Tommy Tuberville ▪ Sale
Tommy Tuberville
Tommy Tuberville 2011 Texas Tech Red Raiders Spring Game.jpg
Tuberville during the 2011 Texas Tech Red Raiders Spring Game
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Head coach
Team Cincinnati
Conference The American
Record 0–0
Annual salary $2.2 million
Biographical details
Born (1954-09-18) September 18, 1954 (age 58)
Camden, Arkansas
Playing career
1972–1975 Southern Arkansas
Position(s) Safety
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1980–1984
1986–1993
1994
1995–1998
1999–2008
2010–2012
2013–present
Arkansas State (DE/LB)
Miami (FL) (assistant)
Texas A&M (DC)
Ole Miss
Auburn
Texas Tech
Cincinnati
Head coaching record
Overall 130–77
Bowls 7–3
Statistics
College Football Data Warehouse
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 SEC Championship (2004)
5 SEC Western Division Titles (2000-2002, 2004-2005)
Awards
AFCA Coach of the Year (2004)
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award (2004)
Sporting News College Football COY (2004)
Walter Camp Coach of the Year (2004)
2x SEC Coach of the Year (1997, 2004)

Thomas Hawley Tuberville (born September 18, 1954) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently the head football coach at the University of Cincinnati, a position he accepted on December 8, 2012. Tuberville served as the head football coach at the University of Mississippi from 1995 to 1998, at Auburn University from 1999 until 2008, and at Texas Tech University from 2010 to 2012.

Tuberville was the 2004 recipient of the Walter Camp and Bear Bryant Coach of the Year awards after Auburn's 13–0 season, in which his team won the Southeastern Conference title and the Sugar Bowl, but was left out of the BCS National Championship Game. Tuberville earned his 100th career win on October 6, 2007, in a 35–7 victory over Vanderbilt. He is the only coach in Auburn football history to beat in-state rival Alabama six consecutive times.

In 2011, Tuberville was elected second vice president of the American Football Coaches Association. According to AFCA tradition, he will move up to first vice president in 2012 and president in 2013.

Early years[edit]

Tuberville was born and raised in Camden, Arkansas. He graduated from Harmony Grove High School in Camden in 1972. He received a B.S. degree in physical education from Southern Arkansas University in 1976.

Coaching career[edit]

Early career[edit]

Tuberville coached at Hermitage High School in Arkansas to begin his career. Tuberville was an assistant coach at Arkansas State University. He then went through the ranks at the University of Miami, beginning as graduate assistant and ending as defensive coordinator in 1993 and winning the national championship three times during his tenure there (1986–1994). In 1994, Tuberville replaced Bob Davie as defensive coordinator under R. C. Slocum at Texas A&M University. The Aggies went 10–0–1 that season.

Ole Miss[edit]

Tuberville got his first collegiate head coaching job in 1994 at the University of Mississippi. He took over a Rebel team under severe NCAA scholarship sanctions and was named the SEC Coach of the Year in 1997 by the AP. During his tenure, he acquired the nickname "The Riverboat Gambler" for his aggressive play calling, particularly on 4th down. While at Mississippi Tuberville made the statement, "They’ll have to carry me out of here in a pine box," in reference to not leaving to coach at another school. Two days after he made that statement, it was announced that he was departing for Auburn.

Auburn[edit]

He left Mississippi following the 1998 regular season to take the head coaching job at Auburn University. During his tenure at Auburn, Tuberville guided the Tigers to the top of the SEC standings, leading the Tigers to an SEC Championship and the Western Division title in 2004. Under his direction, the Tigers made eight consecutive bowl appearances including five New Year's Day bowl berths.

The Auburn Tigers were a perfect 13–0 in 2004 including the SEC title and a win over Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl. Tuberville received Coach of the Year awards from the Associated Press, the American Football Coaches Association, the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association and the Walter Camp Football Foundation.

In 2005, despite losing the entire starting backfield from the unbeaten 2004 team to the first round of the NFL Draft, Tuberville led Auburn to a 9–3 record, finishing the regular season with victories over rivals Georgia and Alabama.

