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  1. World Encyclopedia
  2. Curt Cignetti - Wikipedia
Curt Cignetti - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American football coach (born 1961)

Curt Cignetti
Cignetti in 2026
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamIndiana
ConferenceBig Ten
Record27–2
Annual salary$13.2 million [1]
Biographical details
Born (1961-06-02) June 2, 1961 (age 64)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Height6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Playing career
1979–1982West Virginia
PositionQuarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1983–1984Pittsburgh (GA)
1985Davidson (QB/WR)
1986–1988Rice (QB)
1989–1992Temple (QB)
1993–1999Pittsburgh (QB/TE)
2000–2006NC State (QB/TE/RC)
2007–2010Alabama (WR/RC)
2011–2016IUP
2017–2018Elon
2019–2023James Madison
2024–presentIndiana
Head coaching record
Overall146–37
Bowls3–1
Tournaments
  • 3–1 (CFP)
  • 4–3 (NCAA D-II playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
  • National (2025)
  • PSAC (2012)
  • 3 CAA (2019–2021)
  • Big Ten (2025)
  • 2 PSAC West Division (2012, 2015)
  • CAA South Division (2020)
  • 2 Sun Belt East Division (2022–2023)[a]
Awards
  • 2× AP Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • 2× AFCA Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year (2025)
  • Paul "Bear" Bryant Coach of the Year (2025)
  • Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year (2024)
  • George Munger Award (2025)
  • 2× Home Depot Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • 2× Sporting News Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • 2× Walter Camp Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • 2× Big Ten Coach of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • Sun Belt Coach of the Year (2023)
  • PSAC Coach of the Year (2012)
  • CAA Coach of the Year (2017)

Curt Cignetti (/kɜːrt sɪɡˈnɛti/ born June 2, 1961) is an American college football coach who is the head football coach at Indiana University Bloomington. He previously served as the head coach at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) from 2011 to 2016, Elon University from 2017 to 2018, and James Madison University from 2019 to 2023.

Cignetti is a five-time conference coach of the year and a two-time national coach of the year. He is the only college football coach to have started 10–0 with two different teams in consecutive seasons, achieving this unique distinction with James Madison University in 2023 and Indiana University in 2024. During his first season at Indiana, he was named the Big Ten Coach of the Year after leading the Hoosiers to a program-record 11 wins and their first-ever College Football Playoff berth.[2]

In 2025, he repeated as Big Ten Coach of the Year as Indiana completed the first 12–0 regular season in school history and won their first Big Ten Conference title since 1967.[3][4] In the national championship game, Cignetti led the Hoosiers to their first national championship in program history. With this championship win, the Hoosiers became the first FBS team to compile a perfect 16-win season since the 1894 Yale Bulldogs.

Cignetti's tenure at Indiana, having turned the losingest program in college football history into national champions, has been regarded as one of the greatest turnarounds in the history of college football, with some arguing it as one of the greatest in the history of American sports.[5][6]

Early life and playing career

[edit]

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Cignetti is the son of hall of fame coach Frank Cignetti Sr. (1937–2022),[7] the head coach for four seasons (1976–1979) at West Virginia University in Morgantown,[8][9][10] promoted after six seasons as an assistant under previous head coach Bobby Bowden. After graduation from Morgantown High School in 1979, Cignetti stayed in town and was a quarterback for the West Virginia Mountaineers from 1979 to 1982.[11][12][13] behind starters Oliver Luck and Jeff Hostetler.

Assistant coaching career

[edit]

After graduating from West Virginia, Cignetti began his coaching career as a graduate assistant at Pitt in 1983 under Foge Fazio. He has also coached at Davidson College, Rice University, and Temple University.[14]

In 2000, Cignetti joined Chuck Amato's staff at North Carolina State University (NC State). During his tenure, the Wolfpack achieved significant success, including a school-record 11-win season in 2002. In 2003, he coached quarterback Philip Rivers, who earned ACC Player of the Year honors. Over seven seasons, NC State participated in five bowl games, securing victories in four. Notably, in 2006, Cignetti recruited future Super Bowl champion quarterback Russell Wilson to the Wolfpack.[15][16]

