Football

Rich Rodriguez
- Title:
- Head Coach
- Phone:
- (304) 293-4194
Follow @RealCoachRod
The Rodriguez File
| Personal Information | |
|---|---|
| Hometown: | Grant Town, W.Va. |
| Education: | West Virginia, 1986 (Bachelor's) Salem, 1987 (Master's) |
| Playing Career: | West Virginia, 1981-84 |
| Wife: | Rita |
| Children: | Raquel, Rhett |
| Coaching History | |
|---|---|
| 1985 | West Virginia - Student Assistant Coach |
| 1986-87 | Salem - Assistant Coach |
| 1988 | Salem - Head Coach |
| 1989 | West Virginia - Volunteer Assistant Coach |
| 1990-96 | Glenville State - Head Coach |
| 1997-98 | Tulane - Assistant Coach |
| 1999-00 | Clemson - Assistant Coach |
| 2001-07 | West Virginia - Head Coach |
| 2008-10 | Michigan - Head Coach |
| 2012-17 | Arizona - Head Coach |
| 2019 | Ole Miss - Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks Coach |
| 2021 | Louisiana-Monroe - Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Coach |
| 2022-24 | Jacksonville State - Head Coach |
| 2025-Present | West Virginia - Head Coach |
The architect of the no-huddle, zone-read spread option offense started his coaching career as the youngest head coach in the nation at 24. He has spent his entire 30-plus year career, including 27 as a head coach, showcasing an outstanding resume as a coach. Rodriguez is a master tactician, innovator, developer of talent, program builder and a winner.
Rodriguez has guided six different schools during his head coaching tenure, producing a 190-129-2 overall record and winning nearly 60% of his games. He has earned conference or national coach of the year honors seven times (WVIAC 1993, 1994; Big East 2003, 2005; Pac-12 2014; C-USA 2024 and NAIA National Coach of the Year in 1993). He has led his squads to eight or more wins 15 times, 10 or more wins five times and has won the conference or division championship seven times (Glenville State 1993-96, West Virginia 2003-05, '07, Arizona 2014, Jacksonville State 2022, '24).
He has led his programs to 14 bowl games, including three BCS games (2006 Sugar, 2008 Fiesta, 2014 Fiesta) and two NAIA Division I playoff appearances (the championship game in 1993 and the quarterfinals in 1994). He has coached offenses that have produced 10 conference players of the year, has coached 56 NFL players and more than 30 All-Americans during his career.
Rodriguez coached arguably two of the greatest dual-threat quarterbacks in the history of college football (Pat White – West Virginia, Denard Robinson, Michigan) and several other outstanding signal-callers (Shaun King – Tulane, Woody Dantzler – Clemson, Rasheed Marshall, West Virginia and Kahlil Tate - Arizona).
He returned to West Virginia after leading Jacksonville State to outstanding success, guiding the Gamecocks from NCAA FCS level to the FBS ranks over the past three seasons. The 2024 Conference USA Coach of the Year compiled a 27-10 record (three-straight nine-win seasons), earned the 2024 C-USA regular season and conference championships, won the 2023 New Orleans Bowl and had a first-place finish in the Atlantic Sun Conference in 2022.
In 2024, the Gamecocks boasted eight first or second team all-conference members and three all-freshman team members. The 2023 season saw the Gamecocks make history under Rodriguez, becoming the first program to win a bowl game in its first season of FBS competition. In 2022, the Gamecocks posted a 9-2 record and a 5-0 mark in ASUN Conference play en route to the conference title to wrap up the school's FCS Era.
Prior to Jacksonville, he served as the associate head coach, offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Louisiana-Monroe, where he was new head coach Terry Bowden's choice to lead the Warhawks' offense in rebuilding after ULM suffered a winless campaign in 2020. The Warhawks improved in every offensive category in 2021. He spent the 2019 season as the offensive coordinator at Ole Miss.
At Arizona, Rodriguez helped establish the Wildcats as one of the most explosive offensive programs in the Pac-12. During his tenure, Arizona tied or set more than 100 offensive school records and all-time leaders were set for career rushing and all-purpose yardage.
Rodriguez led the Wildcats to a 43-35 record and five bowl games. Arizona won the 2014 Pac-12 South Division title and advanced to the Fiesta Bowl, finishing the season with a 10-4 mark, one of just three 10-win seasons in the program's history. He was named the Pac-12 Coach of the Year at the season's end.
He compiled 33 wins in his first four years with the Wildcats, the most in school history over a four-year period. The Wildcats also defeated a top-10 team and advanced to a bowl game in each of those four seasons, the only time either of those feats have happened in school history.
Prior to Arizona, he spent three seasons at Michigan, where he coached quarterback Denard Robinson. As a sophomore in 2010, Robinson set the single-season Division I FBS record for rushing yards by a quarterback and became the first player in NCAA history to pass and rush for 1,500 yards on his way to earning first-team All-America honors.
Rodriguez was 60-26 in seven seasons at West Virginia, where he won the Big East Conference championship four times (2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007) and was named the Big East's Coach of the Year in 2003 and 2005. The Mountaineers won the 2006 Sugar Bowl and the 2008 Fiesta Bowl.
Before accepting the position at West Virginia, Rodriguez was Tommy Bowden's offensive coordinator and associate head coach at Clemson in 1999 and 2000, when the Tigers recorded a 15-9 record over two seasons. He went to Clemson from Tulane, where he was Bowden's offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach in 1997 and 1998. He helped lead the Green Wave to a 19-4 mark, including a 12-0 season, Conference USA Championship and Liberty Bowl victory in 1998.
