- Michael Haywood
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Michael Haywood Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born February 26, 1964 Place of birth Houston, Texas Playing career 1984–1986 Notre Dame Position(s) Wide receiver, Defensive back Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1988
1989–1990
1991–1992
1993–1994
1995–2002
2003–2004
2005–2008
2009–2010Minnesota (GA)
Army (DB/DE/ST)
Ohio (OLB/ST)
Ball State (WR/RB/ST)
LSU (RB/ST)
Texas (RB/ST)
Notre Dame (OC/RB)
Miami (OH)Head coaching record Overall 10–15 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Accomplishments and honors Awards 2005 AFCA NCAA IA Assistant Coach of the Year
2010 MAC Coach of the YearMichael Anthony Haywood (born February 26, 1964) is a former American collegiate football coach. He previously served as the head football coach at Miami University, as an assistant coach at various other universities for 21 seasons, and was a former football player at the University of Notre Dame.
Haywood was born in Houston, Texas. He attended St. Thomas High School in Houston and then the University of Notre Dame where he played as a wide receiver wearing jersey #1.
In December 2007, Haywood was considered one of the two leading candidates for the head coaching position at the University of Houston, alongside Jack Pardee.[1] However, the job eventually went to Kevin Sumlin. In December 2008, Haywood was named the head coach of the Miami RedHawks.[2] He replaced Shane Montgomery.
After going 1-11 in his first season, Haywood led the Redhawks to an 8-4 record in his second season and a MAC East title. The Redhawks then emerged victorious in the 2010 MAC Championship Game against Northern Illinois University, winning by a final score of 26-21. He was named the 2010 Mid-American Conference football coach of the year.[3]
On December 16, 2010, Haywood was offered and accepted the head football coaching position at the University of Pittsburgh.[4] However, Haywood was arrested in South Bend, Indiana on December 31, 2010 on felony domestic violence charges arising from a custody dispute.[5] He was released on bond on January 1, 2011 and only hours later was fired by Pitt.[6]
Head coaching record
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP° Miami RedHawks (Mid-American Conference) (2009–present) 2009 Miami 1–11 1–7 7th (East) 2010 Miami 9–4 8–1 1st GoDaddy.com Bowl* Miami: 10–15 9–8 *Lance Guidry coached bowl game[7] Total: 10–15 National Championship Conference Title Conference Division Title #Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.References
- ^ Houston Chronicle: UH narrows coaching candidates to Pardee, Haywood
- ^ ESPN: Sources: Miami of Ohio to hire Mike Haywood as football coach
- ^ Conrad, Pete (2010-12-01). "Haywood named MAC Coach of the Year". Dayton Daily News. http://mo.daytondailynews.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/dayton/miamiredhawks/entries/2010/12/01/haywood_named_mac_coach_of_the.html. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- ^ Associated Press (2010-12-16). "Pittsburgh hires Mike Haywood". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5924001. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
- ^ http://www.wndu.com/sports/headlines/112730024.html
- ^ ESPN.com news services (2011-01-01). "Pitt fires Mike Haywood". ESPN.com. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5978467. Retrieved 2011-01-01.
- ^ RedHawks' defensive backs coach will lead team in GoDaddy.com Bowl
External links
Miami Redskins / RedHawks head football coaches No coach (1888–1889) • No team (1890) • No coach (1891–1894) • C. K. Fauver (1895) • Ernest Merrill (1896) • Herbert McIntyre (1897) • No coach (1898–1899) • Alonzo Edwin Branch (1900) • Thomas Hazzard (1901) • Peter McPherson (1902–1903) • Arthur Smith (1904) • No coach (1905) • Arthur H. Parmelee (1906) • Amos Foster (1907–1908) • Harold Iddings (1909–1910) • Edwin Sweetland (1911) • James C. Donnelly (1912–1914) • Chester J. Roberts (1915) • George Little (1916) • George Rider (1917–1918) • George Little (1919–1921) • Harry W. Ewing (1922–1923) • Chester Pittser (1924–1931) • Frank Wilton (1932–1941) • Stu Holcomb (1942–1943) • Sid Gillman (1944–1947) • George Blackburn (1948) • Woody Hayes (1949–1950) • Ara Parseghian (1951–1955) • John Pont (1956–1962) • Bo Schembechler (1963–1968) • Bill Mallory (1969–1973) • Dick Crum (1974–1977) • Tom Reed (1978–1982) • Tim Rose (1983–1989) • Randy Walker (1990–1998) • Terry Hoeppner (1999–2004) • Shane Montgomery (2005–2008) • Michael Haywood (2009–2010) • Lance Guidry # (2010) • Don Treadwell (2011–)
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.AFCA Division I FBS Assistant Coach of the Year winners 1997: Alan Gooch | 1998: Richard Bell | 1999: Jerry Sandusky | 2000: John Gutekunst | 2001: Fred Jackson | 2002: Ron Aiken | 2003: Chuck Petersen | 2004: Brian White | 2005: Michael Haywood | 2006: John Chavis | 2007: Calvin Magee | 2008: Mac McWhorter | 2009: Mike MacIntyre | 2010: Luke Fickell
Categories:- 1964 births
- Living people
- African American coaches of American football
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- Army Black Knights football coaches
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- People from Houston, Texas
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