Howard Schnellenberger
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Date of birth | March 16, 1934 | |
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Place of birth | Louisville, Kentucky | |
Sport | Football | |
College | Florida Atlantic University | |
Title | Head coach | |
Record with Team | 28-30 | |
Overall Record | 128-107 | |
Coaching Stats | College Football DataWarehouse | |
School as a player | ||
1952-1956 | University of Kentucky | |
Position | Tight end | |
Schools as a coach | ||
2001-present 1995 1985-1994 1979-1983 |
Florida Atlantic University University of Oklahoma University of Louisville University of Miami |
Howard Schnellenberger (born March 16, 1934) is an American football coach at both the professional and college level. He is currently the head coach of Florida Atlantic University and has previously held head coaching positions with the University of Oklahoma, University of Louisville, University of Miami, and the Baltimore Colts. He has also worked extensively as an assistant coach at the pro level, including being a part of the staff of the undefeated 1972 Miami Dolphins.
Schnellenberger was an All-American as a player at the University of Kentucky and worked as an assistant coach there under head coach Blanton Collier. Schnellenberger would also serve as offensive coordinator under his college coach Bear Bryant at Alabama, helping Alabama to win three national championships in 1961, 1964 and 1965 before leaving in 1966 to take a job in the NFL as offensive coordinator of the Los Angeles Rams then being hired by Don Shula in 1970 to become the offensive coodinator for the Miami Dolphins, parlaying the success of Miami's 1972 perfect season into becoming the new head coach of the Baltimore Colts in 1973.
Schnellenberger's Colts would go 4-10 in his one full season, but did manage to pull an upset on the heavily-favored Dolphins towards the end of the 1973 season. The Colts would start the 1974 season 0-3 and Schnellenberger would be fired and replaced with Joe Thomas, returning to the Dolphins coaching staff the following year, where he would remain until being offered the head coaching job at the University of Miami.
Schnellenberger arrived to a Miami program that was on its last legs, with the program having almost been dropped by the university just a few years prior. Drawing from the boot camp methodology learned from mentors Bryant and Shula, a pro-style pass-oriented playbook not yet the norm in Division I college football, Miami developed a passing game that allowed them to have advantage over teams not equipped to defend such an attack. By his third season at Miami, the team had finished the season in the AP Poll top 25 twice, which to that point had not happened since 1966.
He coached Miami to a National Championship in 1983, defeating Nebraska in the 50th Orange Bowl. In all he has 20 years of head coaching experience and a 126-98-3 record at the college level. Following his championship at the University of Miami, Schnellenberger would depart for the USFL where he would become head coach for what was to be a South Florida team (a relocated Washington Federals franchise). That job would never materialize and Schnellenberger would never coach a USFL game.
While at the University of Louisville, he took a moribund program on the verge of being dropped to I-AA status to two bowl victories, one of which being an unprecedented 34-7 thrashing of the Alabama Crimson Tide in the 1991 Fiesta Bowl, capping a 10-1-1 season and the school's first-ever national ranking (11).
Schnellenberger would depart Louisville in 1995 to take the job as head coach at Oklahoma. He would last only one year there as the Sooners struggled to a 5-5-1 record (including a shutout lost to in-state rival Oklahoma State. Schnellenberger would abruptly resign after that season, and has been notoriously and uncharictaristically tight-lipped about his tenure there ever since.[1]
After a few years out of the limelight, Schnellenberger resurfaced in 1998, when he was named director of football operations for Florida Atlantic University, with the task of building a non-existant football program from scratch. Spending most of the next year raising funds for the program, the FAU board of regents approved adding football in 1999. Schnellenberger at that time was named the first head coach for FAU football.
After two additional years of fundraising, recruiting and practice, FAU football came to fruition on September 1, 2001. After playing four years at the Division 1-AA level, with their biggest success being a trip to the semifinals of the 2003 1-AA playoffs, FAU moved to the Sun Belt Conference and Division 1-A level in 2005, which was one of Schnellenberger's primary objectives upon building the program.
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Preceded by: Program started |
Florida Atlantic University Head Football Coach 2001– |
Succeeded by: Current |
Preceded by: Gary Gibbs |
Oklahoma Sooners Head Football Coach 1995 |
Succeeded by: John Blake |
Preceded by: Bob Weber |
University of Louisville Head Football Coach 1985–1994 |
Succeeded by: Ron Cooper |
Preceded by: Lou Saban |
University of Miami Head Football Coach 1979–1983 |
Succeeded by: Jimmy Johnson |
Preceded by: John Sandusky |
Baltimore Colts Head Coach 1973–1974 |
Succeeded by: Joe Thomas |
Florida Atlantic Owls Head Football Coaches |
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Schnellenberger |
Louisville Cardinals Head Football Coaches |
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Larson • Baker • Duffy • Duncan • Enke • King • McGrath • Money • Cregor • Apitz • Camp • Corso • Alley • Gibson • Weber • Schnellenberger • Cooper • Smith • Petrino |
Oklahoma Sooners Head Football Coaches |
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Harts • Parrington • Roberts • McMahon • Ewing • Owen • Lindsey • Hardage • L Jones • Stidham • Luster • Tatum • Wilkinson • G Jones • Mackenzie • Fairbanks • Switzer • Gibbs • Schnellenberger • Blake • Stoops |
Miami Hurricanes Head Football Coaches |
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Buck • Rix • Brett • McCann • Tubbs • Harding • Dunn • Gustafson • Tate • Kichefski • Curci • Elliot • Selmer • Saban • Schnellenberger • Johnson • Erickson • Davis • Coker |
Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts Head Coaches |
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Molesworth • Ewbank • Shula • McCafferty • Sandusky • Schnellenberger • Thomas • Marchibroda • McCormack • Kush • Dowhower • Meyer • Venturi • Marchibroda • Infante • Mora Sr. • Dungy |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Schnellenberger, Howard |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Football player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 16, 1934 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Louisville, Kentucky |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: Living people | 1934 births | Florida Atlantic Owls football coaches | Kentucky Wildcats football players | Kentucky Wildcats football coaches | Louisville Cardinals football coaches | Miami Dolphins coaches | Miami Hurricanes football coaches | Oklahoma Sooners football coaches | American football quarterbacks | Baltimore Colts coaches | Alabama Crimson Tide football coaches