In 2007, Cignetti became part of Nick Saban's inaugural coaching staff at the University of Alabama, serving as wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator. During Cignetti's time under Saban at Alabama, the Crimson Tide achieved remarkable success, including a 12–0 regular season in 2008 and a 14–0 national championship season in 2009. During this period, Alabama won 29 consecutive regular-season games. Cignetti played a pivotal role in recruiting and developing key players, such as wide receiver Julio Jones, Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram II, and linebacker Dont'a Hightower. The 2008 recruiting class featured six future first-round NFL draft selections.[15]

Head coaching career

[edit]

IUP (2011–2016)

[edit]

When Curt Cignetti became head coach at IUP in 2011, the program was coming off a 4–10 conference record in the previous two seasons. In his first season, he revitalized the team, which won six of its final seven games by an average margin of 28 points, finishing 7–3. The following year, IUP won the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC) title and advanced to the NCAA Regional Finals, ending the season 12–2. In 2013, Cignetti’s team posted a 9–2 record, and he guided IUP to NCAA playoff appearances in both 2015 and 2016. His 2016 team finished 10–2. Across six seasons, Cignetti compiled a 53–17 record at IUP, with three NCAA playoff appearances and two conference championships. On December 31, 2016, he accepted the head coaching position at Elon University.[15][16]

Elon (2017–2018)

[edit]

At Elon, Cignetti inherited a program with a 4–20 conference record and six consecutive losing seasons. In his first year, the Phoenix turned their fortunes around, winning eight straight games after an opening loss to MAC champion Toledo. The team was ranked as high as sixth nationally and competed against James Madison for the conference championship, earning their first NCAA Playoff berth since 2009. For this turnaround, Cignetti was named Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) Coach of the Year and was a finalist for the Eddie Robinson National Coach of the Year award. In 2018, Cignetti led Elon to a historic 27–24 victory over James Madison, snapping JMU's 22-game CAA winning streak and 19-game home winning streak. This marked Elon’s first win over a top-five FCS opponent and helped the team secure back-to-back NCAA playoff appearances for the first time in program history.[17]

James Madison (2019–2023)

[edit]

Cignetti was named head coach at James Madison on December 14, 2018, guiding the Dukes to a 14–2 record in his first season. Cignetti's Dukes made an appearance in the FCS National Championship game, ultimately falling to North Dakota State in the title matchup.[15][16] In the pandemic-affected 2020 season, shortened and delayed to spring 2021, JMU finished 7–1 and reached the FCS Semifinals. The 2021 season saw further success, as the Dukes finished 12–2 and announced their move from the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) to the Sun Belt Conference. In their first season at the FBS level in 2022, JMU made a seamless transition, finishing 8–3 and earning a share of the Sun Belt East Division title.[15][16]

Indiana (2024–present)

[edit]

2024 season

[edit]
See also: 2024 Indiana Hoosiers football team

Cignetti was named head football coach at Indiana University on November 30, 2023, to replace the recently dismissed Tom Allen.[18] Shortly after his hiring, he drew media attention for his confident remark, telling reporters, "It's simple, I win. Google me." when asked how he was selling his vision for the program to recruits and transfers.[19] Cignetti guided Indiana to its first 8–0 start since 1967, then to a 9–0 record, marking a program milestone, and finally to a 10–0 start, the best in Indiana football history.[20] The Hoosiers achieved their first-ever 11-win season, earning the team national recognition, a top-five ranking, and a College Football Playoff berth.[15][21] Indiana finished the season ranked No. 10 with an 11–2 record, their season ended with a loss to Notre Dame in the first round of the 2024–25 College Football Playoff.[22]

Indiana extended Cignetti during his first season with a new eight-year contract. The deal doubled his salary to $8 million annually and included commitments to upgrade the football program, such as stadium enhancements and increased athlete and staff compensation.[15]

2025 season

[edit]
See also: 2025 Indiana Hoosiers football team
Cignetti celebrates on the field of Hard Rock Stadium after winning the 2025–26 CFP National Championship.

