Ray Woodard

This article is about the American football player and coach. For the soccer coach, see Ray Woodard (soccer coach).
Ray Woodard
Sport(s) Football
Current position
Record 34–46
Biographical details
Born (1961-08-20) August 20, 1961
Corrigan, Texas
Playing career
1980–1981 Kilgore College
1982–1983 Texas
1987 Kansas City Chiefs
1987 Denver Broncos
Position(s) Defensive lineman
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1988–1995 Kilgore College (assistant)
1996 Texas Terror (assistant)
1997 Frankfurt Galaxy (DC/DL)
2000–2003 Scottish Claymores (DC/LB)
2003–2004 Burton (TX) HS
2005–2006 Navarro College (DC)
2007 Navarro College
2008–2016 Lamar
Head coaching record
Overall

34–46 (college)

9–3 (junior college)

Ray Woodard (born August 20, 1961) is a former American football defensive tackle and former head football coach at Lamar University. He was hired on May 19, 2008 to resurrect the Lamar Cardinals football program that was discontinued in 1989.[1] Woodard played college football at Kilgore College and Texas, was selected 199th overall in the 1984 NFL Draft. He spent the next five seasons with the San Diego Chargers, Denver Broncos and Kansas City Chiefs. He was a member of the Broncos' 1986 AFC Champion and Super Bowl team.

Woodard received his bachelor's degree in kinesiology and history from Sam Houston State University in 1988. He received his masters in education from the University of Texas at Tyler in 1991. On October 23, 2014, Ray Woodard earned his Doctorate in Educational Leadership from Lamar University. He joined a select group of Division I coaches with doctorates. Including Woodard, there were six Division I coaches with a doctorate at the time he received his doctorate. One of those six was an honorary doctorate. Woodard was also one of three Division I (FCS) coaches with a doctorate.[2]

Coaching career

NFL Europe

He spent three years as the defensive coordinator for the Scottish Claymores from 2000–2003.

From 2005–2007 Woodard spent his time coaching at Navarro College, a two-year college whose main campus is in Corsicana, TX. His first two seasons at Navarro were spent as a defensive coordinator and as head coach in his last season. His 2007 squad went 9–3 and advanced to the conference playoffs for the first time in six seasons.

Navarro defeated defending national champion Blinn College on consecutive weeks before rolling past Kilgore College — the Southwest Junior College Football Conference (SWJCFC) regular-season champion — on the road 54–28 to earn the school's first bowl bid since the 1990s.

Navarro claimed a 24–21 win over Georgia Military College in the Pilgrim's Pride Bowl to finish the year ranked fourth in the NJCAA national poll. For his efforts, Woodard was named the SWJCFC Coach of the Year.

Navarro ranked third nationally in total offense (444.6 yards per game), fourth in rushing offense (250.5 ypg) and 16th in passing offense (194.2 ypg), while scoring a school-record 428 points for an average of 35.7 per game in 2007.[3]

Lamar University

In 2008 Lamar University hired Ray Woodard to help bring football back to Lamar after an almost 20-year absence. The Lamar Cardinals football team played their first season in 2010 under coach Woodard. That season, the Cardinals went 56 as Division I independents. The Cardinals began football competition in the NCAA Division I FCS Southland Conference the following year. On November 21, 2016 at approximately 1:30pm, Woodard was informed he was no longer head coach for Lamar.

Head coaching record

College

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Lamar Cardinals (NCAA Division I FCS independent) (2010)
2010 Lamar 5–6
Lamar Cardinals (Southland Conference) (2011–present)
2011 Lamar 4–7 2–5 6th
2012 Lamar 4–8 1–6 7th
2013 Lamar 5–7 2–4 6th
2014 Lamar 8–4 5–3 T–3rd
2015 Lamar 5–6 4–5 T–5th
2016 Lamar 3–8 3–6 T-8th
Lamar: 34–46 17–29
Total: 34–46

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.