Under Tuberville, Auburn had a winning record against its biggest rival, Alabama (7–3), and was tied with its next two most significant rivals, Georgia (5–5) and LSU (5–5). He led Auburn to 6 straight victories over in-state rival Alabama, the longest win streak in this rivalry since 1982, which was the year Auburn broke Alabama's 9-year winning streak.

Tuberville also established himself as one of the best big game coaches in college football, winning 9 of their last 15 games against Top 10 opponents (since the start of the 2004 season). In 2006, his Tigers recorded victories over two Top 5 teams who later played in BCS bowls, including eventual BCS Champion Florida. Tuberville had a 5–2 career record versus Top 5 teams, including three wins versus Florida. However, Tuberville developed a reputation for losing games where he clearly had the better team. Examples include a humbling 24-point loss to a then 4–5 Alabama team in 2001, and a loss to Vanderbilt-the first time Auburn lost to the Commodores in over five decades-and Arkansas in 2008. In fact, after dropping three straight SEC games in 2003, Auburn booster Bobby Lowder, along with Auburn's President Walker and Athletic Director Housel, contacted then Louisville Head Coach Bobby Petrino to gauge his interest in taking the Auburn job, if Tuberville was fired. The press found out about the meeting, which occurred just prior to the 2003 Alabama game, and the episode has since been referred to as 'JetGate'.

Tuberville coached 19 players who were selected in the NFL draft, including four first round picks in 2004, with several others signing as free agents. He coached 8 All-Americans and a Thorpe Award winner (Carlos Rogers). Thirty-four players under Tuberville were named to All-SEC (First Team). Eighteen players were named All-SEC freshman. His players were named SEC player of the week 46 times. He also had 2 SEC players of the year and one SEC Championship game MVP.

Tuberville fired Tony Franklin as the offensive coordinator of Auburn on October 8, 2008. After the 2008 season, with a 5–7 record highlighted by losses to Vanderbilt, West Virginia, and a final 36–0 loss to Alabama, he resigned from Auburn. Auburn athletic director Jay Jacobs claimed that Tuberville voluntarily resigned. Jacobs added: "To say the least, I was a little shocked. But after three times of asking him would he change his mind, he convinced me that the best thing for him and his family and for this football program was for him to possibly take a year off and take a step back." With his departure, Tuberville will be paid a pro-rated buyout of $5.1 million. The payments include $3 million within 30 days of his resignation date and the remaining amount within a year later.

Following his departure from Auburn, during the 2009 football season, Tuberville worked as an analyst for Buster Sports and ESPN, discussing the SEC and the Top 25 on various television shows and podcasts. He also appears with a cameo in The Blind Side.

In 2012 Tuberville and John Stroud, partners in investment firm TS Capital Partners LLC, were sued by seven plaintiffs in United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama for alleged failure to file tax returns and for falsifying documents and co-mingling investors' funds during Tuberville's time at Auburn University. Through attorney at law Vic Hayslip of Birmingham, Alabama, Tuberville denied the allegations and promised to defend "vigorously" against them.

Texas Tech[edit]

On December 31, 2009, Tuberville expressed interest in becoming the head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders football team. The position was left open after the university fired Mike Leach. On January 9, 2010, Tuberville was named head coach and was introduced at a press conference on Sunday, January 10, 2010. On January 1, 2011, Tuberville became the second head coach in Texas Tech football history to win a bowl game in his first season-an accomplishment unmatched since DeWitt Weaver's first season in 1951/52.

On January 18, 2011, Texas Tech announced that Tuberville received a one-year contract extension and a $500,000 per year raise in salary. The extension and raise gave Tuberville a $2 million per-year salary through the 2015 season. At the beginning of Tuberville's first year at Texas Tech, season ticket sales increased from the previous record of 30,092 to 46,546. Additionally, Tuberville is responsible for the highest-rated recruiting class in Texas Tech history, securing the nationally 18th-ranked recruiting class in 2011 according to Rivals.com and the 14th best in the country according to Scout.com.

