David Cutcliffe | |
---|---|
Sport(s) | Football |
Current position | |
Title | Head coach |
Team | Duke |
Conference | ACC |
Record | 12β24 |
Annual salary | $1.5 million/year[1] |
Biographical details | |
Born | September 16, 1954 |
Place of birth | Birmingham, Alabama |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1976β1979 1980β1981 1982 1983β1989 1990β1993 1993β1998 1998β2004 2005 2006β2007 2008βpresent |
Banks HS (AL) (assistant) Banks HS (AL) Tennessee (assistant) Tennessee (TE) Tennessee (QB) Tennessee (OC/QB) Ole Miss Notre Dame (AHC/QB) Tennessee (OC) Duke |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 54β50 (college) |
Bowls | 4β1 |
Statistics | |
College Football Data Warehouse | |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
1 SEC Western Division Title (2003) | |
Awards | |
Broyles Award (1998) SEC Coach of the Year (2003) |
David Cutcliffe (born September 16, 1954) is the head football coach of the Duke University Blue Devils. He is best known for coaching Super Bowl MVP Peyton Manning at the University of Tennessee, and Manning's younger brother and fellow Super Bowl Champion Eli at the University of Mississippi. Almost all offensive records at both schools were set during Cutcliffe's time as coach.
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Cutcliffe was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, which played a formative role in his development as a football coach.[2] He has two brothers (Charles "Paige" Cutcliffe, and Raymond Eugene "JR." Cutcliffe) and three sisters (Mary Marlyn Cutcliffe Sullivan, Margart Lynn Cutcliffe, and Elizabeth "Buff" Cutcliffe Easterly.) Cutcliffe attended Banks High School in Birmingham where he played football. He attended the University of Alabama where he worked as a student assistant on Bear Bryant's Alabama staff.
Cutcliffe's coaching career began as a student assistant to Bear Bryant at the University of Alabama. In 1976 he took a job at Banks High School where he served as an assistant and later as the head coach. In 1982, he was hired as a part time coach at the University of Tennessee. A year later, he was promoted to full time status as the tight ends and assistant offensive line coach. By 1990, Cutcliffe was coaching the position he is now well known for, quarterbacks. Cutcliffe was promoted to offensive coordinator in 1993. As coordinator, Cutcliffe helped lead the Vols to two Southeastern Conference championships and a national championship.
On December 2, 1998, Cutcliffe was hired as the head football coach at Ole Miss. Cutcliffe had success at Ole Miss, where he recruited Eli Manning, son of Ole Miss player Archie Manning, to play quarterback. In 2003, Cutcliffe tied LSU for the West Division title and a win in the Cotton Bowl Classic.
Cutcliffe was fired by Ole Miss's Athletic Director Pete Boone in December 2004 after his only losing season at Ole Miss. Boone had asked Cutcliffe to provide a detailed plan for improving the program, specifically the defense and recruiting, as well as fire some assistant coaches, but Cutcliffe refused to fire any staff members, and was subsequently fired along with his assistants.[3]
After his stint at Ole Miss, Cutcliffe was hired as the Assistant Head Coach and quarterbacks coach at Notre Dame, but health problems forced him to resign before his first season there. In 2005, he underwent successful triple-bypass surgery to correct a 99-percent blocked artery.[4] After taking a year off he returned to Knoxville to coach Tennessee again and join his sons, Chris Cutcliffe and Marcus Hilliard, then Tennessee students, on campus (his daughter, Katie Cutcliffe, is a current Tennessee student). After Cutcliffe's successor as offensive coordinator at Tennessee, Randy Sanders, resigned, Phillip Fulmer rehired Cutcliffe to replace him.