Indiana was ranked No. 20 by the AP to open the season.[23] After starting 5–0 and rising to No. 7, the Hoosiers defeated No. 3 Oregon, 30–20 at Autzen Stadium.[24] This marked Indiana's first win against a top-five team on the road, and their second-ever win against a top-five team, the first since defeating Purdue in 1967.[25][26] Following the win, Indiana rose to No. 3 in the AP poll, the highest in program history.[27] A week later, they surpassed that mark after improving to 7–0 and rising to No. 2 in the AP Poll.[28] The Hoosiers ended the regular season with a dominant 56–3 win over rival Purdue, a 12–0 record, and a No. 2 ranking in the AP poll.[29] On December 6, the Hoosiers played the defending national champions and No. 1 ranked Ohio State in the 2025 Big Ten Football Championship Game. The Hoosiers upset the Buckeyes, 13–10, marking Indiana's first win against Ohio State since 1988.[30] On December 7, the 13–0 Hoosiers were ranked No. 1 in the AP Top 25 poll for the first time in program history, and earned the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff, another school first.[31][32] The Hoosiers then defeated Alabama in the 2026 Rose Bowl by a score of 38–3 before subsequently defeating Oregon for a second time during the season in the 2026 Peach Bowl by a score of 56–22, leading the Hoosiers to the 2026 College Football Playoff National Championship, their first ever national championship appearance.[33] Indiana would go on to defeat the No. 10 seed Miami Hurricanes by a score of 27–21 at Hard Rock Stadium to win their first national championship, subsequently becoming the first FBS team to compile a perfect 16–0 season since the 1894 Yale Bulldogs.[34]

On October 16, 2025, Cignetti and Indiana signed an eight-year, $93 million contract extension.[28] Following the regular season, Cignetti was named Big Ten Coach of the Year for the second consecutive year, sweeping both the Hayes–Schembechler Award (coaches) and the Dave McClain Award (media).[4][3][35]

Major achievements and program turnarounds

[edit]

At James Madison, Cignetti guided the Dukes’ transition from the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) to the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), posting a 52–9 record from 2019 to 2023 and winning three conference titles.[36]

In 2024, his first season at Indiana, the Hoosiers won a then-school record 11 games, secured the program’s first College Football Playoff berth and second-ever appearance in a major bowl or its equivalent. They finished ranked No. 10 in the Associated Press poll, while Cignetti was named Big Ten Coach of the Year.[37]

In 2025, his second season at Indiana, the Hoosiers won their first-ever national championship and became the first FBS team to achieve a 16–0 season in NCAA history. Cignetti was awarded as the Paul “Bear” Bryant National Coach of the Year.

Personal life

[edit]

Cignetti is of Italian descent.[38] He and his wife, Manette, have three children, Curt Jr., Carly Ann, and Natalie Elise.[39] His brother, Frank Jr. is offensive coordinator at Indiana University of Pennsylvania and previously served as Pitt offensive coordinator. His father, Frank Sr., coached for the West Virginia Mountaineers from 1976 to 1979, and served as coach of Indiana University of Pennsylvania from 1980 to 2005.[40][41]

Head coaching record

[edit]
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
IUP Crimson Hawks (Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference) (2011–2016)
2011 IUP 7–3 5–2 3rd (West)
2012 IUP 12–2 6–1 1st (West) L NCAA Division II Quarterfinal 7
2013 IUP 9–2 5–2 2nd (West) 24
2014 IUP 6–5 5–4 5th (West)
2015 IUP 9–3 6–1 T–1st (West) L NCAA Division II Second Round 19
2016 IUP 10–2 6–1 2nd (West) L NCAA Division II Second Round 12
IUP: 53–17 33–11
Elon Phoenix (Colonial Athletic Association) (2017–2018)
2017 Elon 8–4 6–2 3rd L NCAA Division I First Round 21 20
2018 Elon 6–5 4–3 6th L NCAA Division I First Round 19 19
Elon: 14–9 10–5
James Madison Dukes (Colonial Athletic Association) (2019–2021)
2019 James Madison 14–2 8–0 1st L NCAA Division I Championship 2 2
2020–21 James Madison 7–1 3–0 1st (South) L NCAA Division I Semifinal 3 3
2021 James Madison 12–2 7–1 T–1st L NCAA Division I Semifinal 3 3
James Madison Dukes (Sun Belt Conference) (2022–2023)
2022 James Madison 8–3 6–2 T–1st (East)[a]
2023 James Madison 11–1 7–1 1st (East)[a] Armed Forces[b] 24 25
James Madison: 52–9 31–4
Indiana Hoosiers (Big Ten Conference) (2024–present)
2024 Indiana 11–2 8–1 T–2nd L CFP First Round† 10 10
2025 Indiana 16–0 9–0 1st W Rose†, W Peach†, W CFP NCG† 1 1
2026 Indiana 0–0 0–0
Indiana: 27–2 17–1
Total: 146–37
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth
  • †Indicates CFP / New Years' Six bowl.
  • #Rankings from final AFCA poll for IUP, FCS Coaches Poll for Elon and James Madison (2019–2021), and Coaches Poll for James Madison (2022–2023) and Indiana.
  • °Rankings from final STATS poll for Elon and James Madison (2019–2021), and AP poll for James Madison (2022–2023) and Indiana.
  1. ^ a b c James Madison was not eligible for their conference title or post-season play in their first two years of FBS transition while members of the Sun Belt Conference. They had the best record in the SBC East Division in 2022 and tied for the best record in 2023, but weren't allowed to play in the conference championship game.
  2. ^ On November 30, 2023, Cignetti was hired by Indiana before James Madison played in the Armed Forces Bowl.