On November 10, 2012, during a game against the Kansas Jayhawks, Tuberville became involved in a dispute with graduate assistant Kevin Oliver. Tuberville touched him and knocked off both Oliver's hat and his headset. After the game, Tuberville initially explained the incident by stating that he was aiming for Oliver's shirt in an attempt to pull him off the field. Two days later in his weekly press conference Tuberville apologized, citing his desire to set a better example for his two sons, one of them being on the team.

Although Tuberville continued to run Leach's wide-open "Air Raid" spread offense, he was never really embraced by a fan base still smarting over the popular Leach's ouster. Tuberville left Texas Tech with an overall record of 20–17 and 9–17 in Big 12 conference play. Texas Tech Athletic Director Kirby Hocutt revealed that Tuberville had assured him that he was committed to Texas Tech, however Tuberville then left for Cincinnati the very next day. Additionally, Tuberville reportedly left two potential Texas Tech recruits at a restaurant for a dinner he had invited them to. He left the restaurant and did not return after receiving a phone call that revealed he had got the job at Cincinnati.

Cincinnati[edit]

On December 8, 2012, Tuberville resigned as head coach at Texas Tech in order to accept the same position at Cincinnati with a $2.2 million contract. Cincinnati's athletic director, Whit Babcock, had previously worked with Tuberville at Auburn; the two have been friends for several years. Tuberville's came only a day after he promised Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt that he would return to Texas Tech for the 2013 season. On December 9 an article in the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal pointed out that Cincinnati is merely 30 miles from Guilford, Indiana, home of Tuberville's wife Suzanne.

Coaching tree[edit]

Assistant coaches under Tommy Tuberville who became NCAA head coaches:

Personal life and community involvement[edit]

Tommy Tuberville
Tuberville before the 2007 Vanderbilt game, his 100th career win.

Tuberville is married to Suzanne (née Fette) of Guilford, Indiana, approximately 30 miles west of the coach's job in Cincinnati, Ohio. Suzanne and Tommy Tuberville are the parents of two sons-Tucker and Troy. In a January 2010 interview in which Tuberville discussed various aspects of his personal outlook and his life beyond coaching, he described how he and Suzanne, both teetotalers, chanced to meet in Pat O'Brien's Hurricane Bar in the French Quarter of New Orleans. The year was 1989 when Tommy was coaching defense for the University of Miami Hurricanes and Suzanne-based in Boise, Idaho, and employed by Newhouse Newspapers-was in New Orleans to work on a convention. They talked between tables for an hour, and he gave her his business card, finding her especially interesting because, although she, being from a small town in Indiana, was a fan of Bobby Knight and knew a lot about basketball, she "had no clue" about football. The Hurricanes were to play in the 1989 Sugar Bowl in the Louisiana Superdome, and Suzanne did not know what the Sugar Bowl was; thus he found her attractive.

During his time at Auburn, Tuberville participated actively in the Auburn Church of Christ and contributed time and resources to other organizations within the Auburn community including Storybook Farm, an equestrian-based program offering free therapeutic care to children with debilitating illnesses and those suffering from bereavement. Additionally, he hosted charity golf tournaments for Camp ASCAA, the Girls and Boys Club of Montgomery, the Auburn University Marching Band, and the Alabama Sheriffs' Youth Ranches.

Tommy Tuberville has indicated his other interests as "NASCAR, golf, football, hunting and fishing, . . . [and] America's military"; he is a director for Morale Entertainment, which provides National Collegiate Athletic Association for tours among deployed U.S. servicemembers.

Despite 15 years of coaching at a prominent level, Tuberville, according to an article by Jennifer Ritz in Texas Techsan, claimed in 2010 that the most high profile activity he had ever done was in 2009 between his stints at Auburn and Texas Tech, when he appeared in the Oscar-winning film The Blind Side.

