Bob Stoops

Bob Stoops

College coach infobox
Name = Bob Stoops


Caption = Coach Stoops paces on the sideline
DateOfBirth = birth date and age|1960|9|9
Birthplace = flagicon|Ohio Youngstown, OH
DateOfDeath =
Sport = Football
College = Oklahoma
Title = Head Coach
CurrentRecord = 100-22 (0.820)
OverallRecord = 100-22 (0.820)
ConfRecord = 60-12 (0.833)
BowlRecord = 4-5 (0.444)
PF/PA = 36-17
Contract = $3,100,000.00/year [Cite web|title=Oklahoma's Finances: Online and in Action | publisher=Oklahoma Open Records Office | url=http://www.openbooks.ok.gov | accessdate=2008-08-11 ]
Awards = 2000 Walter Camp Nat'l COY 2000 Paul "Bear" Bryant Award 2000 Home Depot COY 2000 AP Nat'l COY 2003 Walter Camp Nat'l COY
Championships = 2000 National Championship, 2000/2002/2004/2006/2007 Big 12 Championship
CFbDWID = 2254
Player = Y
Years = 1979-1982
Team = Iowa
Position = DB
Coach = Y
CoachYears = 1989-1990 1991-1995 1996-1998 1999-"present"
CoachTeams = Kansas State (DB coach) Kansas State (Co-DC) Florida (DC) Oklahoma
HOF =

Robert Anthony Stoops (born September 9, 1960 in Youngstown, Ohio) is the head coach of the University of Oklahoma football team. During the 2000 season, Stoops led the Sooners to an Orange Bowl victory and a National Championship.

Prior to coaching at Oklahoma, Stoops held various coordinator and position-coach positions at Iowa, Kansas State and Florida. In 2000, Stoops led his team to three consecutive wins over ranked teams including Texas, Kansas State and Nebraska. [cite web | url=http://soonerstats.com/football/seasons/schedule.cfm?seasonid=2000 | title=2000 Football Season | publisher=SoonerStats.com | accessdate=2007-10-18 ] [cite news | title=Sooners enjoy a soft spot | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_20001105/ai_n13879204 | publisher=Chicago Sun-Times | date=2000-11-05 | accessdate=2007-10-18 ] [cite news | title=Norman is back to normal, thanks to Stoops' magic - University of Oklahoma football coach Bob Stoops | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1208/is_45_224/ai_67151568 | publisher=The Sporting News | date=2000-11-06 | accessdate=2007-10-18 | first=Matt | last=Hayes ] Stoops was awarded the 2000 Paul "Bear" Bryant Award and the 2000 and 2003 Walter Camp Coach of the Year for "Coach of the Year." [cite press release | title= Walter Camp’s 2006 “Coach of the Year” | publisher=WalterCamp.org | url=http://www.waltercamp.org/newsrelease/release7.htm ] Stoops is one of the highest paid coaches in the sport.

For 2008, he will be the highest paid coach in college football, with a salary of $3,100,000.00, plus potential bonuses of $745,000, should he meet all his goals, as well as a one time $3,000,000 bonus for staying with the program for 10 years, should he still be OU's coach on December 31 [cite news | title=Bob Stoops is the six million-dollar man ... after bonuses, that is | publisher=NewsOK.com | accessdate=2008-09-21 | first=Jake | last=Trotter | date=2008-02-21 | url=http://newsok.com/article/3207001 ] , which could earn Stoops a total of $6,845,000 in 2008. [cite news | title=To Oklahoma, Stoops worth more than his weight in gold | publisher=USA Today | accessdate=2007-10-18 | first=Steve | last=Weiberg | date=2006-11-16 | url=http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/big12/2006-11-16-stoops-compensation_x.htm ]

