NCSU Football History 101

Our friends at The Red and White from State ran a poll to gather opinions on which Wolfpack football coach was the best of all time. The final results look like this:

– Dick Sheridan…..49%
– Lou Holtz………..21%
– Chuck Amato……13%
– Earle Edwards…..10%

Rhetorical Questions:

– So who did you vote for and why?
(If you didn’t vote….then shame on you.)
– How much do you know about NC State coaches that came “before” you?

There are a few websites that I find absolutely essential as aids to intelligent discussion. One such website is College Football Data Warehouse. Sites like this are literally invaluable because of the wealth of information available with just a few mouse clicks…especially to those of us that need to have our memory jogged from time to time. So let’s see what we can dig out about the various Wolfpack coaches:

Here’s a table summarizing the overall records of Wolfpack coaches over the last 50+ years:

Graph of year-by-year results

So the top three vote getters are also the top three winningest coaches at State over the last 50+ years. (But note that “we” didn’t get them in the same order.) But college football fans don’t really get worked up over winning percentages….they get hyped over:

– Playing in bowl games
– Winning bowl games
– Poll rankings; and
– Victories over your rival(s).

Let’s see how the various coaches have performed in these more “critical” areas:

BOWL GAME EXPLOSION

How many times have you heard someone say that Chuck’s bowl record doesn’t mean anything because there are “too many bowls”? Let’s look at the growth in bowl games for a few minutes:

A review of the information available at the CFB Data Warehouse shows two distinct periods of growth:

– From 11 bowl games in 1975 to 18 bowl games in 1984.
– From 18 bowl games in 1996 to 28 bowl games in 2002.

Here is a year-by-year summary if graphs are more your thing. So what do we make out the increase in available bowl games when evaluating coaches?

The answer is quite simple…increasing the number of bowl games has absolutely no effect on evaluating coaches. Go back to the graph of the winning percentages and look at each year. Chuck should get the exact same amount of credit for a 6-5 season that you would accord Monte Kiffin. The obvious difference between the two coaches is that 6-5 was the high point of the Kiffin era.

MY TAKE

1) Lou Holtz

It’s not really close in my opinion.

– Four bowl games in four years…and in an era where there were far fewer bowl games to play.
– End-of-year national rankings in three of four years

No one else really has the resume to touch Lou. However, you would have to be at least my age (mid-40’s) to even remember when Holtz coached at State.

2) Dick Sheridan

There were several things that I didn’t remember until I was looking over the numbers:

– 6-1 vs UNC
– 2-4 in bowl games
– Three national rankings in six years.

Most anyone would look good after three years of Tom Reed…but Sheridan clearly had one of the best tenures of any coach ever. I wish he had stayed longer, but I suspect that working for Todd Turner wouldn’t have been alot of fun…so I don’t begrudge Sheridan a long and happy retirement.

One more thing in Dick’s resume that needs to be highlighted is the fact that he turned down the chance to follow Vince Dooley at Georgia to stay at NC State (in addition to passing on overtures from South Carolina, Auburn, LSU and Arizona). Sheridan truly wanted to be at NC State and believed in what was growing in Raleigh. Those moves earn Sheridan a fond place in any Wolfpack fan’s memory banks. State’s bowl record under Sheridan keeps him from offering serious competition to Holtz for the top spot in our poll.

3) Earle Edwards, Bo Rein, and Chuck Amato (TIE)

Just based on the numbers, I put Earle Edwards in to create a three-way tie. However, I have absolutely no rememberance of his years at State so I can’t say anything good or bad about him. He had some good years and some that weren’t…but there was one little factoid that I ran across which convinced me to include him:

– From 1956 through 1964, State played UNC in Chapel Hill every year. Edwards had a 6-3 record over those nine years…thus earning him a place in my list of top coaches.

Bo Rein probably doesn’t get enough credit for his years at State:

– State’s last conference championship (1979) along with the nation’s toughest schedule (IIRC)
– Two bowls and an offer to a third in four years. (Once again, it was tougher to make a bowl game during this era.)

Obviously, LSU thought enough of Bo to hire him away from State. I am certainly glad that the ACC is much more of a football conference than it was back then. It is absolutely no fun to watch good coaches get hired away by bigger programs.

And finally we get to Chuck:

– Second highest poll ranking in State’s history
– Five bowls in six years

Now before someone starts whining about “minor” or “useless” bowls…go back and look at the winning percentage graph. The simple fact of five winning years in six seasons places Chuck near the top of the list for NC State coaches. (Don’t bring up the OOC schedule unless you are prepared to discuss the increased difficulty of the conference schedule and have the same info for past coaches as well.)

