar Bowl 1 1
1997 Florida 10-2 6-2 2 - East Citrus Bowl 6 4
1998 Florida 10-2 7-1 2 - East Orange Bowl 6 5
1999 Florida 9-4 7-1 1 - East Citrus Bowl 14 12
2000 Florida 10-3 7-1 1 - East Sugar Bowl 11 10
2001 Florida 10-2 6-2 2 - East Orange Bowl 3 3
Florida: 122-27-1 82-12
South Carolina Gamecocks (Southeastern Conference) (2005 — present)
2005 South Carolina 7-5 5-3 2 - East Independence Bowl
2006 South Carolina 8-5 3-5 5 - East Liberty Bowl
2007 South Carolina 6-6 3-5 4 - East
South Carolina: 21-16 11-13
Total: 163-56-2
      National Championship         Conference Title         Conference Division Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches Poll of the season.
  • (*)The 1990 Florida team was on probation and ineligible to win the conference title, to be selected to a bowl, or to be selected in the coaches poll.

[edit] National Football League

Team Year Regular Season Post Season
Won Lost Ties Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
WAS 2002 7 9 0 .438 3rd in NFC East - - - -
WAS 2003 5 11 0 .313 3rd in NFC East - - - -
Total 12 20 0 .375 - - -
Overall Total 12 20 0 .375 NFL Championships (0)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Mike Garrett
Heisman Trophy Winner
1966
Succeeded by
Gary Beban
Preceded by
John Brodie
San Francisco 49ers Starting Quarterback
1974-1975
Succeeded by
Jim Plunkett
Preceded by
First QB
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Starting Quarterbacks
1976
Succeeded by
Gary Huff
Preceded by
Steve Sloan
Duke University Head Football Coach
19871989
Succeeded by
Barry Wilson
Preceded by
Gary Darnell
University of Florida Head Football Coach
19902001
Succeeded by
Ron Zook
Preceded by
Marty Schottenheimer
Washington Redskins Head Coach
20022003
Succeeded by
Joe Gibbs
Preceded by
Lou Holtz
University of South Carolina Head Football Coach
2005
Succeeded by
Current
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