Head coaching record[edit]

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches AP
Ole Miss Rebels (Southeastern Conference) (1995–1998)
1995 Ole Miss 6–5 3–5 5th (West)
1996 Ole Miss 5–6 2–6 T–5th (West)
1997 Ole Miss 8–4 4–4 T–3rd (West) W Motor City 22 22
1998 Ole Miss 6–5 3–5 4th (West) Independence*
Ole Miss: 25–20 12–20 * Bowl game coached by David Cutcliffe
Auburn Tigers (Southeastern Conference) (1999–2008)
1999 Auburn 5–6 2–6 5th (West)
2000 Auburn 9–4 6–2 1st (West) L Citrus 20 18
2001 Auburn 7–5 5–3 T–1st (West) L Peach
2002 Auburn 9–4 5–3 T–1st (West) W Citrus 16 14
2003 Auburn 8–5 5–3 3rd (West) W Music City
2004 Auburn 13–0 8–0 1st (West) W Sugar 2 2
2005 Auburn 9–3 7–1 T–1st (West) L Capital One 14 14
2006 Auburn 11–2 6–2 T–2nd (West) W Cotton 8 9
2007 Auburn 9–4 5–3 2nd (West) W Chick-fil-A 14 15
2008 Auburn 5–7 2–6 T–4th (West)
Auburn: 85–40 52–30
Texas Tech Red Raiders (Big 12 Conference) (2010–2012)
2010 Texas Tech 8–5 3–5 5th (South) W TicketCity
2011 Texas Tech 5–7 2–7 9th
2012 Texas Tech 7–5 4–5 T–5th Meineke Car Care*
Texas Tech: 20–17 9–17 * Bowl game coached by Chris Thomsen
Cincinnati Bearcats (American Athletic Conference) (2013–present)
2013 Cincinnati 0–0 0–0
Cincinnati: 0–0 0–0
Total: 130–77
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title
Indicates BCS bowl, Bowl Alliance or Bowl Coalition game. Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.
Rankings from final AP Poll.

References[edit]

  1. Peale, Cliff (Jan 2, 2013). "Cincinnati's Tommy Tuberville will make $2.2M". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved 3 January 2013. 
  2. "Montana State's Rob Ash Named 2011 AFCA President - AFCA.com-Official Site of the American Football Coaches Association". Afca.com. 2010-12-31. Retrieved 2011-03-25. 
  3. "Ole Miss won't forget old 'pine box' comments". Decatur Daily. October 26, 2007. 
  4. "Tommy Tuberville Resigns As Head Football Coach At Auburn". AuburnTigers.com. December 3, 2008. Retrieved December 8, 2012. 
  5. "Auburn AD: Tuberville's resignation a surprise". 
  6. "Blue Plate Special: Tuberville on Auburn's opener | al.com". Blog.al.com. 2009-09-05. Retrieved 2010-10-12. 
  7. Hoover, Brittany (2012-02-29). "Tuberville denies suit's claims: Ala. investment firm of coach, business partner accused of swindling customers". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. pp. A1, A6. Retrieved 2012-03-05. 
  8. "Ex-Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville expresses interest in Texas Tech Red Raiders job - ESPN". Sports.espn.go.com. 2009-12-31. Retrieved 2010-10-12. 
  9. "Source: Tommy Tuberville will be next Texas Tech Red Raiders coach", ESPN, January 9, 2010 
  10. Harland, C. W. "Pete" (2011-03-20). "Tuberville wasn't first coach to win bowl in first Tech year". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. p. A12. Retrieved 2011-03-27. 
  11. "Football Season Ticket Sales Break Record". Texas Tech Today. 2010-08-25. Retrieved 2011-04-18. 
  12. Myerberg, Paul. "Tommy Tuberville gets physical with an assistant (GIF)". USA Today. Retrieved November 11, 2012. 
  13. Schwab, Frank. "Tommy Tuberville says he was just trying to get assistant off the field when he yanked off his headset". Retrieved 14 December 2012. 
  14. Kay, Joe (2012-12-09). "Tuberville takes Cincinnati post". Advocate (Baton Rouge). p. 5C. Retrieved 2012-12-09. 
  15. Texas Tech hires Kliff Kingsbury. ESPN, 2012-12-12.
  16. Globe News
  17. Today
  18. Kosmider, Nick (December 8, 2012). "Tuberville leaves Texas Tech for Cincinnati". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved December 8, 2012. 
  19. Tommy Tuberville new Cincy coach. ESPN, 2012-12-08.
  20. Kosmidier, Nick (2012-12-09). "Cincinnati, really?: Tuberville bolts Lubbock; stuns community, team". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. pp. A1, A9. Retrieved 2012-12-13. 
  21. Ritz, Jennifer (September/October 2010), "Tommy Tuberville", Texas Techsan: The Magazine for Texas Tech Alumni 63 (05): 26 
  22. Tommy Tuberville interviewed by Don Williams, Coach Tuberville talks about motivation, family, more in Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, 2010 January 17, pp. A1, A11; see also a juxtaposed interview which more concerned Tuberville's philosophy of football coaching: Tuberville interviewed by Williams, Tuberville: 'I always thought I could do anything' in Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, 2010 January 17, pp. A1, A11 (both sites accessed 2010 January 25). Tuberville expressed a fondness for catfish but said that in west Texas he would adjust to steak.
  23. "Tuberville in ''Christian Chronicle''". Christianchronicle.org. 1995-08-20. Retrieved 2010-10-12. 
  24. "Storybook Farm - Hope on Horseback". Story-book-farm.org. Retrieved 2008-12-04. 
  25. Ritz, Jennifer (September/October 2010), "Tommy Tuberville", Texas Techsan: The Magazine for Texas Tech Alumni 63 (05): 28 
  26. Ritz, Jennifer (September/October 2010), "Tommy Tuberville", Texas Techsan: The Magazine for Texas Tech Alumni 63 (05): 29 

