William Lawrence Muschamp (born August 3, 1971) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently the head coach at the University of South Carolina. He is the head coach at the University of Florida from 2011 to 2014.
Muschamp has built a reputation for his strong defense and strong attitude during play and practice. In his second season as a defensive coordinator at Auburn, Muschamp was a finalist for the 2007 Broyles Award for the most outstanding assistant coach in college football. Prior to receiving work in Florida, the University of Texas had announced that Muschamp would eventually replace Mack Brown as head coach of Longhorns and gave him the name "head coach in waiting."
Video Will Muschamp
Initial years
Muschamp was born in Rome, Georgia but grew up in Gainesville, Florida. He studied at Martha Manson Academy primary school and Oak Hall High School in Gainesville. His family moved back to Rome, where his father became headmaster at Darlington School, and where he graduated from high school. Muschamp plays soccer, basketball, baseball, and trot for Darlington Tigers.
Maps Will Muschamp
College career
Muschamp attended the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia. He walked to Georgia Bulldogs football team and played safely from 1991 to 1994. As a scholar, he was initiated into the Order of Alpha Kappa (Gamma Chapter) and also earned a place at the SEC Academic Honor Roll in 1993. He was a season captain of the defensive team senior, and played in two bowl games with the Bulldogs. The former Georgia offensive coordinator and Bulldogs midfielder Mike Bobo, who is his team mate at Muschamp, described it as "hard worker, very physical, very intense." Muschamp graduated from the University of Georgia with a bachelor's degree in 1994.
Train a career
After graduating from Georgia, Muschamp became an assistant graduate trainer at Auburn University, where he worked under the defensive coordinator Wayne Hall and Bill Oliver in 1995 and 1996. He earned his master's degree in education from Auburn in 1996, then spent one season each - in the University of West Georgia and Eastern Kentucky University as defensive back coach, before becoming a defensive coordinator at Valdosta State University in 2000.
LSU
Muschamp joined staff Nick Saban at LSU as a linebacker coach in 2001, before rising to become LSU's defense coordinator in 2002. In 2003, LSU won the BCS Championship. That season, the Muschamp defense led the nation in both defense scoring (11.0 points per game) and total defense (252.0 meters per game). The Tigers topped the SEC in every major defense category and also ranked second nationally in defensive track efficiency (rating 89.8) and third in a hasty defense (67.0 yards per game). While at LSU, Muschamp trains four All-American including Bradie James, Chad Lavalais, Corey Webster and Marcus Spears. Muschamp left LSU with Saban after the 2004 season to join the Miami Dolphins staff as assistant head coach and defensive coordinator.
Miami Dolphins
As an assistant head/defense coach of the Miami Dolphins, Muschamp, along with defensive co-ordinator Richard Smith, oversees the defense that ranks fifteenth in total defense in the NFL. The Dolphins allow 19.8 points per game and 317.4 total yards per game during the 2005 NFL season. The unit also ranks second in the NFL with 49 quarterback sacks.
Auburn
When the Auburn defense co-ordinator position became available in January 2006, Muschamp took the opportunity to return to a college game. In 2006, Muschamp's first season in Auburn, the defense finished seventh among the Division I-FBS NCAA teams in defense, leaving just 21 goals. In 2007, Auburn led the SEC in defense scoring and finished in the top 10 in four defensive categories (ranked 7th nationally in efficiency and sixth nationally in total defense, passing defense and defense scores among the NCAA Division I-FBS teams).
Texas
On January 3, 2008, Muschamp interviewed for an empty co-defensive coordinator job for the University of Texas. The next day, he resigned from Auburn to accept a position with Texas. Muschamp is scheduled to receive a raise to $ 425,000 per year on a two-year, no-purchase contract, at Auburn for 2008, which earned him the highest-paid assistant coach at the SEC. Muschamp received a contract with a $ 425,000 annual salary in Texas, making him the highest paid coach assistant in Big 12.
On November 18, 2008, the University of Texas announced Muschamp would replace Brown whenever he retired. They agreed in principle to increase Muschamp's salary to $ 900,000. There is no set schedule for Brown's departure, and Brown and UT say they expect Brown to stay long. Brown is fifty-nine years under contract as head coach until 2016. After retiring Brown, Muschamp is scheduled to earn a five-year contract as head coach.
In announcing the move, the University of Texas noted, "The Longhorn Muschamp defense leads the top 12 in a hasty defense (82.5 ypg/25 NCAA) and defense score (19.5 ppg/25 NCAA).The UT ranks second national with four sacks per game. The Horns have held off all of their top 12 opponents below their season average score and limit six enemies to 14 points or less. "The Director of Athletics UT DeLoss Dodds said," With the landscape in college football and all changes across the country, I've seen this over the last few years.When it does not work, you have to go outside and make changes.All goes well here, it works, so it is best to be prepared to build from within and that is what we Mack has given extraordinary leadership and continues to improve our soccer program to the highest level of people in the country We hope he stays for a long time and he will be our coach for as long as he wants, but this convinces us that when the time comes, we have the right people to step into that position and continue to build the great things we are finishing. "
Prior to this announcement, Muschamp had been mentioned in associations with coaching head jobs in Clemson, Tennessee, Washington, and Auburn. He had planned an interview next week with Clemson but as a result of this deal decided to wait his turn in Texas, saying, "This is a special place I think it is the 'elite job' in this country." American-Statesman Austin columnist Kirk Bohls estimates that this will be good for the program: "The rise of Muschamp conveys to fans and recruitment that the values ââof Texas have become one of the elite programs in the country and want to be maintained.This smart and courageous move must bring stability of coaching, sustainable recruitment and the possibility of extended recruitment to the Southeast and a sustainable framework for success. "
Florida
On December 11, 2010, University of Florida athletics director Jeremy Foley named Muschamp to succeed Urban Meyer as the 23rd head coach of the Florida Gators football program. In his first year as head coach, Muschamp led the Gators to an overall record of 7-6 and a 3-5 record at the SEC. This is the record of the first loss conference for the Gators since 1979. In 2011, Muschamp's Gators battled for a violation, ranked 98th in total and 83rd offenses in a passing offense. Muschamp's Gators won 24-17 Gator Bowl victories over Ohio State Buckeyes playing under temporary coach Luke Fickell. The following spring, Muschamp brings the country's # 5 recruitment class according to Scout.com. However, the class lacks top offensive talent and only two offensive linemen.
