Bob Davie (American football)

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Bob Davie
MountainWestMD-2016-0726-BobDavie.png
Davie at 2016 Mountain West Media Days
Biographical details
Born (1954-09-30) September 30, 1954 (age 69)
Sewickley, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Playing career
1973–1975 Youngstown State
Position(s) Tight end
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1977 Pittsburgh (GA)
1978–1979 Arizona (LB)
1980–1982Pittsburgh (LB)
1983–1984 Tulane (DC)
1985–1988 Texas A&M (OLB)
1989–1993Texas A&M (DC)
1994–1996 Notre Dame (DC)
1997–2001Notre Dame
2012–2019 New Mexico
Head coaching record
Overall70–88
Bowls1–4
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 MW Mountain Division (2016)

Robert Edwin Davie Jr. (born September 30, 1954) is an American former college football coach and player. He served as the head football coach at the University of Notre Dame from 1997 to 2001 and the University of New Mexico from 2012 to 2019. Davie worked for ESPN as a college football color commentator from 2002 to 2011.

Contents

Early life and playing career

Robert Edwin Davie Jr. was born in Sewickley, Pennsylvania to Robert Sr. and June. [1] [2] Davie was raised in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. As a student at Moon Area High School, Davie excelled in sports, lettering three times each in football, baseball, and basketball. During his senior year, Davie served as captain of both the football and basketball teams. The same year, his elder brother died of cancer. [1]

Davie received a football scholarship to attend the University of Arizona. After two weeks in Arizona, however, Davie became homesick and returned to Pennsylvania. He soon enrolled in nearby Youngstown State University, where he was a starting tight end for three years. [2]

Assistant coach

Following his graduation from Youngstown State in 1977, Davie took a job as a graduate assistant for the University of Pittsburgh football team, working under head coach Jackie Sherrill. [2] Davie then spent two years as an assistant coach at the University of Arizona before returning to the University of Pittsburgh for the 1980–1982 seasons. He then moved to Tulane as defensive coordinator and assistant head coach from 1983 to 1984. From 1985 to 1988, Davie served as the outside linebackers coach at Texas A&M University before serving as the school's defensive coordinator from 1989 to 1993. [1] During his stint at A&M, he helped further develop the "Wrecking Crew" defense, which, in 1991 was No. 1 in the nation in total defense. [3]

In 1994, Lou Holtz, the head coach at the University of Notre Dame, offered Davie a job as defensive coordinator, at the recommendation of Notre Dame offensive line coach Joe Moore. [3] [4] Although Davie twice turned down this job offer, after discussing the matter with his wife he agreed to work for Holtz. Under Davie, the Notre Dame defense improved, and in 1996 the team set a school record for number of sacks and allowed the lowest total yardage of any Notre Dame team since 1980. [3] In September 1995, Davie served as interim head coach when Holtz missed a game in order to have surgery. Under Davie, Notre Dame beat Vanderbilt 41–0. [3]

Head coach

In November 1996, Holtz retired from Notre Dame after eleven seasons as head coach. Notre Dame interviewed four candidates, including Gary Barnett, Tom Clements, and Davie. Davie had applied for several other head coaching jobs, and was offered a position at Purdue University. He turned down Purdue when offered the opportunity to become the next head coach at Notre Dame. Davie was the first assistant to become a head coach at Notre Dame since 1954, when Terry Brennan replaced Frank Leahy. [3]

Fans were not excited about Davie's promotion. His habit of referring to the traditions of Texas A&M University rather than those of Notre Dame alienated many fans. [4] Within months of his hiring, Davie and the university were sued by Joe Moore, who had been fired by Davie. Moore alleged that Davie had defamed him, and that his firing was a result of age discrimination. Although a judge dismissed the defamation charges, [3] the university was later found guilty of age discrimination, and Moore received a small settlement. Throughout much of the proceedings, fan sentiment had been on Moore's side, with many fans very unhappy with Davie. [5] During Davie's tenure, Notre Dame was also placed under NCAA sanctions for the first time over the actions of a booster (Kim Dunbar) who stole $1.2 million and spent it on Notre Dame players during Lou Holz time as head coach. The school was placed on probation and lost two scholarships, and the university subsequently disbanded all booster clubs. [5]

In five seasons at Notre Dame, Davie compiled a 35–25 record including three bowl games, most notably the 2001 Fiesta Bowl, a 41–9 loss to Oregon State, which was the first Bowl Championship Series game in school history. His final season included the 2001 AFCA Academic Achievement Award when the Notre Dame football team posted a 100% graduation rate.