External links[edit]

Popular search requests

Tommy Tuberville is an object of interest for many people. For example, the people often search for Tommy Tuberville website, Tommy Tuberville blog, Tommy Tuberville online, Tommy Tuberville information, Tommy Tuberville photo, Tommy Tuberville picture, Tommy Tuberville video, Tommy Tuberville movie, Tommy Tuberville history, Tommy Tuberville news, Tommy Tuberville facts, Tommy Tuberville description, Tommy Tuberville detailed info, Tommy Tuberville features, Tommy Tuberville manual, Tommy Tuberville instructions, Tommy Tuberville comparison, Tommy Tuberville book, Tommy Tuberville story, Tommy Tuberville article, Tommy Tuberville review, Tommy Tuberville feedbacks, Tommy Tuberville selection, Tommy Tuberville data, Tommy Tuberville address, Tommy Tuberville phone number, download Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Tuberville reference, Tommy Tuberville wikipedia, Tommy Tuberville facebook, Tommy Tuberville twitter, Tommy Tuberville 2013, Tommy Tuberville 2014, Tommy Tuberville in the United States, Tommy Tuberville USA, Tommy Tuberville US, Tommy Tuberville in United Kingdom, Tommy Tuberville UK, Tommy Tuberville in Canada, Tommy Tuberville in Australia, etc.

Tommy Tuberville is also an object of commercial interest. For example, many people are interested in Tommy Tuberville offers, Tommy Tuberville buy, Tommy Tuberville sell, Tommy Tuberville sale, Tommy Tuberville discounts, discounted Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Tuberville coupon, Tommy Tuberville promo code, Tommy Tuberville order, to order Tommy Tuberville online, to buy Tommy Tuberville, how much for Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Tuberville price, Tommy Tuberville cost, Tommy Tuberville price list, Tommy Tuberville tariffs, Tommy Tuberville rates, Tommy Tuberville prices, Tommy Tuberville delivery, Tommy Tuberville store, Tommy Tuberville online store, Tommy Tuberville online shop, inexpensive Tommy Tuberville, cheap Tommy Tuberville, Tommy Tuberville for free, free Tommy Tuberville, used Tommy Tuberville, and so on.

