Tim Beck | |
---|---|
Sport(s) | College football |
Current position | |
Title | Offensive Coordinator Quarterbacks Coach |
Team | Nebraska |
Conference | Big 10 |
Annual salary | $220,000[1] |
Biographical details | |
Born | March 14, 1966 |
Place of birth | Youngstown, Ohio |
Playing career | |
1984-1985 | UCF |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1988–1989 1990 1991–1992 1993–1995 1996–1997 1998 1999–2001 2002–2004 2005–2006 2007 2008–2010 2011–present |
Miramar HS (AC) Illinois State (LB/P) Kansas State (GA) Saguaro HS Missouri State (AC) Missouri State (OC) RL Turner HS Mansfield Summit HS Kansas (WR) Kansas (WR/PGC) Nebraska (RB) Nebraska (OC/QB) |
Tim Beck (March 14, 1966) is the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers football team.[2]
Contents |
Beck was born in Youngstown, Ohio on March 14, 1966, and graduated from Cardinal Mooney High School. Both current Nebraska head football coach, Bo Pelini, and his brother, Carl Pelini, who formerly served as Nebraska's defensive coordinator, also graduated from Cardinal Mooney.
Beck played for two years at Central Florida, in 1984 and 1985, and graduated from UCF in 1988 with a bachelor's degree in liberal arts.
Beck began his football coaching career as an Assistant Coach in 1988 at Miramar High School in Miramar, Florida. After two seasons, Beck advanced to the college coaching ranks by taking a position as outside linebackers coach and punters coach for the Redbirds of Illinois State. Just one year later, Beck moved to his first position at a Big 12 Conference school when he was brought into the Kansas State program as a graduate assistant by Wildcats head coach Bill Snyder. It was at Kansas State that Beck first worked with future Nebraska colleague Carl Pelini.
Following his two years at Kansas State, Beck assumed his first head coaching position in a return to the high school ranks, when he was appointed to lead the Sabercats of Saguaro High School in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Sabercats had struggled for some time prior to his arrival, its record only 5-43 in the previous five years. In his third year at Saguaro, Beck led the Sabercats football team to the 1995 Arizona divisional state championship title, the first ever in the school's entire 30-year history, while assembling a 23-4 record during his tenure.
With his first head coaching title realized, Beck returned to the college coaching ranks in 1996 by accepting an assistant coaching position at Missouri State, and was promoted to Offensive Coordinator for the 1998 season. In his one year as MSU's offensive coordinator, the Bears amassed 4,542 all-purpose offensive yards, the fourth-highest mark in the university's 91-year history.
The position of head coach called Beck back to the high school ranks in 1999 when he was hired to lead the Turner Lions in Carrollton, Texas, where he led the school to its first consecutive winning seasons and playoff appearances in 25 years, being named the district's coach of the year in 2000. Beck was then appointed to the top position at Mansfield Summit High School in Mansfield, Texas in 2002, where he was named their district coach of the year in his second season. Improving on the 2003 recognition, Beck led the Jaguars to the 2004 Texas state playoff quarterfinals and a 9-4 record, finishing the season with the highest rated defense in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area.
In 2005, Beck returned to the college football coaching arena by accepting the position of wide receivers coach at Kansas. The Jayhawks had been struggling for consistency, posting no wins in 2002, losing the bowl game in their 6-7 campaign of 2003, and missing bowl eligibility in the 4-7 season of 2004. Beck's receivers helped the 2005 Kansas team to a 7-5 record and their first bowl win since 1995. In 2006, four different Jayhawks receivers caught 24 or more passes, though the 6-6 team was not extended a bowl invitation. In 2007 Beck was also appointed as the Passing Game Coordinator at Kansas, and the season proved to be a breakthrough year for the Jayhawks. Kansas finished 12-1 with the second-best scoring offense nationally, shared the Big 12 Conference North division title with Missouri, and secured a final #7 ranking in both the AP and Coaches polls with their 24-21 win over #5 Virginia Tech in the 2008 Orange Bowl.
When Bo Pelini was named as Nebraska's 32nd head football coach for the program's turnaround 2008 season, Beck accepted the position of running backs coach for the Cornhuskers. In his first season, the Cornhuskers averaged 169.8 running yards per game, with three of the team's running backs amassing over 450 yards on the year and placing Nebraska as the leading ground yardage team of the conference's north division. 2009 saw the average fall slightly to 147.1 running yards per game, but thanks in part to Nebraska's effective defensive game this was still enough to outgain all but three of the season's opponents on the ground. RB Roy Helu Jr. recorded 1,147 yards on the year, while two Cornhusker true freshman backs secured a pair of touchdowns each for the first time since 1993.
Nebraska's 2010 ground offense has been revitalized further by the emergence of redshirt freshman QB Taylor Martinez, who is on pace after the season's first nine games to be just the third freshman quarterback in NCAA history to record over 1,000 yards on the ground, already accumulating over 900 yards on the year. Overall, Nebraska has surged into the nation's top rushing ranks with an average of 290 ground yards per game through the season's first eight games. The 451 yards accumulated against Kansas State was Nebraska's highest total in 109 games.[3]
Following Nebraska's offensive performance issues in 2010, Head Coach Bo Pelini replaced offensive coordinator Shawn Watson by promoting Beck to the top offensive spot. Beck also assumed responsibility for coaching the quarterbacks.[4]