- Mark Hutson
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Mark Hutson Sport(s) Football Current position Title Interim head coach, offensive line coach Team Tulane Conference Conference USA Record 0–0 Biographical details Born August 29, 1966 Place of birth Fort Smith, Arkansas Playing career 1984–1987 Oklahoma Position(s) Tackle Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1990–1992
1993–1996
1997
1998–1999
2000–2002
2003–2005
2006
2007–2011
2011–presentOklahoma (GA)
Murray State (TE/ST)
Boise State (TE/ST)
Arkansas (TE/ST)
Tulsa (OL)
Eastern Illinois (AHC/OC/OL)
Eastern Illinois (interim HC)
Tulane (OL)
Tulane (interim HC)Head coaching record Overall 8–5 Tournaments 0–1 (NCAA D-I FBS playoffs) Accomplishments and honors Awards SEC Special Teams Coach of the Year (1999) Mark Hutson (born August 29, 1966) is an American football college coach and a former All-America offensive lineman for the Oklahoma Sooners in the 1980s and among the top players in school history.
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Playing career
Hutson was selected to the OU All-Century Team and one of the Top 100 Players in OU History, following a stellar career with the Sooners, which saw him selected to All-America teams in 1986 and 1987. He was team captain for the 1985 National Championship team and was selected All-Big Eight Conference three times in his career.[1][2] He also played in the 1988 Hula Bowl.
After his college days, Hutson was selected in the third round of the 1988 NFL Draft by the Dallas Cowboys. A back injury forced him to end his professional career without having played a regular season game in the National Football League, though he did spent two seasons with the organization.[3]
Hutson returned to campus and finished his degree in communications in 1990.
Coaching career
Hutson began coaching with his alma mater in 1990 as a graduate assistant. He coached with Houston Nutt at Murray State University, Boise State University and the University of Arkansas.[4] While with the Razorbacks, Hutson was selected Southeastern Conference Special Teams Coach of the Year.[5]
His coaching travels next took Hutson to the University of Tulsa as the offensive line coach from 2000 to 2002. Following Tulsa, Hutson came to Eastern Illinois University and spent four seasons as assistant head coach, offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. In the 2006 season, he jumped in as acting head coach when Bob Spoo was sidelined after surgery.[6] The team finished with an 8–5 season record, 7–1 in the Ohio Valley Conference.
During Hutson's tenure at Eastern Illinois, the team won two conference titles and went to the NCAA Division I playoff twice. The team he led as interim head coach lost in the first round of the 2006 playoffs, 24–13, to Illinois State.[7]
Hutson joined the Tulane University staff in 2007 as offensive line coach. He has been named interim coach for Tulane's remaining six games following the resignation of Bob Toledo.[8]
References
- ^ http://tulanegreenwave.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/hutson_mark00.html
- ^ http://www.soonersports.com/sports/m-footbl/archive/aa-mark-hutson-1986-87.html
- ^ http://donhansen2.blogspot.com/2006/08/eastern-illiniois-head-coach-bob-spoo.html
- ^ http://www.collegebasketball.rivals.com/viewcoach.asp?Year=2006&Sport=2&Team=237
- ^ http://tulanegreenwave.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/hutson_mark00.html
- ^ http://donhansen2.blogspot.com/2006/08/eastern-illiniois-head-coach-bob-spoo.html
- ^ http://www.fcspreview.com/playoffs/2006.html
- ^ http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/7118195/tulane-green-wave-coach-bob-toledo-resigns-football-coach
External links
Eastern Illinois Panthers head football coaches Otis Caldwell (1899–1901) • Thornton Smallwood (1902) • Thomas Briggs (1903) • Joesph Brown (1904–1909) • Harold Railsback (1910) • Charles Lantz (1911–1917) • No team (1918) • Charles Lantz (1919–1934) • Winfield Angus (1935) • Gilbert Carson (1936–1937) • Harold Ave (1938) • Gilbert Carson (1939–1931) • Clayton Miller (1942) • No team (1943) • Charles Lantz (1944) • James Goff (1945) • Maynard O'Brien (1946–1950) • Rex Darling (1951) • Maynard O'Brien (1952–1955) • Keith Smith (1956) • Ralph Kohl (1957–1964) • Clyde Biggers (1965–1971) • Jack Dean (1972–1974) • John Konstantinos (1975–1977) • Darrell Mudra (1978–1982) • Al Molde (1983–1986) • Bob Spoo (1987–2005) • Mark Hutson # (2006) • Bob Spoo (2007– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Tulane Green Wave head football coaches T. L. Bayne (1893) • Fred Sweet (1894) • T. L. Bayne (1895) • Harry Baum (1896) • John Lombard (1898) • H. T. Collier (1899) • H. T. Summersgill (1900–1901) • Virginius Dabney (1902) • Charles Eshleman (1903) • Thomas A. Barry (1904) • John F. Tobin (1905) • John Russ (1906) • Joe Curtis (1907–1908) • R. M. Brown (1909) • Appleton A. Mason (1910–1912) • A. C. Hoffman (1913) • Edwin Sweetland (1914) • Clark Shaughnessy (1915–1920) • Myron Fuller (1921) • Clark Shaughnessy (1922–1926) • Bernie Bierman (1927–1931) • Ted Cox (1932–1935) • Red Dawson (1936–1941) • Claude Simons (1942–1945) • Henry Frnka (1946–1951) • Raymond Wolf (1952–1953) • Andy Pilney (1954–1961) • Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) • Jim Pittman (1966–1970) • Bennie Ellender (1971–1975) • Larry Smith (1976–1979) • Vince Gibson (1980–1982) • Wally English (1983–1984) • Mack Brown (1985–1987) • Greg Davis (1988–1991) • Buddy Teevens (1992–1996) • Tommy Bowden (1997–1998) • Chris Scelfo (1999–2006) • Bob Toledo (2007–2011) • Mark Hutson # (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Oklahoma Sooners Football 1985 Consensus National Champions Troy Aikman | Brian Bosworth | Sonny Brown | Tony Casillas | Jamelle Holieway | Mark Hutson | Keith Jackson | Dante Jones | Kevin Murphy | Darrell Reed | Derrick Shepard | Spencer Tillman
Head Coach Barry Switzer
Coaches Jim Donnan | Gary GibbsCategories:- 1966 births
- Living people
- American football offensive linemen
- Arkansas Razorbacks football coaches
- Eastern Illinois Panthers football coaches
- Murray State Racers football coaches
- Oklahoma Sooners football coaches
- Oklahoma Sooners football players
- Tulsa Golden Hurricane football coaches
- Tulane Green Wave football coaches
- People from Fort Smith, Arkansas
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