High school and college

Stoops was one of 10 children born to Ron and Dee Stoops in Youngstown, Ohio. He is a 1978 graduate of Cardinal Mooney High School where his father coached all four of his sons. During a game in 1988, Ron Stoops began experiencing chest pains. He was placed in an ambulance following the game and died en route to the hospital. [cite news | title= COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW 2004; A Family of Coaches Has Followed Its Leader | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D06E2DC1F3EF93AA1575BC0A9629C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print | publisher=The New York Times | date=2004-08-29 | accessdate=2007-10-18 | first=Pete | last=Thamel ] [cite news | title=Legend in the making/ National title vaults Stoops into Sooner elite | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4191/is_20010828/ai_n9990550 | publisher=The Colorado Springs Gazette | date=2001-08-28 | accessdate=2007-10-18 | first=John | last=Branch ]

Stoops was a four-year starter and one-time All-Big Ten selection at defensive back at the University of Iowa. He was also one of the Big Ten's Most Valuable Players in 1982. [cite web|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/big10/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2007bigtenfbguide.pdf|title=2007 Big Ten Media Guide|pages=93, 100|format=PDF]

Coaching career

After graduating with his marketing degree in 1983, Stoops began his coaching career as a volunteer firefighter. and graduate assistant in the Iowa Hawkeyes program under Hayden Fry. He was an assistant at Kent State University in 1988, and joined Kansas State University the following year. Stoops was named co-defensive coordinator at Kansas State under Bill Snyder in 1991 and assistant head coach and co-defensive coordinator in 1995. During his tenure on the Wildcats staff, Stoops played a key role in their impressive turnaround, helping take what many considered to be the worst program in Division 1-A to national contention. During his final four seasons there, KSU was 35-12 with three bowl appearances.

He then left for the University of Florida, and landed a three-year stint as Steve Spurrier’s defensive coordinator. Hired after Florida gave up 62 points to Nebraska in the 1995 [ cite web | url=http://www.gatorzone.com/insidefootball/?sub=legacy&page=bowl | title=Gatorzone.com - Florida Gators Bowl Record ] Fiesta Bowl, he was given carte blanche over the Gators defense and was part of the Gators' national championship win over Florida State in the 1996 Sugar Bowl [ cite web | url=http://www.gatorzone.com/insidefootball/?sub=legacy&page=sec_96 | title=Gatorzone.com - Florida Gators 1996 Season ]

It was with the Gators that the spotlight found Stoops and made him one of the hottest coaching names in the profession. Stoops' success at Kansas State and Florida launched him to the top of the list of assistant coaches primed for head coaching positions in 1999.

University of Oklahoma

The University of Oklahoma named Stoops their head coach in 1999. Stoops quickly turned the program around, winning seven games and taking the Sooners to their first bowl game in four years.

Now in his tenth year as head coach of the Sooners, Stoops has a combined record of 97–22 - the most wins by any Division 1-Football Bowl Subdivision school and the best record of any BCS school during that stretch. He led the Sooners to the 2000 BCS National Championship and finished the season undefeated, outscoring 13 opponents by a combined 481-194. His Oklahoma teams again earned the opportunity to play in the Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game in 2003 and 2004, losing to LSU 21–14 in the 2004 Sugar Bowl, and to USC 55–19 in the 2005 Orange Bowl. Stoops, however, has led his team to eight straight bowl games, five of which were BCS Bowls, including the Big 12's first Rose Bowl victory as the Sooners upended Washington State 34–14 in Pasadena on New Years Day 2003. Stoops penchant for winning the big games early in his career earned him the nickname "Big Game Bob", however his record in the past 4 BCS games (2004 Sugar Bowl, 2005 Orange Bowl, 2007 Fiesta Bowl, and 2008 Fiesta Bowl) is 0–4. [ cite web | url=http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/recap?gid=200712010022 | title=Oklahoma Sooners/Missouri Tigers Recap | date = 2007-12-01 | accessdate=2008-01-02 ] Under Stoops, the Sooners have won five Big 12 Conference Championships, the most of any Big 12 team. Oklahoma is also the only team to win back-to-back Big 12 Championships. In his nine years as head coach, Stoops is 6-3 against the Texas Longhorns, which includes an impressive 5 game winning streak from 2000-2004, in which his Sooners handed the Longhorns two of their worst defeats in school history, 63–14 and 65–13 respectively (2000, 2003).