It is all right to want more in the future…but don’t forget where Chuck fits compared to State coaches over the last fifty years. Those people claiming that Chuck is on the hot seat simply show that they don’t have a clue (In my humble, but accurate, opinion).

Post Script:

I have another entry that I am working on covering NC State football history. Life has severly restricted my time to participate at SFN and these entries are dragging out longer than I had planned. Until I get a chance to finish the second part, keep the comments focused on the past and not next season or future years. (Haven’t we heard the same opinions enough for now?)

Don’t forget…I’m not bashful about deleting entries that don’t stay on topic.

About VaWolf82

Engineer living in Central Va. and senior curmudgeon amongst SFN authors One wife, two kids, one dog, four vehicles on insurance, and four phones on cell plan...looking forward to empty nest status. Graduated 1982

Chuck Amato General NCS Football Tradition

34 Responses to NCSU Football History 101

  1. brown pelican 08/06/2006 at 9:45 PM #

    sheridan did more to estsblish state’s reputation as a first class program off the field than anyone else—the way he dealt with discipline—naz worthen and ray frost are examples of players that he disciplined —for an entire season—both came back and performed at a high level—state was held in high esteem for many of the ‘right reasons’ when coach sheridan was in charge—he remains a role model for many in the profession today in highschool football in both sc and nc

  2. old13 08/06/2006 at 9:48 PM #

    If one goes by win-loss, I agree with the blog’s comments. BUT I was a NCSU student during the 1964-1967 seasons when Earl Edwards was the coach. What he did with so little in the way of facilities and other resources to me was amazing. A lesser coach would have had a MUCH worse record. To be ranked #3 in the country (before losing to Penn State and Clemson both away) in the SECOND YEAR of the existance of Carter (-Finley) Stadium was an astounding feat – especially if one ever experienced old Riddick Stadium. I’m not sure where he would fit in any ranking of NCSU coaches. But he was such in important keystone linking the teams of old Riddick and those of today’s C-F, that he has to be mentioned prominently in my opinion.

  3. Cardiac95 08/06/2006 at 10:11 PM #

    Another “point” about Chuck that misses the mark is that the 11 win season is somehow lessened because it included 2-1AA wins (E. Tenn St. & UMass the year before they went 1A).

    That position completely ignores the fact that 9 Div 1A wins in one season is the most that ANY coach at NC State has ever achieved. Combined with the 2nd highest final ranking ever, plus the Gator Bowl victory, I can’t see how anyone could not consider it one of the best seasons in NC State History.

    IMO, that’s earned enough good-will to suffer through the 5-6, 6-5 seasons. But the good-will doesn’t last forever & this is a critical season in the court of public opinion.

  4. RickJ 08/07/2006 at 8:15 AM #

    Very surprised & delighted to see Earle Edwards viewed in a positive light by this entry & the old13 comment. It is very easy to look at the record and dismiss his contributions. When Coach Edwards was hired at NC State, our reputation as a football program was about as bad as you could imagine. NC high school coaches considered the program to be a complete joke.

    Winning 7 or 8 games and winning a minor bowl is a “peak season� for NC State football. We’ve never played in a major bowl.

    The easiest stat to remember regarding Amato is that NC State had 468 wins and 468 losses when he was hired.

    It is vitally important for the direction of the program for this year to be considered more successful than last year.

  5. Texpack 08/07/2006 at 8:22 AM #

    Lou Holtz doing his magic act for those of us who were attending the Norm Sloan Basketball School will always be a highlight for me. Bo Rein was pure Woody Hayes in his strategic approach to football. He doesn’t get nearly enough credit. The loss to Penn State in 1979 probably cost him his life. A Gator Bowl bid was waiting had we not lost on a 56 yard FG off the upright on the game’s last play. CF went from rocking to graveyard very quickly. In the weeks that followed, we turned down a bowl bid because it conflicted with finals. I think that was all Bo Rein needed to push him to LSU. The goal line stand at Clemson to win the ACC Championship that year was by far the greatest State football moment of my years there. Watching it from the Clemson student section made it all the sweeter.

  6. RAWFS 08/07/2006 at 8:57 AM #

    VaWolf, as always, an excellent statistical analysis. Your well thought out argument is compelling – that Holtz was indeed the best State coach ever.

    When I moved to Raleigh in 1972, it was from Atlanta, and from an area that was (and is) quite devoted to its college football. Georgia had Vince Dooley at the helm, and a very good team year in and year out, and Georgia Tech was quite good too, though in decline after Bobby Dodd’s retirement.