Records

[edit]
NCAA Division I
  • First NCAA Division I head coach to start 10–0 or better in consecutive seasons at different institutions (James Madison, 2023; Indiana, 2024)[42]
  • First NCAA Division I head coach in the CFP era (2014–present) to win 16 games in a single season (16–0).
Indiana
  • Most head coaching wins in a single season: 16 (2026)
  • Most Big Ten Conference head coaching wins in a single season: 9 (2025)
  • First head coach to start their tenure with a 4–0 record (2024)
  • First head coach to reach double-digit wins in a single season (2024)
  • First head coach to defeat an AP top-five ranked opponent on the road (2025)
  • First head coach with consecutive 10–0 seasons (2024, 2025)
  • First head coach to reach the College Football Playoff (2024–25)
James Madison
  • Most head coaching wins in a single season: 14 (2019)
    • Tied with Mike Houston (2016, 2017)
  • Most Coastal Athletic Association head coaching wins in a single season: 8 (2019)
    • Tied with Mike Houston (2008, 2016, 2017)
  • First head coach to reach an NCAA Division I FBS bowl game (2023 Armed Forces Bowl)
Elon
  • First head coach to defeat a top-five FCS opponent (October 16, 2018, at No. 2 James Madison)
  • First head coach to reach the NCAA Division I FCS Playoffs in back-to-back seasons (2017, 2018)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Indiana University and Football Coach Curt Cignetti Agree to New Eight-Year Contract Through 2033". Indiana University Athletics. October 16, 2025. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  2. ^ Niziolek, Michael (December 3, 2024). "Google it. IU football's Curt Cignetti wins Big Ten Coach of the Year". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved November 30, 2025.
  3. ^ a b Bowie, Dustin. "Curt Cignetti named Big Ten Coach of the Year again as Indiana surges to 12–0." The Indianapolis Star. December 3, 2025.
  4. ^ a b "Curt Cignetti wins second consecutive Big Ten Coach of the Year award." Crimson Quarry. December 4, 2025.
  5. ^ McGee, Ryan (January 20, 2026). "Indiana erases forgettable history with unforgettable title". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 23, 2026.
  6. ^ Wolken, Dan (January 20, 2026). "How Fernando Mendoza, Curt Cignetti and Indiana authored the greatest run in American sports history". Yahoo Sports.
  7. ^ Doyel, Gregg (November 20, 2024). "Indiana's Curt Cignetti learned faith, family, football from dad Frank". IndyStar. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  8. ^ Clayton, John (November 20, 1979). "WVU dismisses Cignetti as coach". Pittsburgh Press. p. B6.
  9. ^ "West Virginia fires Cignetti, offers him new post". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. November 20, 1979. p. 13.
  10. ^ Post, Alex Hickey, The Dominion (August 29, 2019). "Return to West Virginia more than just a game to Cignetti family". The Dominion Post. Retrieved January 23, 2026.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Callihan, Schuyler (December 18, 2024). "Curt Cignetti Gives a Shoutout to Rich Rodriguez, West Virginia on Pat McAfee Show". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved June 19, 2025.
  12. ^ "Curt Cignetti Bio". James Madison University Athletics. October 4, 2025. Retrieved October 25, 2025.
  13. ^ "WVUStats - Curt Cignetti". www.wvustats.com. West Virginia University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. Retrieved January 26, 2026.
  14. ^ "Staff Directory: Curt Cignetti". IUPAthletics.com. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Dellenger, Ross (November 20, 2024). "Forever a basketball school, Curt Cignetti has awakened a 'sleeping giant' of a football program at Indiana". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  16. ^ a b c d Rittenberg, Adam. "Curt Cignetti's viral rise to making Indiana a College Football Playoff contender". ESPN. Retrieved November 23, 2024.
