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The Ole Miss football program sought a proven winner in a
head coach and found that man and more in Houston Nutt, who was introduced as
the Rebels' 36th head coach on Nov. 28, 2007.
After guiding Arkansas to three SEC Western
Division titles and eight bowl berths in his decade in Fayetteville,
Nutt has immediately reversed the Rebels' fortunes and guided Ole Miss to
success not experienced in Oxford
in 40 years.
Nutt's first two years at the helm have produced consecutive
nine-win seasons for the first time since 1961-62 and back-to-back January bowl
victories for the first time since 1960-61.
Including his decade of success at Arkansas, Nutt has guided his teams to 10
bowl berths in the past 12 seasons, most of any SEC Western Division coach
during this span. Nutt's squads recorded eight or more wins in eight of those
12 campaigns and nine or more victories in six of those seasons in the SEC.
Rising as high as No. 4 in the national rankings in 2009,
Nutt's Rebels knocked off No. 8 LSU, Tennessee
and Arkansas
en route to a second straight berth in the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, in
which Ole Miss prevailed over No. 18 Oklahoma State 21-7.
The 2009 campaign saw Nutt earn his 50th career coaching
victory in SEC play (52-47). He is just the 14th conference coach all-time to
reach that mark and only the third current coach. With a 93-56 overall mark as
an SEC coach, Nutt ranks 18th all-time in the league in coaching victories and
behind only Steve Spurrier among active coaches.
Nutt was also bestowed with one of his greatest honors last
year, as the Fellowship of Christian Athletes named him the 2009 FCA Grant
Teaff Coach of the Year Award recipient. The award recognizes a football coach
who exemplifies Christian principles and who is involved in FCA. The award is
also based on the success/performance of the coach's team that year.
In his first season in Oxford,
Nutt led one of the greatest turnarounds in school history, reviving a Rebel
squad that was coming off four straight losing seasons and a 3-8 campaign with
no conference wins in 2007. With a 9-4 record (5-3 in the SEC), it marked the
team's best improvement from one season to the next since legendary Ole Miss
Coach John Vaught's debut in 1947.
Projected to place fifth in the SEC Western Division in the
preseason, Nutt's first Rebel unit finished second in the West, ended the
season on a six-game win streak and earned a No. 14 final national ranking.
Nutt's efforts earned him SEC Coach of the Year honors (SEC Coaches and The
Touchdown Club of Atlanta) for the third time in his decorated career and AFCA
Region Coach of the Year accolades for the fifth time.
In his two seasons in Oxford, Nutt has continued his reputation as a giant
killer, as his Rebels have registered a 5-3 record against ranked teams and a 3-2
mark against top-10 teams, including a 25-23 victory over eighth-ranked LSU in 2009.
The 2008 Ole Miss squad knocked off three top-20 foes away
from Oxford,
including the defending national champion in No. 18 LSU and the eventual title
holder in No. 4 Florida. The third win was a resounding 47-34 defeat of No. 8
Texas Tech in the 2009 Cotton Bowl.
The upset over the Gators - their lone blemish of the season - provided Nutt
his fifth win against a top-five
opponent as a head coach. In all five wins, Nutt's team entered the game
unranked, and four of the wins came on the road.
Also the 2006 SEC Coach of the Year, Nutt has recorded 21 victories over ranked
opponents, including the 50-48 overtime win at eventual national champion and
No. 1-ranked LSU in his final game as Arkansas
mentor. He has had 25 victories while his own team was ranked.
Nutt, who was also named SEC Coach of the Year in 2001 and National Coach of the
Year in 1998, guided Arkansas
to three final national rankings, including a final ranking of No. 15 in 2006.
In his 10 seasons in Fayetteville,
Nutt was the second-longest tenured coach in the SEC. Arkansas went 75-48
during his time, including 42-38 in SEC play. In the previous eight years prior
to Nutt's arrival, Arkansas
was 38-51 with two bowl bids. In UA's first six years in the Southeastern
Conference (1992-97) prior to Nutt's return to Fayetteville, the Razorbacks totaled only 19
league victories.
After that, Nutt led the Hogs to four nine-win seasons,
including a 10-4 mark in 2006, and SEC Western Division championships in 1998,
2002 and 2006. The Razorbacks earned trips to the Citrus (1999), Cotton (2000,
2002 & 2007), Las Vegas (2000), Music
City (2002), Independence (2003) and Capital One (2006)
bowls.