    The only school that generated anything close to that level of excitement was NC State’s Lou Holtz.

    One can only wonder what the past would have held if Holtz had stayed in Raleigh and led the Wolfpack for ten years or longer. Would a national power have resulted? The record would seem to indicate yes.

    And Tex is right about Rein — he was a great coach too.

  7. GoldenChain 08/07/2006 at 9:20 AM #

    In regards to bowls, in ’79 the Pack was 7-4 record with some impressive wins, and at least two losses were in the last second to PSU and Auburn, both top 10 at the time; we also lost to unx that year and I am pretty sure they were ranked as well. It happens to also be the last time we won the ACC. BUT WE DID NOT GO TO A BOWL. In 2006 we would have been in a BCS bowl. That would be my case for “bowl inflation”.

  8. GoldenChain 08/07/2006 at 9:32 AM #

    BTW, I do remember the bowl offer Texpack mentioned, it was the “Garden State Bowl” which was a new and under-financed bowl played in NJ the 15th of December. It only lasted 4 years. I was a senior that fateful gray November day. What you didn’t mention is that PSU completed a 4th and 26 to even get in position to kick the 56 yarder (a record at that time). It hit the crossbar and plopped over to give PSU the 9-7 win in a game that we had totally dominated until the last 30 seconds. While I agree that Rein (what we his record against ECU?!) was perhaps on of the very best we’ve had I still think he was using NCSU as a stepping stone.

  9. VaWolf82 08/07/2006 at 9:38 AM #

    I thought about writing more about the 1979 season, but decided against it. I was in school then and agree with Texpack that Bo Rein was ultra conservative…but sucessful. Here is a summary of the 1979 season:

    http://www.statefansnation.com/images/1979.gif

    There were a total of 15 bowls in 1979 and State played teams that were in five of them.

  10. packpigskinfan23 08/07/2006 at 9:52 AM #

    I dont know a lot about NCSU football history…. since I am only 23, and I have only lived in NC for about 10 years….. BUT, from the alumni that I have spoken too, they completley agree that Lou Holtz is a standout for greatest NCSU coach ever. IF he would have stuck around Raleigh for 10 years I do believe that we would be the toughest and most prestigious school in the ACC. Maybe even the south.

    as for a bit of history that NCSU lost, and completley saddens me is the tearing down of the remains of Riddick!!!! I LOVED walking past that part of campus. I would often go there and just enjoy the view. Unfortunetly I dont know much about it though……

  11. choppack1 08/07/2006 at 10:17 AM #

    Ironically, if Amato’s tenure had ended after his 3rd year, he’d have a pretty strong case to be tied w/ Rein and Edwards – and maybe even ahead of them. However, years 4-6 haven’t been as kind. During those years – at a time when one would have expected a long-time assistant to really start putting together something special, his teams have struggled to a 10-14 conference record. We can talk about conference expansion and it’s impact, but during those same 3 years, his record is 8-9 against the “old ACC.” (Even if you throw in 3 wins vs. Duke, you’d have a 11-9 record.)

    He has no ACC titles even if you take away FSU. He’s also lost 2 of the last 3 to UNC and Wake – leaving us arguably, #3 in the Big 4.

    Regarding the term of “hot seat” – I really think it’s more of a state of mind. I think Chuck bought an extra year w/ his team’s turnaround last year, but I think if we lose to Carolina and struggle again in conference, his back will be up against the wall. I’ve only missed a handful of games in Carter-Finley since 1988 and I’ve never heard the booing I heard at last year’s Clemson game. All things are relative – and the reason I don’t think Chuck is on the “hot seat” right now is that we won 5 out of our last 6 games. I think we’ve seen how quickly things can turn around if we head the wrong way.

  12. BJD95 08/07/2006 at 10:34 AM #

    I would bet that the poll skews due to the large number of people (like me) in their 30s, who remember vividly how Dick Sheridan took us from laughingstock to a real player in the ACC (and even, to an extent, nationally). One should not forget the accomplishment of being the ONLY coach to defeat a Danny Ford-coached Clemson team 3 years in a row. If not for the untimed down Hail Mary play that beat USC (but injured Erik Kramer), Sheridan would have an ACC title under his belt.

    Sheridan did that with mediocre facilities, and pretty average talent. If he had been a more dynamic recruiter (and maybe part of this did involve institutional limitations – which explains the heavy interest from Georgia and others for his services), NC State would have been dominant, IMHO. I take alot of stock in how the marketplace places a “value” on a coach, and its pretty clear that the coaching market thought VERY highly of Sheridan (as it did Valvano and Holtz).