In 2012, Muschamp leads the Gators into the 11-2 season with four wins over teams ranked among the top twelve BCS standings at the end of the regular season, including Texas A & M, LSU, South Carolina, and Florida State. The season also includes a near loss to non-BCS Louisiana-Lafayette schools and losses to Georgia where Muschamp's Gators did not score, costing the Gators the SEC East Division Title. The season ends with a disappointing 23-33 defeat for Louisville Cardinals at Sugar Bowl. Although Gators 2012 has a top defense, this season is mainly hampered by a lack of offensive output again. In 2012, Gators offense ranked 97th in total violations and 116 (out of 124 teams) for violations. The following spring, Muschamp brings in the country's number 7 recruitment class according to Scout.com.
It initially appears the success will continue in 2013, when the Gators start out 4-1. However, they will miss seven games in a row, losing their longest flow in recent memory. The 4-8 record is the first season of the first Gators to lose since 1979. Muschamp again lost the record in the SEC, 3-5. This makes Muschamp the first Gators coach who has two lost SEC records since the 1950s. It also ended a 22-year-old bowl streak dating back to 1991 when the Gators exited from probation. The season includes two very embarrassing defeats. The first is the homecoming loss for Vanderbilt - their first loss to the Commodores since 1988 and first at home since 1945. Muschamp's Gators also lost to FCS team, Georgia Southern, the first loss of the bottom division team in program history. Muschamp lost to his traditional rivals Georgia for a third year in a row and lost 30 points to Florida State in the final game of the season to set his record of beating Seminoles to 1-2. Gator Defense is again one of the best in the country, ranked eighth in total defense. However, Gator's offense was again ineffective, ranked 114th nationally in total violations and 107 in passing. After the season, Florida's athletic director, Jeremy Foley, takes Muschamp back for the following season. The following spring, Muschamp's Gators brought the 9th recruiting class, which trailed the other five SEC teams and rivaled Florida State.
Despite the flagging 2013 season, high hopes for Muschamp and Gators for the 2014 campaign. After losing homecoming 42-13 to Missouri, some Gator fans asked for Muschamp to be fired soon. However, Foley refused to do so and allowed Muschamp to coach the Florida-Georgia annual soccer game. Florida, a 10-point underdog came at the start of a new Trondle Harris student by throwing the ball just six times as the 428 yards rushing Giles rushed to temper the 11th-ranked Bulldogs 38-20. However, after losing home for 23-20 to South Carolina 2 weeks later on November 16, 2014, Foley announced that Muschamp will resign after the end of the 2014 regular season, citing the high rate of losses this season. Muschamp commented, "I was given every chance to finish it here and I really did not win enough games - that's the point: I'm disappointed that I did not finish it and it is my responsibility to get it done."
Return to Auburn
On December 12, 2014, a week after the end of the regular season, Muschamp became the defensive coordinator for the Auburn Tigers. He agreed to a three-year contract with a Tiger worth between $ 1.6 million and $ 1.8 million per year. This deal makes him the highest-paid defensive coordinator in college football. He became Auburn's fourth defense co-ordinator in five years and replaced Ellis Johnson, who was fired a day after the loss of 55-44 Tigers to Alabama in November of the same year.
South Carolina
On December 6, 2015, Muschamp was announced as the 34th South Carolina Gamecocks football coach. Muschamp inherited the soccer team 3-9 but will go 6-7 in his first season as head coach of Gamecocks. In his second season at the helm, Muschamp rose to 9-4, including a 26-19 win over Michigan in the Outback Bowl. The 5-3 South Carolina conference record marked the program's first winning record in a conference game since 2013 under current head coach Steve Spurrier. Muschamp's 15 wins in South Carolina tied him up with Spurrier and Joe Morrison for the most wins in their first two seasons at the helm.
Personal life
Muschamp's wife, Carol (nà © Ã
© e Davis) is from Thomaston, Georgia. They have two sons, Jackson and Whit. His brother Mike Muschamp is the head coach of football at The Lovett School in Atlanta, Georgia who leads the team to the state championship in 2013.
Head coaching record
Note
Train a tree
The well-known head coach under which Muschamp served:
- Nick Saban: LSU (2001-2004), Miami Dolphins (2005)
- Tommy Tuberville: Auburn (2006-2007)
- Mack Brown: Texas (2008-2010)
- Gus Malzahn: Auburn (2015)
Assistant under Muschamp who has been head coach:
- Charlie Weis: Kansas (2012-2014)
- And Quinn: Atlanta Falcons (2015-present)
- D. J. Durkin: Maryland (2016-present)
- Jeff Choate: Montana State (2016-present)
- Shawn Elliott: State of Georgia (2017-present)
See also
- Florida Gators
- Florida-Georgia football competition
- Georgia Bulldogs
- The History of the University of Florida
- List of Auburn University people
- List of members of Kappa Alpha Order
- List of people at the University of Georgia
- The University Athletic Association
References
Bibliography
- Florida 2012 Football Media Guide , University Athletic Association, Gainesville, Florida (2012).
External links
- South Carolina Profile
- Auburn Profile
Source of the article : Wikipedia