  17. ^ Smith, Adam. "EPIC FOR ELON: Phoenix takes down Dukes in dramatic, historic victory". The Times. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  18. ^ Marot, Michael (November 30, 2023). "Indiana Hoosiers agree to deal with Curt Cignetti as new football coach". AP News. Retrieved December 7, 2023.
  19. ^ McDaniel, Mike (December 23, 2023). "Indiana's Curt Cignetti Flexes Winning Record: 'Google Me'". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved October 19, 2025.
  20. ^ Haehnle, Kaspar (November 1, 2024). "The rise of Indiana football and how MSU can prepare". The State News. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  21. ^ Niziolek, Michael. "Indiana football will play Notre Dame in College Football Playoff first round". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved December 8, 2024.
  22. ^ Niziolek, Michael (August 4, 2025). "Where is IU football ranked in preseason US LMB Coaches Poll Top 25?". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  23. ^ Bode, Josh (August 11, 2025). "IU football ranked in preseason AP poll following historic season". WISH-TV. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  24. ^ Russo, Ralph D.; Williams, Justin (October 12, 2025). "Indiana legitimizes rise with win at Oregon: Hoosiers end Ducks' home dominance and more takeaways". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  25. ^ Osterman, Zach (October 11, 2025). "Likes, dislikes from No. 7 Indiana football's win at No. 2 Oregon: Ducks hunted, haunted by IU". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  26. ^ Kassim, Ehsan (October 11, 2025). "What's Indiana football's highest ranking? Hoosiers looking at history after Oregon win". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  27. ^ Kadlick, Mike (October 12, 2025). "AP Top 25 Poll: Indiana Earns Highest Ranking in Program History With Win Over Oregon". SI. Retrieved October 12, 2025.
  28. ^ a b Vannini, Chris (October 16, 2025). "Indiana signs Curt Cignetti to new 8-year contract amid Penn State speculation". The Athletic. Retrieved October 16, 2025.
  29. ^ Osterman, Zach (November 29, 2025). "Indiana finishes regular season with exclamation point. Now come the questions". USA TODAY. Retrieved November 30, 2025.
  30. ^ Marot, Michael (December 7, 2025). "No. 2 Indiana beats No. 1 Ohio St. 13-10 to end Big Ten title drought, lock up top playoff seed". AP News. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  31. ^ "Indiana takes No. 1 spot in AP Top 25 for first time in history". Reuters. December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  32. ^ "Alabama, Miami in, Notre Dame out and Indiana No. 1 in College Football Playoff rankings". NFL.com. Associated Press. December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  33. ^ Purdum, David (January 10, 2026). "IU grows as title-game fave after semi blowout". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 10, 2026.
  34. ^ Dinich, Heather (January 19, 2026). "Mendoza, Hoosiers cap perfect season, win first national title". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
  35. ^ Bode, Josh (December 3, 2025). "IU football's Curt Cignetti wins Big Ten Coach of the Year". WISH-TV. Retrieved February 6, 2026.
  36. ^ Rittenberg, Adam (November 20, 2024). "Curt Cignetti's viral rise to making Indiana a College Football Playoff contender". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 25, 2025.
  37. ^ Wetzel, Dan (September 23, 2025). "Curt Cignetti isn't here to play nice, and he may not be close to done". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 25, 2025.
  38. ^ Rexrode, Joe (October 20, 2024). "Indiana's Curt Cignetti has ignited a fire: 'This guy is just different'". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  39. ^ Bob Fulton. "Geography Lesson". IUP Magazine. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  40. ^ Ankony, Jack (October 18, 2024). "Nick Saban A Long-Time Believer in Indiana Coach Curt Cignetti". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved October 16, 2025.
  41. ^ Shoemaker, Wesley (September 22, 2022). "Remembering former WVU head coach Frank Cignetti Sr". The Daily Athenaeum. Retrieved October 16, 2025.