    One thing that is notable about our football history is that (with the exception of MOC), we’ve been pretty agressive in firing. We’ve had alot of substandard coaches, but we’ve also shown a willingness to show them the door. And that was BEFORE the new era of Wolfpack football, complete with facility upgrades and LTRs. Fair or not, we are going to expect MORE going forward, to play “over our history”, so to speak. Results below the Sheridan level are not going to be acceptable, long term. Yes, the conference may be tougher – but that is as much an opportunity as it is a burden. The best coaches will want to prove themselves in the new ACC. The job is what it is, and conference records of 4-4, 3-5, and 3-5 do NOT set the baseline of what we should expect or accept. We made the commitment to the program in order to AT LEAST periodically compete for AT LEAST the divisional crown – not to stay a step or two ahead of the league’s 3 worst programs (UNC, Wake, and Duke) or a laughingstock like ECU – as Chuck recently suggested to Dave Glenn as how he “should” be measured.

    Again, look at the marketplace as a true measure if value. IF we kicked Amato the curb next offseason, would major conference power programs come knocking on his door (as they did for Sheridan)?

    I’m not saying we should fire Amato, but that we damned sure can and should expect him to perform better than the last 3 seasons, tough conference or not. And by “performing better” I do NOT mean making sure the schedule is weak enough that we can scrape into a low-tier bowl against a poor opponent, even with a 2-6 or 3-5 ACC record.

  13. class of 74 08/07/2006 at 10:37 AM #

    Your assessment is mostly correct. Holtz was our best coach followed by Sheridan then put Rein just ahead of Edwards tied with Amato. The list of minor bowls we’ve participated in points out the lack of quality that has existed in our football program. When the Gator Bowl is the best bowl in school history well, that says it all.

  14. joe 08/07/2006 at 10:48 AM #

    Back in the Bo Rein era the SEC was considered way above the ACC for FB so it was not a big surprise that he left for the LSU job. It’s interesting that just 9 years later Sheridan turned down Georgia to stay at NCSU.

    Holtz admitted it was a big mistake for him to go to the NFL but he may have left NCSU for a bigger name program anyway a few years later.

  15. choppack1 08/07/2006 at 11:23 AM #

    BJ – I think Amato’s biggest problem is kind of – yikes – similar to the last coach who left. Amato needs a “signature season” – and by this, I mean a good one (not a bad season or stretch which confirms the worst thoughts). In 6 years, Amato has never won less than 3 or more than 5 conference games (the bad news is that we all know the direction of the graph.) This program desperately needs a season that gives the increasing # of LTR holders and other fans a sense of pride. Even a 5-3 conference record this year would likely to wonders for this program and Chuck’s job stability. Another 3-5 will really hurt the enthusiam for our football program.

  16. tcthdi-tgsf-twhwtnc 08/07/2006 at 11:30 AM #

    In my lifetime Holtz was by far the best. He left the program in great shape and allowed Bo to keep the program moving forward. Dick doesn’t get any consideration from me because of the way he left the program in the middle of the summer for ‘health reason’ forcing the pack to hire O’Cain with no national search.

  17. redfred2 08/07/2006 at 12:49 PM #

    I would go with Holtz primarily for the shape he left the program in and also the persona he brought to the job, much like Valvano. The program was moving in an upward direction and he was out there promoting NC State at small high school awards banquets anywhere and everywhere he could. He was damn good at it and great for the school’s image. Sheridan was good before his collapse, but Lou Holtz was “just right” in every aspect.

  18. Woof Wolf 08/07/2006 at 1:45 PM #

    Holtz was the best and I saw them all. My first State game was in Riddick in 1959. We went 1-9 that year. The 67 team was really good as old13 said earlier and 2001 was the most fun we’ve had during football season in a long time. Sheridan had soon good teams but in my opinion they weren’t as good or as exciting as the Holtz teams.

    We won 3 games in each of the three seasons before Lou got here. 1972, his first season, we went 8-3-1. We opened the season with a tie against a so so Maryland team and then beat Syrcuse. The three losses that year were @ Georiga, @ Penn State, and a 33-34 lost @ a very good (11-1) UNC. We beat WVU in the Peach Bowl.

