Chris Tormey

Chris Tormey
Chris Tormey
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Title Linebackers coach
Team Washington State
Biographical details
Born May 1, 1955 (1955-05-01) (age 56)
Place of birth Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Playing career
1975–1977 Idaho
Position(s) Linebacker
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1980–1981
1982–1983
1984–1994
1995–1999
2000–2003
2004–2008
2009–2010
2011-present
Washington (GA)
Idaho (assistant)
Washington (assistant)
Idaho
Nevada
Washington (assistant)
Hawaii (assistant)
Washington State (assistant)
Head coaching record
Overall 49–54
Bowls 1–0
Statistics
College Football Data Warehouse
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 Big West (1998)
Awards
Big West Coach of the Year (1998)

Chris Tormey (born May 1, 1955 in Omaha, Nebraska) is an American football coach. Formerly the head coach at Idaho and Nevada, he is currently an assistant at Washington State, coaching the linebackers. Tormey was an assistant coach for 16 seasons at Washington, 1984–94 and 2004-08; he also spent two seasons as a UW graduate assistant (1980-81).

Contents

Early years

Tormey grew up in Spokane and attended high school at Gonzaga Prep. He played college football at the University of Idaho in Moscow, where he was an all-conference (Big Sky) linebacker (1976-77) and three-year letter winner for the Vandals under head coach Ed Troxel. He received a bachelor's degree in education in 1978.

Assistant coach

Tormey had a brief stop with the Washington Redskins of the NFL, then began his coaching career as a high school assistant back at Gonzaga Prep, where he also taught geography. In 1980 his collegiate coaching career began as a graduate assistant at Washington in Seattle, a position he left in 1982 to coach the defensive line at his alma mater, serving under newly-hired Idaho Vandals' head coach Dennis Erickson.

After two years on the Palouse, Tormey returned to the Huskies in Seattle, where he would remain for 11 seasons, 1984-94, coaching tight ends, linebackers, and the secondary for Don James and Jim Lambright. UW shared the national championship (with Miami) in 1991. For the 1994 season Tormey was named acting defensive coordinator.

Idaho

Following the 1994 season, John L. Smith left Idaho and Tormey returned to Moscow to succeed him as head coach. Tormey's first season in 1995 was the Vandals' last in the Big Sky and Division I-AA; Idaho joined the Big West in Division I-A in 1996.

In his five seasons at the helm in Moscow, Tormey compiled a 33-23 record (.589), including the Vandals' first-ever bowl appearance in 1998 in the Humanitarian Bowl, a 42-35 victory over 17-point favorite Southern Mississippi.[1] The Vandals earned the bowl berth by winning the Big West title with a dramatic one-point overtime win over rival Boise State, on the road in Bronco Stadium in Boise. The bowl victory propelled Idaho to an impressive 9-3 record in 1998, their third season back in Division I-A, and Tormey was named Coach of the Year in the Big West.

The Vandals went 7-4 in 1999, including a 28-17 win over neighboring Washington State, eight miles (13 km) to the west. It was Idaho's first football victory over the Cougars since 1965 in the Battle of the Palouse.

Nevada

Following the 1999 season, Tormey moved south to Reno to coach the Nevada Wolf Pack, which was leaving the Big West to join the WAC. Tormey was the head coach for four seasons (2000-03), compiling a 16-31 record (.340). He succeeded Jeff Tisdel, a former All-American quarterback for the Wolf Pack. While Tormey's win totals improved each season (2,3,5,6), he was released from the fifth and final season of his contract at the end of the 2003 season, the final game marked by a 56-3 blowout loss at Boise State. Most notably, Tormey failed to defeat bitter in-state rival UNLV in the annual Battle for the Fremont Cannon, but his Nevada team did defeat the Washington Huskies 28-17 in Seattle that final season. Nevada's athletic director Chris Ault hired himself to succeed Tormey, his third stint as head coach of the Wolf Pack.

Back to Washington

Tormey was quickly rehired at Washington in 2004 as a defensive assistant under head coach Keith Gilbertson, and stayed on with the new coach Tyrone Willingham, becoming the recruiting coordinator.

Hawai'i

Following the dismissal of Willingham after Washington's winless 2008 season, Tormey joined head coach Greg McMackin at Hawai'i as an assistant coach for two seasons.[2]

Washington State

Tormey returned to the mainland and the Palouse in 2011, joining the Washington State staff as the linebackers coach under fourth-year head coach Paul Wulff.[3]

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Idaho Vandals (Big Sky Conference) (1995)
1995 Idaho 6–5 4–3 L NCAA Division I-AA First Round
Idaho Vandals (Big West Conference) (1996–1999)
1996 Idaho 6–5 3–2
1997 Idaho 5–6 2–3
1998 Idaho 9–3 5–1 1st W Humanitarian
1999 Idaho 7–4 4–2
Idaho: 32–23 18–11
Nevada Wolf Pack (Western Athletic Conference) (2000–2003)
2000 Nevada 2–10 1–7
2001 Nevada 3–8 3–5
2002 Nevada 5–7 4–4
2003 Nevada 6–6 4–4
Nevada: 16–31 12–20
Total: 49–54
      National Championship         Conference Title         Conference Division Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.

References

  1. ^ College Football Data Warehouse.com - Chris Tormey - head coaching record - accessed 2009-10-09
  2. ^ Hawaii Athletics.com - football - Chris Tormey - accessed 2009-10-09
  3. ^ The Seattle Times - Tormey back in Palouse at WSU - 2011-01-21

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Jim Lambright
Washington Huskies Defensive Coordinator
1994
Succeeded by
Randy Hart

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