Todd Dodge

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Todd Dodge

Title Head coach
College North Texas
Sport Football
Conference Sun Belt
Team record 2–10
Born July 21, 1963 (1963-07-21) (age 44)
Place of birth Flag of Texas Port Arthur, TX
Annual salary $265,000[1]
Career highlights
Overall 2–10 (College)
124–46 (High School)
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Championships
2002, 2004-06 Texas 5A state championships
Awards
2004 Schutt Sports HS Coach of the Year
2005 USA Today HS Coach of the Year
Playing career
1982-1985 Texas
Position QB
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1987
1988-1991
1992-1993
1994-1995
1996-1997
1998-1999
2000-2006
2007-present
Rockwall HS (QB/WR)
McKinney HS (OC)
North Texas (QB/WR)
Yoe HS
Newman Smith HS
Fossil Ridge HS
Carroll HS
North Texas

Todd Dodge (born July 21, 1963 in Port Arthur, Texas) is an American football coach, currently serving as the head coach at the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas for the North Texas Mean Green. Prior to collegiate career, Dodge coached high school football and became one of the most successful coaches in Texas history, winning four 5A state titles in just seven years at Southlake Carroll High School.[2]

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Dodge played quarterback at Thomas Jefferson High School in Port Arthur, Texas, under a coach who pioneered pass-happy offenses in Texas football, Ronnie Thompson. As a senior in 1980, Dodge became the first quarterback in Texas high school football history to pass for more than 3,000 yards in a season, while he led Jefferson High to the 1980 Class 5A state championship game against storied Permian High School of Odessa, Texas.

Dodge went on to play quarterback at the University of Texas at Austin under coach Fred Akers. He still ranks ninth on the UT all-time passing list (2,791 yards) and stands ninth in TD passes (18). His 359 passing yards in Texas' 44-16 win over Rice in 1985 stood as the Longhorn single-game record[3] for 13 years before James Brown broke it with a 397-yard passing day against Texas Tech in 1997. Dodge's passing effort currently ranks third on the UT single-game chart (behind Major Applewhite and Brown).

[edit] High school coaching career

I was very blessed to know when I was 17 years old that I wanted to go into coaching. And that I had the opportunity to play at the University of Texas, where I don't know that you can have a better training ground to be a coach.

—Todd Dodge[2]

Soon after graduation, Dodge pursued a coaching career at the high school level. His first stop was at Rockwall in 1987, where he coached the quarterbacks and wide receivers and helped guiding the team to a 4A state championship game appearance against West Orange-Stark. Dodge then became offensive coordinator at McKinney, where head coach Ron Poe used to field a run-oriented offense. By 1991, Poe yielded to Dodge's persuasion and agreed to try the spread offense. Dodge came up with a hybrid between the University of Houston's Run-and-Shoot, the University of Miami's three- and five-step drops and zone running game. Powered by the new high-octane offense, McKinney reached the 4A Regionals in 1991.[2]

After a two-year stint at North Texas, Dodge returned to the high school ranks and coached at three different high schools the next six seasons, turning a troubled program around each time. In 2000, he became head coach at Southlake Carroll, where coach Bob Ledbetter won 3A state championships in 1988, '92 and '93. Southlake Carroll had since moved up to Class 4A and, in 2002, had been designated a Class 5A high school. During his seven seasons at Southlake Carroll, Dodge amassed a 98–11 record overall. In 2002 the school won its first 5A state championship with a 45-14 rout over Smithson Valley. A year later, Southlake Carroll lost the championship game by one point to Katy.

Southlake Carroll obtained total superiority over Texas high school football in 2004, starting a winning streak that lasted until 2007 and tied Abilene's record streak from the 1950s. Dodge's teams won three consecutive 5A state championships during that span, as only the second team ever to do so in Texas history. Each championship squad was recognized as mythical national champions by either USA Today (2004, '06) or National Prep Poll (2004, '05), while Dodge was named “National Coach of the Year” by Schutt Sports in 2004 and by USA Today in 2005.

Dodge's highly successful “Air-Raid offense” revolutionized the style of play of Texas high school football, according to many observers.[2] During the last 35 years, Texas has evolved from almost strictly a running state to one that has produced at least one air-it-out champion annually since 1993. Three of Dodge's former quarterbacks at Southlake Carroll rank among the top 7 all-time in single season passing yardage in Texas: Chase Wasson, Chase Daniel, and Greg McElroy. After the 2006 season, Dodge left Southlake Carroll, making one of the rare jumps from high school head coaching to a FBS college football program.

