Ricky Hunley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard "Ricky" Hunley (born November 11, 1961 in Petersburg, Virginia) has been the Linebackers coach for the NFL's Cincinnati Bengals since 2003.

Contents

[edit] Coaching Career

He started his NFL coaching career through the NFL Minority Fellowship Coaching Program in 2002 as the defensive line coach for the Washington Redskins with Steve Spurrier, where he met Marvin Lewis. He also served on the board of directors for the Black Coaches Association.

He coached at the University of Southern California (1992–93), University of Missouri (1994–2000), and University of Florida (2001).

[edit] Professional Career

Ricky went on to an NFL career with the Denver Broncos (1984–87), Phoenix Cardinals (1988), and the Los Angeles Raiders (1989–90). It is noted that Hunley was drafted by the Bengals but after failing to reach a contract agreement was traded to Denver. He was elected executive vice president of the NFL Players Association (1990–92).

[edit] College Career

From 1980–83, Hunley played linebacker at the University of Arizona. In 1982, he became the University of Arizona's first consensus All-American as a linebacker, an honor he received two consecutive years. [1]

In 1998, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame and remains the only player from the University of Arizona to be inducted.

[edit] Personal

He founded the Ricky Hunley Football Camp, a non-profit instruction center for high school boys.[2]

Hunley and his wife Camille, have two daughters, Alexis and Kenady.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
'
Cincinnati Bengals Linebackers Coach
2003-current
Succeeded by
Current Linebackers Coach