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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 18 January 2025. American football coach (born 1968) Butch Jones Jones in 2014 Current position Title Head coach Team Arkansas State Conference Sun Belt Record 19–31 Biographical details Born (1968-01-17) January 17, 1968 (age 57) Saugatuck, Michigan, U.S. Playing career 1987–1989 Ferris State ...
He led Tennessee to 34-27 overall record, but just 14-24 in conference play. Jones has struggled in three seasons with the Red Wolves, winning just 11 games over his tenure, and a 6-7 record this ...
In the Mountaineers' ensuing drive, Tennessee's Micah Abernathy ended the game by breaking up an end-zone pass on fourth–and–5 from the 20. [28] Tennessee head coach Butch Jones commented after the game: "The first game of the year is always a game of the unknowns. We're still developing our identity for this football team, but we found a ...
Prior to the 1899 season, the Volunteers did not have an official head coach while compiling a record of twelve wins and eleven losses (.522) between 1891 and 1898. [1] Since 1899, 11 coaches have led the Volunteers in postseason bowl games : Robert Neyland , John Barnhill , Bowden Wyatt , Doug Dickey , Bill Battle , Johnny Majors , Phillip ...
The post Butch Jones Shares What He Learned Under Nick Saban appeared first on The Spun. After three years as an assistant to Nick Saban at Alabama, Butch Jones is back in the head coaching ranks ...
Rick Minter currently holds several records among Cincinnati coaches, including most games coached (117), seasons coached (10), games won (53), games lost (63), conference wins (23), and conference losses (30). Minter also holds, along with Tuberville and Brian Kelly, the record for most bowl games coached (3).
The Bearcats were led by second-year head coach Butch Jones and played their home games at Nippert Stadium and two conference games at Paul Brown Stadium. They finished the season 10–3 overall and 5–2 in Big East play to share the conference championship with Louisville and West Virginia.
The team was coached by Butch Jones and played their home games in Kelly/Shorts Stadium. The Chippewas finished the regular season 10–2 and 8–0 in conference play, beat Ohio in the 2009 MAC Championship Game to win the MAC title and were invited to the GMAC Bowl where they defeated Sun Belt Champion Troy 44–41 in double overtime.