Under Nutt, the Razorbacks went 53-17 at home, which was the
second-most home victories in the SEC during that span.
Nutt and his staff have produced 20 All-America selections,
85 All-SEC selections, a Walter Camp Player of the Year winner (Darren
McFadden, 2007), a two-time Doak Walker Award winner (McFadden, 2006 &
2007), a Rimington Trophy winner (Jonathan Luigs, 2007), a two-time Heisman
Trophy runner-up (McFadden, 2006 & 2007), two Outland Trophy finalists
(Michael Oher, 2008 & Shawn Andrews, 2003) and a Lombardi Award finalist
(Andrews, 2003). In UA's first six seasons in the SEC, the Razorbacks averaged
three All-SEC picks and had no All-Americans.
Nutt's teams have had 96 games televised since 1998, an
average of eight per season. In the eight years prior to Nutt's arrival, the
Hogs appeared on television 36 times, an average of 4.5 games per year.
Nutt's offensive approach has made the Ole Miss rushing
attack rise from one of the SEC's worst to one of the best. In 2008, the Rebels
recorded their most rushing yards since 1990 and ranked second in the conference
after ranking 11th just one year prior.
After averaging 186.5 yards per game with 21 TDs in year one
under Nutt, Ole Miss continued its potent rushing offense with a 183.6 clip and
22 touchdowns this season.
Arkansas led the SEC in rushing five of Nutt's last six
years there and ranked among the nation's top 15 five times. Nutt's teams
recorded four of the top eight season rushing totals, five of the top nine
season passing totals, the top four total offensive averages, five of the top
eight season scoring totals and the top seven touchdown passing seasons in
school history.
Defensively, Nutt's squads have ranked among the NCAA's top
30 in rushing defense four times, in passing defense three times and in total
defense six times.
In his first year in Oxford,
Ole Miss dramatically jumped to No. 2 in the SEC in rushing yards allowed from
No. 11 in 2007. In fact, Nutt's Rebels finished fourth in the nation in rush
defense and tied for first in tackles for loss.
Ole Miss remained among the NCAA leaders in TFLs again in
2009 at No. 11, while improving in pass defense from 63rd in the nation to 15th.
Nutt's latest Rebel defense also ranked 11th in pass
efficiency defense, 14th in country in sacks and 15th in scoring defense.
Nutt was only the third head coach in Arkansas history to lead the Hogs to bowl
games in each of his first six seasons. Nutt joined former UA leaders Lou Holtz
and Ken Hatfield in accomplishing that feat.
Nutt has also shown the ability to prepare athletes for the
professional level as evidenced by the 37 NFL Draft selections since 1998. He
helped four former Rebels hear their names called in 2009, including two
first-rounders for the first time in school history with Michael Oher (Baltimore) and Peria Jerry (Atlanta).
Nutt also tutored a pair of first-round picks in 2008 and
six total draftees. Former Hog Darren McFadden was the fourth overall selection
(Oakland), while backfield mate Felix Jones was
taken at No. 22 (Dallas)
to run the Razorbacks' total to six first-rounders in five years.
In 2004, six former Razorbacks were chosen in the NFL Draft,
including first-round selections Shawn Andrews (Philadelphia)
and Ahmad "Batman" Carroll (Green Bay).
Quarterback Matt Jones (Jacksonville)
made it yet another first-round draft pick under Nutt when he was taken with
the 21st overall choice in 2005.
Three former Nutt pupils inked NFL contracts in 2006, and in
2007, a total of 13 Razorbacks signed professionally, including four draft
picks and nine free agents. Defensive end Jamaal Anderson (Atlanta Falcons)
went in the first round.
Nutt also enhanced the academic success of his players with
dozens of student-athletes graduating before their athletic eligibility expired
and the 175 SEC Academic Honor Roll selections, including 22 in 2009. A total
of 74 Razorbacks were named to UA's Academic Honor Roll (3.0 grade point
average or better) during the 2005 and 2006 seasons.
Off the field, Nutt has also given back to the community in
a variety of charitable causes. In addition to receiving the 2009 FCA Coach of
the Year award, he and his wife Diana committed a gift of $100,000 to the University of Mississippi in April 2009 to create
scholarships for deserving student-athletes and to go towards the Indoor
Practice Facility.
