John Cooper (coach)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Date of birth | July 2, 1937 | |
---|---|---|
Place of birth | Knoxville, Tennessee | |
Sport | College football | |
College | The Ohio State University | |
Title | Head Coach | |
Overall Record | 192–84–6 (68.1%) | |
Coaching Stats | College Football DataWarehouse | |
School as a player | ||
1959 – 1962 | Iowa State | |
Schools as a coach | ||
1988-2000 1985-1987 1977-1984 |
The Ohio State University Arizona State University University of Tulsa |
John Cooper (born July 2, 1937 in Knoxville, Tennessee) was the head coach of the Ohio State Buckeyes college football team from 1988 to 2000.
Cooper grew up in the Knoxville suburb of Powell, Tennessee and joined the United States Army after high school. After serving for two years, he enrolled at Iowa State University where he played football for four years eventually becoming team captain and MVP.
Cooper spent time as an assistant coach at Iowa State, Oregon State, UCLA, Kansas, and Kentucky. In 1977, he was named the head football coach at the University of Tulsa, where he compiled a 57-31 record with five Missouri Valley Conference titles. He became the head coach at Arizona State in 1985 where his teams won three consecutive bowl games, including the 1987 Rose Bowl, during his three year tenure. He accepted the job as head coach at Ohio State on December 31, 1987. It is rumored that he became the front-runner for the head coaching position at Ohio State because of his 1987 Rose Bowl victory over Michigan.
During his time in Columbus, he never won an outright Big Ten championship, but shared Big Ten titles in 1993, 1996, and 1998. Unfortunately, Cooper will never be remembered for his many victories at Ohio State, but instead will be remembered for his 2-10-1 record against archrival Michigan. His most crippling losses to the Wolverines came in 1993, 1995, and 1996. In 1993, Ohio State entered the game undefeated, ranked #5, and heavily favored, only to be shutout by the Wolverines and denied their first trip to Pasadena in almost 10 years. In 1995, Ohio State lost a #2 ranking, the Big Ten title, and another shot at the Rose Bowl by losing to the Wolverines, 31-23, in Ann Arbor. In 1996, the Buckeyes smelled revenge in Columbus and were ranked #2, but failed to achieve payback. The gut-wrenching 1996 loss, which came by a 13-9 score, prevented a #2 vs. #3 matchup in the Rose Bowl against Cooper's former team, Arizona State (although Cooper's team did go to the Rose Bowl that year, and beat Arizona State to ruin any hope they had of winning or splitting the national championship). His dismal record against Michigan, coupled with a poor bowl record, a bowl-less 6-6 season in 1999, and pervasive academic and discipline problems amongst his players, led to Cooper's firing after the 2000 season. In his 13 seasons at OSU, Cooper compiled an impressive 111-43-4 won-loss record. He is currently a college football analyst for ESPN.
Cooper recruited and coached a great deal of talent that would go on to play in the National Football League, including 1995 Heisman Trophy winner Eddie George, 1996 Outland Trophy winner Orlando Pace, Alonzo Spellman, Robert Smith, Dan Wilkinson, Joey Galloway, Terry Glenn, Mike Vrabel, David Boston, Shawn Springs, Antoine Winfield, Ahmed Plummer, Na’il Diggs, Nate Clements, and Ryan Pickett.
[edit] See also
Preceded by Earle Bruce |
Ohio State University Head Football Coaches 1988-2000 |
Succeeded by Jim Tressel |
Preceded by Darryl Rogers |
Arizona State University Head Football Coaches 1985-1987 |
Succeeded by Larry Marmie |
Preceded by F.A. Dry |
Tulsa University Head Football Coaches 1977-1984 |
Succeeded by Don Morton |
Ohio State Buckeyes Head Football Coaches |
---|
Lilley • Ryder • Hickey • Edwards • Eckstorm • Hale • Sweetland • Herrnstein • Jones • Vaughn • Richards • Wilce • Willaman • Schmidt • Brown • Widdoes • Bixler • Fesler • Hayes • Bruce • Cooper • Tressel |
Arizona State Sun Devils Head Football Coaches |
---|
Irish • Schaeffer • Cooper • Wills • McCreary • Shipkey • Lavik • Howell • Walker • Coutchie • Doherty • Siemering • Smith • Devine • Kush • Owens • Rogers • Cooper • Marmie • Snyder • Koetter • Erickson |
Tulsa Golden Hurricanes Head Football Coaches |
---|
Leards • Taylor • McBirney • Allen • Evans • Medford • Smith • Schmidt • Acher • Henderson • Hurt • Benefiel • Frnka • Brothers • Witucki • B Dobbs • G Dobbs • Carillot • Gibson • Dry • Cooper • Morton • Henshaw • Rader • Burns • Kragthorpe |
Categories: College football coach stubs | 1937 births | Living people | People from Tennessee | Iowa State Cyclones football players | Iowa State Cyclones football coaches | Oregon State Beavers football coaches | UCLA Bruins football coaches | Kansas Jayhawks football coaches | Kentucky Wildcats football coaches | Tulsa Golden Hurricane football coaches | Arizona State Sun Devils football coaches | Ohio State Buckeyes football coaches | United States Army soldiers | People from Knoxville, Tennessee