Mike Sanford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mike Sanford
Date of birth April 20, 1955
Sport Football
Title Head Coach
Record with Team 4-19
Overall Record 4-19
Coaching Stats College Football DataWarehouse
School as a player
1973-76 Southern Cal
Position Quarterback
Schools as a coach
2005-Present UNLV

Mike Sanford (Born April 20, 1955) is the head football coach at University of Nevada at Las Vegas. He is a graduate of the University of Southern California, where he played quarterback for the Trojans from 1973-1976.

Contents

[edit] Assistant Coaching Career

Sanford began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at USC in 1977. Since then, he has served as an assistant coach for numerous teams in the collegiate and professional ranks, including San Diego City College, The U.S. Military Academy, Virginia Military Institute, Long Beach State, Purdue, USC, Notre Dame, the San Diego Chargers and Stanford. In 2003 Urban Meyer hired Sanford as his offensive coordinator at Utah. That year, the Utes won the Mountain West Conference Championship and won the Liberty Bowl. The next year, the Utes repeated as conference champs and finished the season 12-0, including a win over Pittsburgh in the Fiesta Bowl. Sanford's offense averaged 45.3 points a game, and quarterback Alex Smith was MWC Player of the Year as well as a finalist for the Heisman Trophy. The following spring, Smith was the first overall pick in the 2005 NFL Draft, selected by the San Francisco 49ers.

[edit] UNLV

On December 6, 2004, UNLV hired Sanford as the school's ninth head coach, taking over for the legendary John Robinson. Because of his success as an assistant coach, it was hoped that Sanford would reverse the fortunes of the long-suffering Rebels' program. However, his first two years at the helm have produced just four total wins.

[edit] Head Coaching Record

TEAM YEAR WINS LOSSES Bowl Game
UNLV 2005 2 9
UNLV 2006 2 10
CAREER TOTAL 2 years 4 19

[edit] External links

Preceded by:
John Robinson
UNLV Head Football Coach
2005–Present
Succeeded by:
Current