Nutt also took part in the Second Annual Coaches Tour
presented by Under Armour, traveling to military bases throughout the Middle East to visit U.S. Troops. Along with head coaches Mack Brown (Texas), Troy Calhoun (Air Force), Rick Neuheisel (UCLA)
and former Ole Miss and Auburn
coach Tommy Tuberville, Nutt headed to the gulf on a USAF KC-135 Refueling
Tanker and visited more than 12,000 troops and traveled 20,000 flight miles.
The coaches participated in meet-and-greets at various bases
and coached flag football teams made up of servicemen and women. The head
coaches also hosted a symposium where audience members had the opportunity to
ask questions.
Also in 2009, Nutt received the Award of Merit from
representatives from the National Water Safety Congress and Sardis Lake. He was recognized for his part in helping
produce several public service announcements about the importance of wearing a
life jacket.
* * *
Success is nothing new to the Little Rock, Ark.,
native. Nutt has compiled a career record of 129-78 (.623) in 17 seasons as a
head coach including stops at Murray State, Boise State, Arkansas and Ole Miss.
When Nutt was introduced as Arkansas head coach on Dec. 10, 1997, it
would have been difficult for anyone to envision the immediate, positive impact
that he had on a program, a university and a state.
Taking the reins of a proud program that had faltered in
back-to-back 4-7 seasons, Nutt faced the daunting task of restoring the
excitement and passion in Razorback football.
Nutt made an immeasurable impact on the Arkansas football program, but his
commitment to enhance the program was not limited to the playing field. Nutt
created a family atmosphere for the student-athletes who chose to come to Fayetteville and now to Oxford.
While his on-field accomplishments speak for themselves, it
is his investment in the lives of his players that sets him apart. He and his
staff personally monitor class attendance and visit players in their apartments
and dormitory rooms at night. Nutt consistently makes decisions with the best
interests of his program and student-athletes in mind. While wins and losses
are easily calculated, it is Nutt's commitment to the academic success of his
student-athletes that will continue to pay dividends for years to come.
His philosophy has proven to be a recipe for success in the
rough and tumble world of SEC football. Once courted by Frank Broyles as a star
quarterback out of Little Rock's Central High School,
Nutt first thrilled Hog fans when, as a high school senior, he signed with
Broyles over Paul "Bear" Bryant and Alabama.
He was the last player to sign a letter of intent to play for Broyles before
the legendary coach retired after the 1976 season.
With Ron Calcagni sidelined by an injury, Nutt started four
games as a true freshman in 1976. He also lettered for Arkansas' basketball team that year, a squad
that finished 26-2 and won the Southwest Conference championship with a perfect
16-0 league mark under Coach Eddie Sutton.
Recruited as a drop-back passer, Nutt spent the 1977 season
as a backup in the option-oriented offense instituted by Lou Holtz, Broyles'
successor at the helm of the UA football program. He decided to transfer to Oklahoma State where he redshirted and then
played two years at quarterback for the Cowboys. He also spent two seasons with
the OSU basketball program. Nutt earned his degree in physical education in
1981. Following his graduation, Nutt remained at OSU as a graduate assistant
for head coach Jimmy Johnson.
In 1983, he returned to Arkansas as a graduate assistant under
Holtz. His first full-time position came at Arkansas
State in the spring of 1984, but Nutt
never worked a game in Jonesboro.
Instead, Nutt returned to Oklahoma
State, this time to be a
receivers coach, in August of 1984.
He remained in Stillwater
for six seasons, working extensively with quarterbacks and receivers. He was
named offensive coordinator late in the 1989 season. Heisman Trophy winner
Barry Sanders and All-American Thurman Thomas both played for the Cowboys
during Nutt's tenure.
Nutt made the trek back to Fayetteville in 1990 to serve as wide
receivers coach under Jack Crowe. During his three seasons on campus, Nutt quickly
gained a reputation as an aggressive recruiter while he was establishing
excellent relationships with high school coaches in Arkansas.
Murray
State recognized his
abilities and hired him as head coach in 1993. Nutt guided the Racers to steady
progress with 4-7 and 5-6 marks in his first two seasons. In 1995, the program
took off.
