Jon Heacock

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Jon Heacock
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Defensive Coordinator
Safeties Coach
Team Toledo
Conference MAC
Biographical details
Born (1960-10-11) October 11, 1960
Playing career
1982 Muskingum
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1983
1984
19851987
19881989
1990
19911996
19971999
2000
20012009
20102012
2013present
Toledo (GA)
Steubenville HS (OH) (asst.)
West Liberty (assistant)
Michigan (GA)
Army (assistant)
Youngstown State (assistant)
Indiana (DC)
Youngstown State (DC)
Youngstown State
Kent State University (DC)
Purdue University (CB)
Head coaching record
Overall 6044
Statistics
College Football Data Warehouse
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 Gateway (20052006)

Jon Heacock (born October 11, 1960) is a former American football player and the currently coaching cornerbacks at Purdue University. He was the head coach at the Youngstown State University from 2001 to 2009, where he compiled a record of 6044. Heacock served as an assistant coach at Youngstown State for seven seasons (19911996, 2000) under Jim Tressel before Tressel left to assume the head coaching position at Ohio State University.

Playing career

A native of Beloit, Ohio, Heacock graduated from West Branch High School in 1979 and earned a bachelor's degree in health and physical education from Muskingum College in 1983. He participated in both football and track and field at Muskingum.

Coaching career

Assistant coach

After graduating from Muskingum in 1983, Heacock accepted a position as a graduate assistant defensive line coach at the University of Toledo. In 1984, he served on the football coaching staff at Steubenville High School, where he helped the team to an Ohio Division II State Championship. Heacock then served as the defensive coordinator, defensive line coach, and secondary coach at West Liberty University from 1985 to 1987. The next two seasons, he was a graduate assistant on Bo Schembechler's staff at the University of Michigan, where he worked with both the defensive backs and special teams during a stretch in which Michigan won two Big Ten Conference titles and the 1989 Rose Bowl. Heacock then moved on as an assistant coach at the United States Military Academy before joining the coaching staff at Youngstown State in 1991.

In his first year at Youngstown State, Heacock served as defensive backs coach as the Penguins finished 123 and won the Division I-AA national championship. During the next five seasons (19921996) he was promoted and served as the defensive coordinator. Youngstown State advanced to the I-AA title game for four consecutive years, winning in 1991 over Marshall, losing to Marshall in 1992, rebounding with a victory over Marshall 1993, and beating Boise State in 1994. Youngstown State finished 38 in 1995 and 83 in 1996, bringing the Penguins' record to 61192 during Heacock's six year stint as an assistant. Heacock left YSU for a period of three years to serve as the defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach at Indiana University. He returned to Youngstown State in 2000 as the defensive coordinator. His defense was ranked 15th in the nation in scoring allowed and the Penguins finished 93.

In 2013, Heacock left Kent State to take the Safeties Coach position at Purdue, following Darrell Hazell.[1] In 2014, Heacock returned to the MAC when he was named the defensive coordinator for Toledo.[2]

Head coach

Heacock was named Youngstown State's fifth head football coach on January 25, 2001 when Jim Tressel left to coach at Ohio State University. The Penguins finished 83 in 2005, with a 52 record in conference that earned the program its first-ever Gateway Conference title, in a tie with Northern Iowa University and Southern Illinois University. In 2006, the Penguins went 61 in the Gateway Conference to win the league title outright. For the seventh time in school history, the Penguins advanced to the NCAA semifinals, defeating foes James Madison University and Illinois State University before falling to top-ranked Appalachian State University. They finished with an 113 overall record. Heacock was named the Gateway's Bruce Craddock Coach of the Year in 2005 and 2006. He was also named the American Football Coaches Association's Division I-AA Region Four Coach of the Year in both seasons and was a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Award. On November 22, 2009, Heacock announced his resignation as head coach at Youngstown State.

Family

Heacock and his wife Trescia, a registered nurse, have two children, son Jace and daughter Adelyn.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Sports Network# USA/ESPN°
Youngstown State Penguins (Gateway/Missouri Valley Football Conference) (2001–2009)
2001 Youngstown State 83 52 T2nd 15 16
2002 Youngstown State 74 43 T3rd
2003 Youngstown State 57 25 6th
2004 Youngstown State 47 25 T5th
2005 Youngstown State 83 52 T1st 14 14
2006 Youngstown State 113 61 1st L FCS Semifinals 4
2007 Youngstown State 74 33 T3rd 16
2008 Youngstown State 48 35 T6th
2009 Youngstown State 65 44 T5th
Northwestern: 6044 3430
Total: 6044
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title

References

  1. Mike Carmin. "Where Purdue football assistants salaries rank". www.jconline.com. Gannett. Retrieved December 17, 2013. 
  2. "University of Toledo football hires Purdue safeties coach Jon Heacock". www.toledoblade.com. Toledo Blade. January 25, 2014. Retrieved January 27, 2014. 

External links

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