Notre Dame's performance on the field was inconsistent from year to year during Davie's tenure. Following a 7–6 campaign in 1997 which saw Notre Dame overcome a 2–5 start, the Irish were poised for a major bowl bid with a 9–1 record going into their 1998 season finale against USC upon closing the door in the final seconds against LSU. They led 39-36 with 21 seconds left in their own territory but had to kill time for four plays due to LSU having three timeouts. On 4th down, having killed all but eight seconds, Davie instructed his quarterback Jarious Jackson to scramble around in the end zone before taking a safety. Ideally, this would have wound the clock almost to zero, but instead, Jackson suffered a blindsided hit, leading to ligament damage in his right knee. [6] Jackson did not play against the Trojans and Notre Dame, its offense rendered powerless, suffered a 10–0 loss. The team had to settle for the Gator Bowl and lost to Georgia Tech to finish 9–3. A 5–7 campaign followed in 1999, and the national media began to question Davie's abilities.

In 2000 the Irish bounced back and finished 9–3 once again. Newly hired athletic director Kevin White promptly gave Davie a five-year contract extension. [7] Within weeks of signing the contract extension, Davie's team lost in the Fiesta Bowl. [7] During the next season, Davie presided over the first 0–3 start in Notre Dame history in 2001. The Irish won their next three games to even their record, but losses to Boston College, Tennessee and Stanford sealed Davie's fate as the Irish finished 5–6.

Bob Davie in 2009. Bob Davie in 2009.jpg
Bob Davie in 2009.

He was fired on December 2, one day after a 24–18 win over Purdue. Davie was replaced by George O'Leary, who in turn resigned after it was revealed that his resume contained inaccuracies. Notre Dame then turned to Tyrone Willingham to lead the program. [7]

On November 16, 2011, Davie was hired as the new football coach at New Mexico replacing Mike Locksley. [8] With Davie, the Lobos won the 2016 Mountain West Conference Mountain Division championship along with Wyoming and Boise State. [9] On February 8, 2018, he was suspended 30 days without pay; this was related to his handling of incidents of alleged misconduct by football players at UNM. [10]

After the Lobos' 2019 season opener, a 39–31 victory against Sam Houston State, Davie was hospitalized for heart problems, forcing him to cancel the post-game press conference. [9] Run game coordinator and offensive line coach Saga Tuitele served as interim head coach for New Mexico's game against Notre Dame. [11]

On November 25, 2019, it was announced that New Mexico and Davie have agreed to part ways. [12]

Media career

Between his head coaching positions at Notre Dame and New Mexico, Davie was a college football analyst for ESPN.

Personal life

Davie is married to the former Joanne Fratangelo. They are the parents of two children, Audra and Clay. Clay Davie played football at Arizona State University. [2]

Head coaching record

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs Coaches#AP°
Notre Dame Fighting Irish (NCAA Division I-A Independent)(1997–2001)
1997 Notre Dame 7–6L Independence
1998 Notre Dame 9–3L Gator 2222
1999 Notre Dame 5–7
2000 Notre Dame 9–3L Fiesta 1615
2001 Notre Dame 5–6
Notre Dame:35–25
New Mexico Lobos (Mountain West Conference)(2012–2019)
2012 New Mexico 4–91–7T–9th
2013 New Mexico 3–91–75th (Mountain)
2014 New Mexico 4–82–6T–5th (Mountain)
2015 New Mexico 7–65–3T–2nd (Mountain) L New Mexico
2016 New Mexico 9–46–2T–1st (Mountain) W New Mexico
2017 New Mexico 3–91–76th (Mountain)
2018 New Mexico 3–91–76th (Mountain)
2019 New Mexico 2–100–86th (Mountain)
New Mexico:35–6417–47
Total:70–89
      National championship        Conference title        Conference division title or championship game berth

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Woolford, Dave (April 20, 1997), "Chasing the Legends: Davie follows Holtz, Parseghian, Rockne", Toledo Blade, retrieved January 25, 2010
  2. 1 2 3 4 Layden, Tim (May 5, 1997), "This Old House: As he rebuilds at Notre Dame, Bob Davie plans to leave the dome golden. The rest is up for grabs", Sports Illustrated, retrieved January 25, 2010
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Demasio, Nunyo (July 7, 1997), "Big Shamrocks to fill for Davie, Every Step Will Draw Irish eyes", New York Daily News, retrieved January 25, 2010[ permanent dead link ]
  4. 1 2 Eden (2005), p. 42.
  5. 1 2 Eden (2005), p. 43.
  6. "30 Years of Notre Dame on NBC: A dramatic, Pyrrhic victory over LSU in 1998". February 22, 2020.
  7. 1 2 3 Eden (2005), p. 44.
  8. Schad, Joe (November 16, 2011). "Source: Bob Davie to coach Lobos". ESPN. Retrieved November 16, 2011.
  9. 1 2 Tyree, Amber (September 1, 2019). "New Mexico's Bob Davie hospitalized with 'heart trouble' after win vs. Sam Houston, report says". Sporting News . Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  10. Writer, Jessica Dyer | Journal Staff. "Breaking: UNM suspending Davie in the wake of outside investigation". www.abqjournal.com. Retrieved February 9, 2018.
  11. Bumbaca, Christopher (September 5, 2019). "New Mexico coach Bob Davie will not make Notre Dame trip next week due to health concerns". USA Today . Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  12. "New Mexico, Davie to part ways after 8 seasons". November 26, 2019.

Sources