The Racers went 11-1 in 1995 and won the Ohio Valley
Conference with a perfect 8-0 mark. They scored a school-record 421 points and
had the most improved record in NCAA Division I-AA football. Their league
championship was the school's first since 1986. Nutt was named OVC Coach of the
Year and The Sports Network/Eddie Robinson National Division I-AA Coach of the
Year.
In 1996, the Racers posted an 11-2 record, including a
perfect 8-0 mark in winning their second consecutive league title. MSU won its
first I-AA playoff game in school history while eclipsing the school scoring
record set just the season before. Nutt was again named OVC and Regional Coach
of the Year.
Nutt's accomplishments didn't go unnoticed. Boise State,
in just its second season of Division I-A football, called on Nutt to take over
a fledgling program that was coming off a dismal 2-10 record. In fact, Sports
Illustrated rated Boise
State 112th out of 112
teams in Division I-A football.
With what most observers agreed was a limited talent pool,
Nutt managed to guide the Broncos to a 5-6 record in his first campaign. Nutt's
squad held a lead against Wisconsin in the
final minute of play at Madison,
Wis., before the Badgers escaped
with a win. The Broncos did, however, upset archrival Idaho on its own home field to end the 1997
season.
After a successful season at Boise
State, Nutt found himself in the
running for the top job at Arkansas.
The first candidate interviewed, he waited a week to learn his fate before
hearing the job was his.
Once he arrived in Fayetteville,
he took the state by storm. As he recruited student-athletes, he also
re-recruited fans who had grown apathetic during a listless decade of Hog
football. Many who had stayed away were rejuvenated by Nutt's enthusiasm.
Fans were not the only ones attracted to Nutt's refreshing
approach. Picked to finish last in the SEC West, the Razorbacks exploded out of
the gates, winning their first eight games. Arkansas
had top-ranked Tennessee on the ropes at Knoxville, Tenn.,
before an untimely fumble allowed the Volunteers to escape on the way to a
national championship.
The Razorbacks finished 9-3 and won a share of the SEC
Western Division title. The Hogs made their first ever trip to the Florida
Citrus Bowl and concluded the season with their first top-20 poll finish (16th)
in nine seasons. For his efforts, Nutt was named Football News' National Coach
of the Year.
In 1999 the Razorbacks became the Western Division favorite
because of an unusually large senior class. The Hogs had trouble on the road
throughout the campaign, but finished in the manner of legends, defeating No. 3
Tennessee and No. 12 Mississippi State on consecutive weekends to earn a spot
opposite long-time rival Texas
in the Cotton Bowl.
Nutt's well-prepared team handed the Longhorns a 27-6 defeat
in front of a packed house that included more than 40,000 cardinal-clad Hog fans.
For the first time in its illustrious history, Texas was held to negative rushing yards.
Once again the Hogs finished in the top 20 in the final polls, and Nutt's
status in the eyes of fans was raised to an even higher level.
In the 2000 campaign, Nutt faced his toughest challenge yet,
taking on a daunting schedule without the services of the top career passer
(Clint Stoerner) and receiver (Anthony Lucas) in school history. From literally
the first day of workouts, Nutt and the Razorbacks faced more than their fair
share of adversity and injuries. Nine players were lost for the season to
injury, including the top three tailbacks listed on the preseason depth chart.
In addition, dozens of other players missed practice and game time with various
ailments.
Despite all the misfortune and distractions, Nutt rallied
his team to back-to-back wins over No. 13 Mississippi State and No. 24 LSU to
secure yet another winning regular season and a bowl game.
In 2001, the Razorbacks stumbled to a 1-3 start, including
three-straight losses in league play. Nutt and the Hogs rebounded to win six of
their final seven regular-season games, including wins over conference
divisional leaders in consecutive contests. Arkansas topped No. 9 South Carolina, 10-7,
before downing No. 17 Auburn, 42-17. The Hogs won their way back to Dallas for a New Year's Day meeting with defending
national champion Oklahoma
in the Cotton Bowl.