[edit] High school coaching record

Season Team Wins Losses Notes
1994 Cameron Yoe 3 7
1995 Cameron Yoe 5 5
1996 Carrollton Newman Smith 4 6
1997 Carrollton Newman Smith 5 5
1998 Fort Worth Fossil Ridge 2 7
1999 Fort Worth Fossil Ridge 5 5
2000 Southlake Carroll 9 5
2001 Southlake Carroll 10 5
2002 Southlake Carroll 16 0 5A Division II state champions
2003 Southlake Carroll 15 1 lost title game 16-15 to Katy
2004 Southlake Carroll 16 0 5A Division II state champions
2005 Southlake Carroll 16 0 5A Division II state champions
2006 Southlake Carroll 16 0 5A Division I state champions
13 Total 124 46

[edit] College coaching career

Dodge was hired on December 12, 2006 to become the new head football coach at the University of North Texas, replacing former coach Darrell Dickey, who was fired on November 8 after going 3–9 in the 2006 season. Dodge had been an offensive assistant at North Texas in 1992-93 under Dennis Parker.[4] During his tenure he co-directed the Mean Green offense to a per-game average of 348 yards and 26 points. Prior the 2006 season, Dodge was contacted by Bill Parcells to join the Dallas Cowboys as tight ends coach.[5] He was also a candidate for the vacant head coaching position at Rice University in 2006, but turned down an invitation to interview for the job.

During the season, Dodge and his coaching staff faced allegations of racial bias, but were cleared after a school investigation.[6] One of the players bringing the complaint, cornerback Desmon Chatman, was suspended earlier that season by Dodge for missing a workout.

While Dodge's offense registered 24.8 points and 408.4 total yards per game and was widely praised,[7] his defensive units, directed by Ron Mendoza, gave up an FBS-worst 45.1 points per game. Soon after the season ended, Dodge chose to dismiss Mendoza.[8] He eventually hired Gary DeLoach, who spent the 2000-02 seasons as the Mean Green’s defensive coordinator, as Mendoza's replacement.[9]

[edit] College coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Coaches# AP°
North Texas Mean Green (Sun Belt Conference) (2007 — present)
2007 North Texas 2–10 1–6 7th
2008 North Texas 0–0 0–0
North Texas: 2–10 1–6
Total: 2–10
#Rankings from final Coaches Poll of the season.
°Rankings from final AP Poll of the season.

[edit] Family

Todd Dodge is married to former Elizabeth Neptune, daughter of Ebbie Neptune, longtime athletic director and football coach at Westlake High School of Austin, Texas. The couple has a son, Riley, who is playing quarterback at North Texas, and a daughter, Molly, who is an 8th grader in Carroll Independent School District.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Vito, Brett. "Striking a deal: Dodge comes to terms on five-year deal", Denton Record-Chronicle, 2006-12-14. 
  2. ^ a b c d Townsend, Brad. "Carroll's Dodge a legend in his own time", Dallas Morning News, 2006-12-16. 
  3. ^ Wade, Harless. "Texas goes to the air, beats Rice as Dodge sets school record", Dallas Morning News, 1985-10-06. 
  4. ^ Fetterman, Debbie. "UNT's Dodge draws praise as a coach", Dallas Morning News, 1992-04-23. 
  5. ^ MacMahon, Tim; Archer, Todd. "Carroll's Dodge flattered by Cowboys' interest", Dallas Morning News, 2006-02-16. 
  6. ^ Vito, Brett. "Probe clears staff", Denton Record-Chronicle, 2007-11-08. 
  7. ^ "Dodge's offense turning heads at North Texas", ESPN, 2007-09-27. 
  8. ^ Vito, Brett. "Dodge fires defensive coordinator", Denton Record-Chronicle, 2008-01-05. 
  9. ^ Vito, Brett. "DeLoach set to lead UNT defense", Denton Record-Chronicle, 2008-01-24. 

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Robert Brewer
University of Texas Quarterback
1982–1985
Succeeded by
Bret Stafford
Preceded by
Darrell Dickey
North Texas Mean Green Head Football Coach
2007–Present
Succeeded by
Current