  42. ^ "Nine Finalists Selected for 2024 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award". Sugar Bowl. December 10, 2024. Retrieved December 15, 2025.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Curt Cignetti.
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Head football coaches of the Big Ten Conference
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  • Luther Davis
  • Brandon Deaderick
  • Rob Ezell
  • D. J. Fluker
  • Darius Hanks
  • Jerrell Harris
  • Dont'a Hightower
  • Mark Ingram II
  • Kareem Jackson
  • Marquis Johnson
  • Mike Johnson
  • Nico Johnson
  • Barrett Jones
  • Julio Jones
  • Dre Kirkpatrick
  • Eddie Lacy
  • Robert Lester
  • Marquis Maze
  • A. J. McCarron
  • Rolando McClain
  • Alfred McCullough
  • Greg McElroy
  • Kerry Murphy
  • Kevin Norwood
  • Colin Peek
  • Cory Reamer
  • Trent Richardson
  • Jeremy Shelley
  • Brad Smelley
  • Damion Square
  • Anthony Steen
  • Ed Stinson
  • Leigh Tiffin
  • Carson Tinker
  • Courtney Upshaw
  • William Vlachos
  • Chance Warmack
  • Lorenzo Washington
  • Alex Watkins
  • Chavis Williams
  • Michael Williams
  • Justin Woodall
Head coach
Nick Saban
Assistant coaches
Burton Burns
Curt Cignetti
Scott Cochran
Bo Davis
Mike Groh
Jim McElwain
Kevin Garver
Joe Judge
Joe Pendry
Jeremy Pruitt
Freddie Roach
Rob Sale
Glenn Schumann
Kirby Smart
Sal Sunseri
Bobby Williams
James Willis
  • v
  • t
  • e
2025 Indiana Hoosiers football—consensus national champions
  • Lee Beebe Jr.
  • Charlie Becker
  • Kahlil Benson
  • Kaelon Black
  • LeBron Bond
  • Devan Boykin
  • Jonathan Brady
  • Pat Coogan
  • Omar Cooper
  • Stephen Daley
  • Drew Evans
  • Amare Ferrell
  • Aiden Fisher
  • Rolijah Hardy
  • Roman Hemby
  • Isaiah Jones
  • Mikail Kamara
  • Mario Landino
  • Mark Langston
  • Bray Lynch
  • Khobie Martin
  • Alberto Mendoza
  • Fernando Mendoza
  • Zen Michalski
  • Louis Moore
  • Tyler Morris
  • Daniel Ndukwe
  • Riley Nowakowski
  • D'Angelo Ponds
  • Nico Radicic
  • Dominique Ratcliff
  • Elijah Sarratt
  • Jamari Sharpe
  • Carter Smith
  • Holden Staes
  • Tyrique Tucker
  • Hosea Wheeler
  • Grant Wilson
  • E.J. Williams Jr.
  • Head coach: Curt Cignetti
  • Assistant coaches: Bob Bostad
  • Grant Cain
  • Bryant Haines
  • John Miller
  • Mike Shanahan
  • Chandler Whitmer
  • Buddha Williams
  • v
  • t
  • e
The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award winners
  • 1994: Brooks
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Bowden
  • 1997: Price
  • 1998: Fulmer
  • 1999: Solich
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Willingham
  • 2003: Carroll
  • 2004: Meyer
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Schiano
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Saban
  • 2009: Kelly
  • 2010: Chizik
  • 2011: Miles
  • 2012: Kelly
  • 2013: Malzahn
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: MacIntyre
  • 2017: Frost
  • 2018: Kelly
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
AP College Football Coach of the Year winners
  • 1998: Snyder
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Ferentz
  • 2003: Saban
  • 2004: Tuberville
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Grobe
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Saban
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: C. Kelly
  • 2011: Miles
  • 2012: B. Kelly
  • 2013: Malzahn
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: MacIntyre
  • 2017: Frost
  • 2018: B. Kelly
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Harbaugh
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
AFCA Division I FBS Coach of the Year winners
  • 1935: Waldorf
  • 1936: Harlow
  • 1937: Mylin
  • 1938: Kern
  • 1939: Anderson
  • 1940: Shaughnessy
  • 1941: Leahy
  • 1942: Alexander
  • 1943: Stagg
  • 1944: Widdoes
  • 1945: McMillin
  • 1946: Blaik
  • 1947: Crisler
  • 1948: Oosterbaan
  • 1949: Wilkinson
  • 1950: Caldwell
  • 1951: Taylor
  • 1952: Munn
  • 1953: Tatum
