List of Texas Tech Red Raiders head football coaches

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The first coach of the Red Raiders, known then as the Matadors, was Ewing Y. Freeland.

The Texas Tech Red Raiders football program is a college football team that represents Texas Tech University in the Big 12 Conference in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. The program has had 14 head coaches, and one interim head coach, since it began play during the 1925 season.

Texas Tech (then known as Texas Technological College) was known as the "Matadors" from 1925 to 1936, a name suggested by the wife of Ewing Y. Freeland, the first football coach, to reflect the influence of the Spanish Renaissance architecture on campus.[1] In 1932, Texas Tech joined the Border Intercollegiate Athletic Association. The school's short-lived Matadors moniker was replaced officially in 1937 with "Red Raiders", the nickname the team has had ever since.[1] The same year, Pete Cawthon, Texas Tech's third head coach, led the team to their first conference championship and bowl game berth, a 7–6 loss to the West Virginia Mountaineers in the Sun Bowl. Texas Tech suffered four more bowl losses, under two head coaches, before their first postseason win in the 1952 Sun Bowl, under first-year head coach DeWitt Weaver.[2] Before withdrawing from the Border Conference in 1956, the Red Raiders won nine conference championships, the most held by a Border Conference member. Weaver and his predecessor Dell Morgan each won four conference championships, a record for a Texas Tech head coach.

In 1960, Texas Tech was admitted to the Southwest Conference. The Red Raiders won two conference championships in 1976 and 1994, under head coaches Steve Sloan and Spike Dykes respectively. Texas Tech became a charter member in the South Division of the Big 12 Conference in 1996 when the Southwest Conference disbanded. During his ninth season as head coach, Mike Leach led Texas Tech to the program's first division championship in 2008. After Leach was fired at the end of the 2009 season, Ruffin McNeill was named interim head coach for the Alamo Bowl. Tommy Tuberville coached the Red Raiders from 2010 to 2012, resigning after the conclusion of the regular season. The current head coach, Kliff Kingsbury, is a former quarterback with the team. He was hired on December 12, 2012.[3]

Key

Coaches

Statistics correct as of the end of the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season
# Name Season(s) GC OW OL OT O% CW CL CT C% PW PL PT CCs DCs Notable awards
1 Ewing Y. Freeland 1925–1928 37 21 10 6 .649
2 Grady Higginbotham 1929 10 1 7 2 .200
3 Pete Cawthon 1930–1940 114 76 32 6 .693 10 1 1 .875 0 2 0 1
4 Dell Morgan 1941–1950 107 55 49 3 .528 23 3 1 .870 0 3 0 4 Border Conference Coach of the Year (1949)[6]
5 DeWitt Weaver 1951–1960 105 49 51 5 .490 20 6 3 .741 2 1 0 4 Border Conference Coach of the Year (1951, 1953)[7]
6 J. T. King 1961–1969 92 44 45 3 .495 27 35 1 .437 0 2 0 0 SWC Coach of the Year (1965)[8]
7 Jim Carlen 1970–1974 59 37 20 2 .644 20 15 0 .571 1 2 1 0 SWC Coach of the Year (1970, 1973)[9]
8 Steve Sloan 1975–1977 35 23 12 0 .657 15 8 0 .652 0 2 0 1 SWC Coach of the Year (1976)[10]
9 Rex Dockery 1977–1980 33 15 16 2 .485 10 13 1 .438 0 0 0 0 SWC Coach of the Year (1978)[11]
10 Jerry Moore 1981–1985 55 16 37 2 .309 9 29 2 .250 0 0 0 0
11 David McWilliams 1986 11 7 4 0 .636 5 3 0 .625 0 0 0 0 SWC Coach of the Year (1986)[12]
12 Spike Dykes 1986–1999 150 82 67 1 .550 57 40 1 .587 2 5 0 1 0 SWC Coach of the Year (1989, 1993, 1994)[13]
Big 12 Coach of the Year (1996)[14]
13 Mike Leach 2000–2009 127 84 43 .661 47 33 .588 5 4 0 1

Big 12 Coach of the Year (2008)
George Munger Award (2008)
Woody Hayes Award (2008)

Int Ruffin McNeill 2009 1 1 0 1.000 1 0
14 Tommy Tuberville 2010–2012 37 20 17 .541 9 17 .294 1 0 0 0
Int Chris Thomsen 2012 1 1 0 1.000 1 0
15 Kliff Kingsbury 2013–present 32 17 15 .531 8 14 .364 1 0 0 0

Notes

  1. A running total of the number of head coaches, not including interim head coaches. Interim head coaches are represented with "Int".
  2. Overtime rules in college football were introduced in 1996, making ties impossible in the period since.[4]
  3. When computing the win–loss percentage, a tie counts as half a win and half a loss.[5]
  4. 4.0 4.1 Texas Tech was not in an athletic conference from 1925 through 1931 and 1957 through 1959.
  5. Texas Tech participated as a member of the South Division in the Big 12 Conference from 1996 through 2010.

References[15]

General

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Specific
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