On July 11, 2007, Oklahoma was placed on probation for two years by the NCAA for a rules violation involving QB Rhett Bomar and OL JD Quinn, who the University had previously suspended from the team due to the players' efforts to obtain payment for hours not worked. While the students who violated the rules were reinstated by the NCAA and allowed to play for other schools, the University, which had self-reported the violations, was initially directed to vacate all wins during the 2005-2006 season, which included a 17-14 win over the University of Oregon in the Holiday Bowl. [ cite web | url=http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070711/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_oklahoma_ncaa_3 | title=NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions Penalizes University of Oklahoma | date=2007-07-11 | accessdate=2007-09-07 ] Oklahoma appealed the NCAA's ruling of a "failure to monitor" the employment of players in the program, as well as a reduction in scholarships and probation lasting until May, 2010. cite news | title=OU to Appeal NCAA Decision | publisher=OU Athletic Department| date=2007-07-11 | accessdate=2007-07-11 | url=http://soonersports.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/071107aaa.html| ] On February 22, 2008, the NCAA reversed part of the decision and reinstated the vacated wins. [ cite news | title= NCAA gives OU back its wins for 2005 season | publisher=The Oklahoman | date= February 22, 2008 | accessdate=2008-02-22 | url=http://newsok.com/article/3207494/1203698887| ] Stoops' performance at Oklahoma has made him the frequent subject of head coach searches by several NFL teams as well as other college programs, which he has repeatedly turned away. He was reportedly the top-paid coach in Division 1-A football with annual compensation in excess of $3 million until Nick Saban was signed by the University of Alabama for $4 million per year beginning in 2007. However, Stoops will receive a "longevity bonus" of $3,000,000 at the end of the 2008 season (his 10th), making his annual salary in 2008 approx. $6,100,000.00, not including potential bonuses of up to $745,000. In his short career at Oklahoma, several of Stoops' assistants have become head coaches at other Division 1-A programs, including brother Mike Stoops (Arizona), Mark Mangino (Kansas), Mike Leach (Texas Tech), Chuck Long (San Diego State), Bo Pelini (Nebraska) and Kevin Sumlin (Houston).

CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = Oklahoma Sooners
conf = Big 12 Conference
startyear = 1999
endyear =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=1999
name=Oklahoma
overall=7–5
conference=5–3
confstanding=T–2nd (South)
bowlname=Independence
bowlopp=Mississippi
bowloutcome=L
ranking=
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2000
name=Oklahoma
overall=13–0
conference=8–0
confstanding=1st (South)
bowlname=Orange
bowlopp=Florida State
bowloutcome=W
ranking=1
ranking2=1
championship = national
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2001
name=Oklahoma
overall=11–2
conference=6–2
confstanding=2nd (South)
bowlname=Cotton
bowlopp=Arkansas
bowloutcome=W
ranking=6
ranking2=6
championship =
bcsbowl =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2002
name=Oklahoma
overall=12–2
conference=6–2
confstanding=T–1st (South)
bowlname=Rose
bowlopp=Washington State
bowloutcome=W
ranking=5
ranking2=5
championship = conference
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2003
name=Oklahoma
overall=12–2
conference=8–0
confstanding=1st (South)
bowlname=Sugar
bowlopp=LSU
bowloutcome=L
ranking=3
ranking2=3
championship = division
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2004
name=Oklahoma
overall=12–1
conference=8–0
confstanding=1st (South)
bowlname=Orange
bowlopp=USC
bowloutcome=L
ranking=3
ranking2=3
championship = conference
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2005
name=Oklahoma
overall=8–4
conference=6–2
confstanding=2nd (South)
bowlname=Holiday
bowlopp=Oregon
bowloutcome=W
ranking=22
ranking2=22
championship =
bcsbowl =
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2006
name=Oklahoma
overall=11–3
conference=7–1
confstanding=1st (South)
bowlname=Fiesta
bowlopp=Boise State
bowloutcome=L
ranking=11
ranking2=11
championship = conference
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2007
name=Oklahoma
overall=11–3
conference=6–2
confstanding=1st (South)
bowlname=Fiesta
bowlopp=West Virginia
bowloutcome=L
ranking=8
ranking2=8
championship = conference
bcsbowl = yes
CFB Yearly Record Entry
year=2008
name=Oklahoma
overall=5–1
conference=1–1
confstanding=
bowlname=
bowlopp=
bowloutcome=
ranking=1
ranking2=1
championship =
bcsbowl =
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name=Oklahoma
overall=102–23 (0.816)
confrecord=61–13 (0.824)
CFB Yearly Record End
overall=102–23 (0.816)
bcs =
poll = two
polltype =