  • 1954: Sanders
  • 1955: Daugherty
  • 1956: Wyatt
  • 1957: Hayes
  • 1958: Dietzel
  • 1959: Schwartzwalder
  • 1960: Warmath
  • 1961: Bryant
  • 1962: McKay
  • 1963: Royal
  • 1964: Broyles & Parseghian
  • 1965: Prothro
  • 1966: Cahill
  • 1967: Pont
  • 1968: Paterno
  • 1969: Schembechler
  • 1970: McClendon & Royal
  • 1971: Bryant
  • 1972: McKay
  • 1973: Bryant
  • 1974: Teaff
  • 1975: Kush
  • 1976: Majors
  • 1977: James
  • 1978: Paterno
  • 1979: Bruce
  • 1980: Dooley
  • 1981: Ford
  • 1982: Paterno
  • 1983: Hatfield
  • 1984: Edwards
  • 1985: DeBerry
  • 1986: Paterno
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Nehlen
  • 1989: McCartney
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: B. Lewis
  • 1992: Stallings
  • 1993: Alvarez
  • 1994: Osborne
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Br. Snyder
  • 1997: Carr
  • 1998: Fulmer
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Coker & Friedgen
  • 2002: Tressel
  • 2003: Carroll
  • 2004: Tuberville
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Grobe
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Whittingham
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: C. Kelly
  • 2011: Miles
  • 2012: B. Kelly
  • 2013: Cutcliffe
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: MacIntyre
  • 2017: Frost
  • 2018: Leach
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Allen
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
Walter Camp Coach of the Year Award winners
  • 1967: Pont
  • 1968: Hayes
  • 1969: Schembechler
  • 1970: Blackman
  • 1971: Devaney
  • 1972: Paterno
  • 1973: Majors
  • 1974: Switzer
  • 1975: Kush
  • 1976: Burns
  • 1977: Holtz
  • 1978: Powers
  • 1979: Mackovic
  • 1980: Dooley
  • 1981: Sherrill
  • 1982: Stovall
  • 1983: White
  • 1984: Morrison
  • 1985: DeBerry
  • 1986: Johnson
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Nehlen
  • 1989: McCartney
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: B. Bowden
  • 1992: Stallings
  • 1993: T. Bowden
  • 1994: Paterno
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Br. Snyder
  • 1997: Carr
  • 1998: Bi. Snyder
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Ferentz
  • 2003: Stoops
  • 2004: Tuberville
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Schiano
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Saban
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: C. Kelly
  • 2011: Miles
  • 2012: B. Kelly
  • 2013: Cutcliffe
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: MacIntyre
  • 2017: Richt
  • 2018: Saban
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award winners
  • 1957: Hayes
  • 1958: Dietzel
  • 1959: Schwartzwalder
  • 1960: Warmath
  • 1961: Royal
  • 1962: McKay
  • 1963: Royal
  • 1964: Parseghian
  • 1965: Daugherty
  • 1966: Cahill
  • 1967: Pont
  • 1968: Hayes
  • 1969: Schembechler
  • 1970: Agase
  • 1971: Devaney
  • 1972: McKay
  • 1973: Majors
  • 1974: Teaff
  • 1975: Hayes
  • 1976: Majors
  • 1977: Holtz
  • 1978: Paterno
  • 1979: Bruce
  • 1980: Dooley
  • 1981: Ford
  • 1982: Paterno
  • 1983: Schnellenberger
  • 1984: Edwards
  • 1985: DeBerry
  • 1986: Paterno
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Holtz
  • 1989: McCartney
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: James
  • 1992: Stallings
  • 1993: Bowden
  • 1994: Brooks
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Snyder
  • 1997: Price
  • 1998: Fulmer
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Tressel
  • 2003: Saban
  • 2004: Meyer
  • 2005: Weis
  • 2006: Schiano
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Saban
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: C. Kelly
  • 2011: Gundy
  • 2012: B. Kelly
  • 2013: Malzahn
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Ferentz
  • 2016: MacIntyre
  • 2017: Frost
  • 2018: Clark
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Lea
  • v
  • t
  • e
The Sporting News College Football Coach of the Year winners
  • 1963: Royal