Cutcliffe led a major turnaround of the Tennessee offense during the 2006 season. Tennessee quarterback Erik Ainge ranked among the nation's top 25 passers by yardage, and Robert Meachem had the third-most receiving yards of any player.[5]
Cutcliffe was hired as the head football coach at Duke University on December 14, 2007,[6] replacing Ted Roof, who had amassed a 6β45 win-loss record (3β33 in the ACC) over four-plus years at the school. Duke has had only three winning seasons in the last 25 years and, before the 2008 season, had not beaten an ACC opponent in over three seasons.[7]
Cutcliffe immediately began a strength and conditioning program, challenging the team to collectively lose 1,000 pounds after finding the team in less than ideal physical shape.[8]
On Saturday, August 30, 2008, David Cutcliffe won his first game as Duke's head coach, defeating the James Madison Dukes 31β7, before a crowd of 32,571, the largest in Wallace Wade Stadium since 1994.[9][10] The game marked the introduction of a number of rituals that Cutcliffe hopes to turn into Duke traditions, including the Blue Devil Walk, which parades the players and coaching staff from Duke Chapel, through West Campus and past Cameron Indoor Stadium to Wallace Wade Stadium,[11] and the "Blue Devil Rock", located in the stadium tunnel and mined from the same quarry used in the construction of Duke's West Campus.[12]
In Cutcliffe's second game, Duke lost to Northwestern in a mirror image game of the previous season's matchup, twice falling short of a touchdown deep in Northwestern territory. After the home loss against Northwestern, Duke hosted Navy, prevailing 41β31. Cutcliffe next led Duke to its first ACC victory since 2004, with a 31β3 rout of Virginia.[13] This was a complete turnaround from the team's 2006 game against UVA, in which the Blue Devils were shut out 37β0 in Wallace Wade. Duke proceeded to lose to Georgia Tech and Miami before notching its first road win of the season, a 10β7 victory over SEC opponent Vanderbilt. Next, on the road at Wake Forest, Duke lost a heartbreaker in overtime, 33β30, missing what would have been a game-winning field goal at the end of regulation. This was another in a string of such painful kicking miscues for the Blue Devils, including a miss at North Carolina in the previous season. The next game, Duke went on to lose to Clemson, 31β7, before fighting to a surprisingly close 14β3 loss to powerhouse Virginia Tech and suffering a disappointing close loss to arch-rival North Carolina at season's end.
In January 2010, following Lane Kiffin's abrupt departure after just one season at the helm of the Tennessee football team, Cutcliffe quickly emerged as a leading candidate to replace Kiffin.[14] Cutcliffe, however, ultimately rebuffed Tennessee's overtures, remaining at Duke and stating, βAfter much thought and consideration, Karen and I reached the decision that Duke is the place for our family. We have both family members and lifetime friends in the Knoxville community and share a deep respect for the University of Tennessee. Our ties to the school and the Eastern Tennessee area are obvious. But before Tennesseeβs hiring process comes to a conclusion, I know that Duke University is where we want to coach.β[15] Cutcliffe's decision was widely lauded as a rare example of commitment and integrity among prominent college football coaches.[16][17]
Six quarterbacks whom Cutcliffe coached in college have gone on to play in the NFL: Heath Shuler, Peyton Manning, Eli Manning, Erik Ainge, and Thaddeus Lewis. Cutcliffe also coached Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton while Helton played quarterback at Tennessee.
Cutcliffe is married to the former Karen Oran of Harriman, Tennessee. They have four children: Marcus, Chris, Katie, and Emily.[18]
Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | Coaches# | APΒ° | ||
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Ole Miss Rebels (Southeastern Conference) (1998β2004) | |||||||||
1998 | Ole Miss | 1β0* | 0β0* | W Independence | |||||
1999 | Ole Miss | 8β4 | 4β4 | 3rd (West) | W Independence | 22 | 22 | ||
2000 | Ole Miss | 7β5 | 4β4 | 3rd (West) | L Music City | ||||
2001 | Ole Miss | 7β4 | 4β4 | 5th (West) | |||||
2002 | Ole Miss | 7β6 | 3β5 | 4th (West) | W Independence | ||||
2003 | Ole Miss | 10β3 | 7β1 | Tβ1st (West) | W Cotton | 14 | 13 | ||
2004 | Ole Miss | 4β7 | 3β5 | 3rd (West) | |||||
Ole Miss: | 44β29 | 25β23 | *coached last game of 1998, the Independence Bowl | ||||||
Duke Blue Devils (Atlantic Coast Conference) (2008βpresent) | |||||||||
2008 | Duke | 4β8 | 1β7 | 6th (Coastal) | |||||
2009 | Duke | 5β7 | 3β5 | 5th (Coastal) | |||||
2010 | Duke | 3β9 | 1β7 | Tβ5th (Coastal) | |||||
2011 | Duke | 3β9 | 1β7 | 6th (Coastal) | |||||
Duke: | 15β33 | 6β26 | |||||||
Total: | 59β62 | ||||||||
National championship Conference title Conference division title | |||||||||
#Rankings from final Coaches' Poll. Β°Rankings from final AP Poll. |
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