    We went 9-3 in 1973. We opened with a 57-8 win over ECTC and went
    7-0 in the conference. The three losses were @ Nebraska, @ Georgia and a 29-34 @ 12-0 Penn State. We ended up beating Kansas in the Liberty Bowl. Maybe scheduling three out of conference powers in a season is not such a good idea.

    1974 we went 9-2-1. The loses were to Maryland and unx but we beat Syracuse, Arizina State and Penn State. The tie was with Houston in the Bluebonnet Bowl. We came back from two touchdowns down with less than two minutes to play to tie the game. We dropped back a little to 7-4-1 in 1975 with a loss to WVU in the Peach Bowl and Lou went “Jetting off.”

    I think a major contributing factor to his early departure was that the same week in 1972 that Lou’s team tied Maryland in his opening game, a guy named David Thompson started his Sophomore year at State. He, Buleson, Towe, Sloan et al got most of the attention and almost all the ink for the next three years. It seemed at times that there were more people and certainly more excitement at some of the basketball practices than at some of the football games.

    Realistically we would have eventually lost him to a major program, but it sure was fun while he was here. We actually swept all of our conference football and basketball games in the same school year (73-74). It was actually fun going to work and socializing with the boys in blue.

  19. choppack1 08/07/2006 at 1:45 PM #

    Lou is clearly the gold-standard. Bo Rein could have been great.

    The only flaw I see in Sheridan is the inability to win the “big” game (if the opponent wasn’t Clemson.) Later in his career, when the Clemson-State game became high profile, he had a harder time getting these victories.

  20. tcthdi-tgsf-twhwtnc 08/07/2006 at 1:59 PM #

    Not to mention Sheridan’s coaching was awful in the loss to ECU in the Peach Bowl. I was at the game- who the hell schedules a bowl game at 11am on New Years day- anyway didn’t we have a 21 point lead going into the 4th? I guess you must give some credit to Jeff Blake’s arm but the ‘prevent offense’ that Sheridan resorted to using was criminal and will forever scare his legacy in my eyes.

  21. RAWFS 08/07/2006 at 2:58 PM #

    The 86 Peach Bowl was the one that killed me. I do not care what Hokie fans say, their team cheated to win that game. They faked an ijury to stop the clock and get the FG unit on, and it ridiculously, it was allowed.

    The ECU PB loss was a nightmare that just would not stop happening.

  22. Mike 08/07/2006 at 3:08 PM #

    Holtz was far and away the best coach, and I continue to read IF he had stayed longer……..we would have been on probation. Holtz has had every program in trouble during his tenure. IF he had stayed longer, show me where he stayed anywhere for a long period of time. Holtz was no different then than he is now, except he is a weasel in a TV studio now.

    Sheridan gets the vote here. He turned around 3 straight 3-8 teams with coaching, using essentially the same players Tom Reed had brought in and struggled with. And FYI, tcthdi, Sheridan leaving in the middle of the summer is not a reaon to exclude him. Do you know what was going on with him at the time? Dick Sheridan did what he thought was best at the time for the program. We all regret the day this event happened. I remember exactly where I was when I heard the announcement, and I think all of us in Wolfpack red will remember that sorrowful day. Sheridan did more as a coach, on and OFF the field than any man who ever coached our Pack, and this is why he gets my vote.

    And mentioning the Peach Bowl loss to EZU, yes, what a shame. Stuff happens, but dont trash a mans career based on one game. For 3 quarters we were great, then we went to the dreaded prevent defense, which we all know only prevents winning. Blake got hot, we lost momentum, and we lost the game.

    I am not anti Chuck, but Sheridan would be a good fit for our program today. None of this off the field crap, taunting, stupid penalties that Chuck’s program is known for would happen under DS.

  23. Mike 08/07/2006 at 3:18 PM #

    Oh yeah, and DS was 6-1 in games that counted.

  24. GoldenChain 08/07/2006 at 3:23 PM #

    Sheridan was named Bobby Dodd National Coach of the Year, also earned National Coach of the Year awards from CBS television, Pro Football Weekly and Athlon Publications in ’86. I don’t think any other State f’ball coach ever got anything like that. He basically owned Mac Brown and he did have some nice wins over Pitt, ‘Cuse, 5 over Smack Brownie, and others. My vote is with Sheridan. Holtz was with us but he was never really ours. At a WP Club dinner one time someone asked him how long he would stay and he said that at the end of his contract (4 years) “we might not want him” and laughed it off. It was preordained that he was using State as a stepping stone (which he did quite well!).
    I want to hear from the 10 guys that voted for O’Cain. O’Cain beat up on some good folks but he lost as many miserable games as he won (Baylor comes to mind).

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