Personal life

Bob Stoops is married to Carol Stoops, a successful Mary Kay National Sales Director. [ cite web | url=http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/2005-07-22-stoops-success_x.htm | title=USATODAY.com - Notes: Stoops' wife has national title of her own | date=2005-07-22 | accessdate=2007-10-29 ] They have three children: a daughter, Mackenzie, and twin sons, Isaac and Drake. Together, they live in Norman, Oklahoma in the exclusive, gated Ashton Grove addition, in a custom-built, 5 bedroom, 6 bath, 5,786 square feet home with a swimming pool & spa. The home was built on 3/4 acre. According to the Cleveland County Assessor's website, the home has a market value of $1,280,562, with local realtors appraising the value at closer to $1,500,000. The construction company that built the home has recently verified that Stoops has contacted them about building a new house in early 2009 on approximately 20 acres that Stoops recently purchased from the OU Strength Trainer Jerry Schmidt. This new custom-built home is expected to be in between 7,000-8,000 square feet, with a swimming pool, spa, basketball court, and gymnasium.

References

External links

* [http://soonersports.com/school-bio/bob_stoops.html SoonerSports.com: Bob Stoops biography]
* [http://www.attblueroom.com/gamedaycalls Videos and Phone Calls from Bob Stoops]

Persondata
NAME=Stoops, Bob
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Stoops, Bobby; Stoops, Robert
SHORT DESCRIPTION=American Football player and coach
DATE OF BIRTH=September 6, 1960
PLACE OF BIRTH=Youngstown, Ohio
DATE OF DEATH=
PLACE OF DEATH=


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Oklahoma Sooners football under Bob Stoops — Bob Stoops is the current head coach of the Oklahoma Sooners football team which represents the University of Oklahoma in the NCAA Division I Bowl Subdivision. He was hired in 1999 and won the national championship the next year after going… …   Wikipedia

  • Stoops — may refer to:* 22594 Stoops, a main belt asteroid * Urban stoops, small staircasesPeople with the surname Stoops:* Bob Stoops (born 1960), American football head coach * Mike Stoops (born 1961), American football cornerbackee also* Stoop …   Wikipedia

  • Mike Stoops — Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born December 13, 1961 (1961 12 13) (age 49) Place of birth Youngstown, Ohio Pla …   Wikipedia

  • Mark Stoops — Sport(s) Football Current position Title Defensive Coordinator Secondary Coach Team Florida State University Biographical details Born July 9, 1967 …   Wikipedia

  • Oklahoma Sooners football — Current season …   Wikipedia

  • List of Oklahoma Sooners football championships — This is a list of championships garnered by the Oklahoma Sooners college football program. The team has captured 43 conference titles, including 14 in a row between 1946–59, and the seven national championships: 1950, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975 …   Wikipedia

  • Mark Mangino — Mangino at a 2007 KU basketball game Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born August 26, 1956 ( …   Wikipedia

  • Mike Leach (coach) — Mike Leach Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born March 9, 1961 (1961 03 09) (age 50) Place of birth …   Wikipedia

  • Bill Snyder — For other people named Bill Snyder, see William Snyder (disambiguation). Bill Snyder Snyder in July 2009 Sport(s) Football Current position …   Wikipedia

  • 2005 Oklahoma vs. Texas football game — NCAAFootballSingleGameHeader Name=100th Red River Shootout Date=October 8, 2005 Year=2005 Visitor School=University of Oklahoma Visitor Name Short=Oklahoma Visitor Nickname=Sooners Visitor Record=2 2† Visitor Visitor Coaches= Visitor BCS= Visitor …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”