Information source: wikipedia.org

Do you want to know more? Look at the full version of the Tommy Tuberville article.

HOT DESIGNS
Premium designs
Designs by country
Designs by U.S. state
Most popular designs
Newest, last added designs
Unique designs
Cheap, budget designs
Design super sale

DESIGNS BY THEME
Accounting, audit designs
Adult, sex designs
African designs
American, U.S. designs
Animals, birds, pets designs
Agricultural, farming designs
Architecture, building designs
Army, navy, military designs
Audio & video designs
Automobiles, car designs
Books, e-book designs
Beauty salon, SPA designs
Black, dark designs
Business, corporate designs
Charity, donation designs
Cinema, movie, film designs
Computer, hardware designs
Celebrity, star fan designs
Children, family designs
Christmas, New Year's designs
Green, St. Patrick designs
Dating, matchmaking designs
Design studio, creative designs
Educational, student designs
Electronics designs
Entertainment, fun designs
Fashion, wear designs
Finance, financial designs
Fishing & hunting designs
Flowers, floral shop designs
Food, nutrition designs
Football, soccer designs
Gambling, casino designs
Games, gaming designs
Gifts, gift designs
Halloween, carnival designs
Hotel, resort designs
Industry, industrial designs
Insurance, insurer designs
Interior, furniture designs
International designs
Internet technology designs
Jewelry, jewellery designs
Job & employment designs
Landscaping, garden designs
Law, juridical, legal designs
Love, romantic designs
Marketing designs
Media, radio, TV designs
Medicine, health care designs
Mortgage, loan designs
Music, musical designs
Night club, dancing designs
Photography, photo designs
Personal, individual designs
Politics, political designs
Real estate, realty designs
Religious, church designs
Restaurant, cafe designs
Retirement, pension designs
Science, scientific designs
Sea, ocean, river designs
Security, protection designs
Social, cultural designs
Spirit, meditational designs
Software designs
Sports, sporting designs
Telecommunication designs
Travel, vacation designs
Transport, logistic designs
Web hosting designs
Wedding, marriage designs
White, light designs

E-COMMERCE DESIGNS
Magento store designs
OpenCart store designs
PrestaShop store designs
CRE Loaded store designs
Jigoshop store designs
VirtueMart store designs
osCommerce store designs
Zen Cart store designs

CMS DESIGNS
Flash CMS designs
Joomla CMS designs
Mambo CMS designs
Drupal CMS designs
WordPress blog designs
Forum designs
phpBB forum designs
PHP-Nuke portal designs

ANIMATED WEBSITE DESIGNS
Flash CMS designs
Silverlight animated designs
Silverlight intro designs
Flash animated designs
Flash intro designs
XML Flash designs
Flash 8 animated designs
Dynamic Flash designs
Flash animated photo albums
Dynamic Swish designs
Swish animated designs
jQuery animated designs

WEBSITE DESIGNS
WebMatrix Razor designs
HTML 5 designs
Web 2.0 designs
3-color variation designs
3D, three-dimensional designs
Artwork, illustrated designs
Clean, simple designs
CSS based website designs
Full design packages
Full ready websites
Portal designs
Stretched, full screen designs
Universal, neutral designs

CORPORATE ID DESIGNS
Corporate identity sets
Logo layouts, logo designs
Logotype sets, logo packs
PowerPoint, PTT designs
Facebook themes

VIDEO, SOUND & MUSIC
Video e-cards
After Effects video intros
Special video effects
Music tracks, music loops
Stock music bank

GRAPHICS & CLIPART
Pro clipart & illustrations, $19/year
5,000+ icons by subscription
Icons, pictograms

 
Tommy Tuberville Sale - Buy now!
Super Offers
Super Offers
Custom Logo Design $149  ▪  Web Programming  ▪  ID Card Printing  ▪  Best Web Hosting  ▪  eCommerce Software  ▪  Add Your Link
© 1996-2013 MAGIA Internet StudioAboutPortfolioPhoto on DemandHostingAdvertiseSitemapPrivacyMaria Online