  • 1964: Broyles
  • 1965: Daugherty
  • 1966: Parseghian
  • 1967: Pont
  • 1968: Hayes
  • 1969: Royal
  • 1970: Ralston
  • 1971: Fairbanks
  • 1972: McKay
  • 1973: Switzer
  • 1974: Claiborne
  • 1975: Bellard
  • 1976: Majors
  • 1977: Holtz
  • 1978: Rogers
  • 1979: Mackovic
  • 1980: Dooley
  • 1981: Fry
  • 1982: MacIntyre
  • 1983: White
  • 1984: Wacker
  • 1985: Schembechler
  • 1986: Cooper
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Holtz
  • 1989: No Award
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: James
  • 1992: Erickson
  • 1993: Bowden
  • 1994: Brooks
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Br. Snyder
  • 1997: Price
  • 1998: Fulmer
  • 1999: J. Jones
  • 2000: Erickson
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Tressel
  • 2003: Meyer
  • 2004: Tuberville
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Grobe
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Saban
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: C. Kelly
  • 2011: Bi. Snyder
  • 2012: B. Kelly
  • 2013: Malzahn & Cutcliffe
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: Franklin
  • 2017: Smart
  • 2018: Clark
  • 2019: Rhule
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Cignetti
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
George Munger Award winners
  • 1989: Schembechler
  • 1990: Paterno
  • 1991: James
  • 1992: Stallings
  • 1993: Bowden
  • 1994: Paterno
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Snyder
  • 1997: Carr
  • 1998: Fulmer
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Willingham
  • 2003: Carroll
  • 2004: Meyer
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Schiano
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Leach
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: Beamer
  • 2011: Hoke
  • 2012: O'Brien
  • 2013: Cutcliffe
  • 2014: Mullen
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: Saban
  • 2017: Smart
  • 2018: Monken
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Chadwell
  • 2021: Aranda
  • 2022: Fritz
  • 2023: DeBoer
  • 2024: Freeman
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award winners
  • 1976: Dooley
  • 1977: Schembechler
  • 1978: Osborne
  • 1979: Edwards
  • 1980: Bowden
  • 1981: Paterno
  • 1982: G. MacIntyre
  • 1983: Hatfield
  • 1984: Wacker
  • 1985: DeBerry
  • 1986: Sheridan
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Nehlen
  • 1989: Curry
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: Welsh
  • 1992: Robinson
  • 1993: Alvarez
  • 1994: Goldsmith
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Sutton
  • 1997: Price
  • 1998: Snyder
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: O'Leary
  • 2001: Friedgen
  • 2002: Tressel
  • 2003: Stoops
  • 2004: Johnson
  • 2005: Paterno
  • 2006: Grobe
  • 2007: Carr
  • 2008: Brown
  • 2009: Patterson
  • 2010: Petersen
  • 2011: Swinney
  • 2012: Snyder
  • 2013: Cutcliffe
  • 2014: Saban
  • 2015: Ferentz
  • 2016: M. MacIntyre
  • 2017: Shaw
  • 2018: Kelly
  • 2019: Whittingham
  • 2020: Fitzgerald
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Fritz
  • 2023: Norvell
  • 2024: Freeman
  • 2025: Cignetti
  • v
  • t
  • e
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award winners
  • 1986: Paterno
  • 1987: MacPherson
  • 1988: Holtz
  • 1989: McCartney
  • 1990: Ross
  • 1991: James
  • 1992: Stallings
  • 1993: Bowden
  • 1994: Brooks
  • 1995: Barnett
  • 1996: Br. Snyder
  • 1997: Carr
  • 1998: Bi. Snyder
  • 1999: Beamer
  • 2000: Stoops
  • 2001: Coker
  • 2002: Tressel
  • 2003: Saban
  • 2004: Tuberville
  • 2005: Brown
  • 2006: Petersen
  • 2007: Mangino
  • 2008: Whittingham
  • 2009: Petersen
  • 2010: Chizik
  • 2011: Gundy
  • 2012: O'Brien
  • 2013: Malzahn
  • 2014: Patterson
  • 2015: Swinney
  • 2016: Swinney
  • 2017: Frost
  • 2018: Swinney
  • 2019: Orgeron
  • 2020: Saban
  • 2021: Fickell
  • 2022: Dykes
  • 2023: Norvell
  • 2024: Freeman
  • 2025: Cignetti
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