The 2002 season started impressively with convincing wins
over Boise State
and South Florida. After a home loss to Alabama and a road defeat at the hands of Tennessee in six
overtimes, the Razorbacks' hopes for a division title looked bleak, but once
again Nutt rallied his team down the stretch. Five straight wins, including
road conference wins at South Carolina and Mississippi State, gave the Hogs a chance for a
share of the SEC Western Division crown. Trailing nationally ranked LSU with
less than a minute to play, quarterback Matt Jones found DeCori Birmingham in
the back of the end zone for a 31-yard touchdown pass, a share of the SEC
Western Division title and a ticket to the SEC Championship Game in Atlanta,
Ga. Arkansas made its second appearance in the league championship game and
capped its season in the Music City Bowl.
The Razorbacks wasted little time getting noticed in 2003. Arkansas topped No. 5 Texas, 38-28, in a nationally
televised showdown at Austin
in the second game of the season. Arkansas
vaulted into the national polls at No. 14, marking the highest debut of any
team since the poll was expanded to 25 teams in 1989. Two weeks later, Arkansas rallied for a 34-31 double-overtime win at Alabama to keep the
momentum going. After suffering a trio of heartbreaking conference games, Arkansas salvaged its season with a historic 71-63
seven-overtime win at Kentucky.
The Hogs tied their own NCAA record for overtime periods set in 2001 at Ole
Miss. The memorable win ignited a streak that saw the Razorbacks win four of
their last five games including a 27-14 win over Missouri in the Independence Bowl.
Arkansas
mounted another late-season run in 2004 before coming up just shy of extending
its bowl streak to a school record seven-consecutive seasons.
With a new quarterback, the Razorbacks missed out on a bowl
bid in 2005, but showed great improvement down the stretch. UA led the SEC in
rushing for the third time in four years, won two of its last three and
suffered its last three losses by a combined nine points.
The Hogs were back in business in 2006. After a
season-opening loss, Arkansas
reeled off 10 straight wins, including wins over No. 2 Auburn, No. 13 Tennessee
and No. 22 Alabama, and won the Western Division title. UA had chances to win
but came up short against No. 4 Florida in the SEC Championship game, 38-28,
and in the Capital One Bowl against No. 6 Wisconsin, 17-14. Darren McFadden led
the SEC and set a school record by running for 1,647 yards and 14 touchdowns.
He won the Doak Walker Award as the country's top tailback and finished second
in Heisman Trophy balloting.
Nutt was named SEC Coach of the Year by the SEC coaches, the
Associated Press and the Little Rock and Atlanta touchdown clubs.
Also a national coach of the year finalist, away from the field he was
recognized as the 2006 Easter Seals Arkansan of the Year.
Much like the nine prior, Nutt's final campaign with the
Razorbacks displayed the determination of his teams. After a 3-3 start that saw
a three-point loss at Alabama and a two-point setback to No. 22 Auburn,
Arkansas rallied with wins in five of its last six games en route to earning a
Cotton Bowl berth.
His coaching finale with his homestate team epitomized the
heart of Nutt's Razorbacks. A huge underdog in Death Valley,
Arkansas marched into Baton Rouge and battled past the nation's
top-ranked team and eventual BCS champion LSU in a 50-48 triple-overtime
classic. It was Nutt's seventh OT game with the Hogs, posting an amazing 6-1
record.
* * *
Nutt is quick to credit his upbringing for laying the
foundation for his success. His parents, the late Houston Sr. and Emogene,
spent 35 years teaching young people at the Arkansas
School for the Deaf in Little Rock. His father,
a 2001 inductee into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame, also served as athletics
director and head basketball coach.
The oldest of four Nutt boys, Houston is not the only family
member carrying on his father's coaching legacy. Dickey spent 13 seasons as the
head basketball coach at Arkansas State and is now the head coach at Southeast
Missouri State, while Danny was the Razorbacks' running backs coach from
1998-2006 and is currently Ole Miss' Assistant Athletics Director for Player
Development. Dennis was the head basketball coach at Texas State
for six years and is now a scout for the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats. The Nutt
coaching foursome was featured in an article in Sports Illustrated in 1999.
Houston Nutt has proven true to his family's rich coaching
heritage: a heritage that is centered on commitment, enthusiasm and a passion
for people. He has impacted his players' lives and revitalized tradition-rich
programs in both Arkansas
and now Ole Miss.
Born Oct. 14, 1957, Nutt and his wife Diana, who also
graduated from Oklahoma
State, have four
children: Houston III, twins Hailey and Hanna, and Haven.
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