Charlie Bradshaw (American football coach)

For the football player of the same name, see Charlie Bradshaw (American football player).
Charlie Bradshaw
Sport(s) Football
Biographical details
Born (1923-12-31)December 31, 1923
Died June 3, 1999(1999-06-03) (aged 75)
Montgomery, Alabama
Playing career
19461949 Kentucky
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
19541958 Kentucky (assistant)
19591961 Alabama (assistant)
19621968 Kentucky
1970 Texas A&M (assistant)
1971 Vanderbilt (assistant)
19761982 Troy State
Head coaching record
Overall 66686

Statistics

Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 GSC (1976)

Charlie Bradshaw (December 31, 1923 June 3, 1999) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach the University of Kentucky from 1962 to 1968 and at Troy State University, now Troy University, from 1976 to 1982, compiling a career college football record of 66686.

Coaching career

Bradshaw was an assistant coach at the University of Alabama under Bear Bryant and was on the staff that won the 1961 national championship.[1]

At Kentucky Bradshaw inherited a program that had won a championship in 1950 under Bear Bryant and done well under Blanton Collier but posted a record of 25414 (.386). Bradshaw's 1964 team was ranked #5 in the AP Poll after defeating #1 ranked Ole Miss on the road, 2721, and beating Auburn, 200, for a 30 start, but the squad finished 55 after defeating the Tennessee in its final game. Bradshaw's 1965 team defeated #10 Georgia, 2810, and appeared bound for a bowl game, being ranked in the AP top ten for four weeks in September and November of that season. Bradshaw's wins in 1965 included games at Missouri, which capped the season with a Sugar Bowl victory and #6 national ranking in the final AP Poll, an upset of another bowl-bound team from Ole Miss, and another win over the Georgia. The 1965 team was then set back when star quarterback Rick Norton suffered a broken leg. The Wildcats finished 64 and out of bowl contention. The remainder of Bradshaw's tenure at Kentucky was disappointing, although his final team did defeat a Missouri team that ended up winning the Gator Bowl and earning a #9 national ranking in the final AP Poll. The 1968 Kentucky team also defeated a ranked Oregon State team. Tackle Herschel Turner, tackle Sam Ball, halfback Rodger Bird, and quarterback Rick Norton were named first-team All Americans under Bradshaw at Kentucky.

Bradshaw was the coach in 1962 of the infamous Thin Thirty at Kentucky, the team going from 88 players when Bradshaw arrived in January of that year to just 30 by the end of the year. That season was profiled in Sports Illustrated and in a book published in August 2007, The Thin Thirty, by Shannon Ragland.

Bradshaw was the last Kentucky coach to defeat a #1 ranked team until Rich Brooks led the Wildcats to a victory over #1 ranked LSU in 2007. He was also the last Kentucky head coach to defeat the University of Tennessee twice in Knoxville, and the last Kentucky coach to post two wins against Auburn University.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Kentucky Wildcats (Southeastern Conference) (1962–1968)
1962 Kentucky 352 231 T7th
1963 Kentucky 361 051 11th
1964 Kentucky 55 42 T2nd
1965 Kentucky 64 33 T6th
1966 Kentucky 361 24 7th
1967 Kentucky 28 16 8th
1968 Kentucky 37 07 10th
Kentucky: 25414 12302
Troy State Trojans (Gulf South Conference) (1976–1982)
1976 Troy State 811 71 1st
1977 Troy State 64 62 T2nd
1978 Troy State 82 52 T3rd
1979 Troy State 631 411 2nd
1980 Troy State 82 42 3rd
1981 Troy State 37 15 6th
1982 Troy State 28 25 7th
Troy State: 41272 29181
Total: 66686
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title

References

External links

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