Rodriguez went to Tulane after a seven-year stint as the head coach at NAIA Glenville State in Glenville, West Virginia. His Glenville State teams won or shared four consecutive West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference titles and he was named WVIAC Coach of the Year in 1993 and 1994, as well as the NAIA Coach of the Year after leading his team to a national runner-up finish.
His head coaching career started earlier than most in 1998, when Salem College made the 24-year-old Rodriguez the youngest head coach in college football after he'd served the previous two seasons as an assistant at the school.
A 1986 graduate of West Virginia University and native of Grant Town, West Virginia, Rodriguez started at defensive back as a walk-on in 1981 and became a three-year letterwinner as a defensive back for the Mountaineers from 1982-84 under Hall of Fame coach Don Nehlen.
Rodriguez and his wife, Rita, have two children, Raquel and Rhett.
Career Record
| School | Record | Conference Record |
Postseason/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salem | 2-8 | 2-5 | |
| Glenville State | 43-28-2 | 32-15 | 1993 NAIA National Championship Appearance, 1994 NAIA National Runner-up Appearance, Won or Tied Four WVIAC Championships |
| West Virginia | 60-26 | 34-14 | Led the Mountaineers to six bowl appearances, including winning the 2005 Sugar Bowl (Georgia) and 2006 Gator Bowl (Georgia Tech), Four Top 25 finishes in the national rankings, including three in the Top 10 (No. 25 in 2002, highest ranking of No. 5 in 2005, No. 10 in 2006), Won or Tied for four Big East Conference Championships (2003, 2004, 2005, 2007) |
| Michigan | 15-22 | 6-18 | Played in the 2010 Gator Bowl |
| Arizona | 43-35 | 24-30 | The Wildcats played in five bowl games and won three (2012, 2013, 2015), Arizona won the Pac-12 South (2014), earned a trip to the Fiesta Bowl and finished the season ranked No. 19 in AP Poll and No. 17 in the Coaches Poll. |
| Jacksonville State | 27-10 | 18-3 | Led the Gamecocks to three nine-win seasons, two conference championships (2022 Atlantic Sun, 2024 Conference USA) and two bowl games, including winning in the 2023 New Orleans Bowl. |
| West Virginia | |||
| Career Totals |
192-134-2
(.588)
|
116-85 (.577) |
Year-by-Year Record
| Year | School | Record | Conference Record |
Postseason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Salem | 2-8 | 2-5 | |
| Salem Total | 2-8 (.200) | 2-5 (.286) | ||
| 1990 | Glenville State | 1-7-1 | 1-5 | |
| 1991 | Glenville State | 4-5-1 | 3-4 | |
| 1992 | Glenville State | 6-4 | 5-2 | |
| 1993 | Glenville State | 10-3 | 6-1 | NAIA National Runner-Up, NAIA National Coach of the Year, WVIAC Champions, WVIAC Coach of the Year |
| 1994 | Glenville State | 8-3 | 5-1 | NAIA National Quarterfinalists, WVIAC Co-Champions, WVIAC Coach of the Year |
| 1995 | Glenville State | 8-2 | 6-1 | WVIAC Co-Champions |
| 1996 | Glenville State | 6-4 | 6-1 | WVIAC Co-Champions |
| Glenville State Totals | 43-28-2 (.603) | 32-15 (.681) | ||
| 2001 | West Virginia | 3-8 | 1-6 | |
| 2002 | West Virginia | 9-4 | 6-1 | Final Ranking - No. 25 AP Poll/No. 20 Coaches, Continental Tire Bowl |
| 2003 | West Virginia | 8-5 | 6-1 | Big East Conference Co-Champion, Big East Coach of the Year, Toyota Gator Bowl |
| 2004 | West Virginia | 8-4 | 4-2 | Big East Conference Co-Champion, Toyota Gator Bowl |
| 2005 | West Virginia | 11-0 | 7-0 | Final Rankings - No. 5 AP Poll, No. 6 Coaches, Big East Conference Champions, Big East Coach of the Year, Nokia Sugar Bowl Champions |
| 2006 | West Virginia | 11-2 | 5-2 | Final Rankings - No. 10 AP Poll, No. 10 Coaches, Big East Conference Co-Champion, Toyota Gator Bowl Champions |
| 2007 | West Virginia | 10-2 | 5-2 | Final Rankings - No. 11 AP Poll, No. 9 Coaches, Big East Conference Champions Tostitos Fiesta Bowl |
| West Virginia Totals | 60-26 (.698) | 32-15 (.681) |
||
| 2008 | Michigan | 3-9 | 2-6 | |
| 2009 | Michigan | 5-7 | 1-7 | |
| 2010 | Michigan | 7-6 | 3-5 | Toyota Gator Bowl |
| Michigan Totals | 15-22 (.405) |
6-18 (.333) |
||
| 2012 | Arizona | 8-5 | 4-5 | Gildan New Mexico Bowl Champions |
| 2013 | Arizona | 8-5 | 4-5 | Advocare V100 Bowl Champions |
| 2014 | Arizona | 10-4 | 7-2 | Final Rankings - No. 19 AP Poll, No. 17 Coaches Poll, Pac-12 South Champions, Pac-12 Coach of the Year, Vizio Fiesta Bowl |
| 2015 | Arizona | 7-6 | 3-6 | Gildan New Mexico Champions |
| 2016 | Arizona | 3-9 | 1-8 | |
| 2017 | Arizona | 7-6 | 5-4 | Foster Farms Bowl |
| Arizona Totals | 43-35 (.551) |
24-30 (.444) |
||
2022 |
Jacksonville State |
9-2 |
5-0 |
Atlantic Sun Champions |
2023 |
Jacksonville State |
9-4 |
6-2 |
New Orleans Bowl Champions |
2024 |
Jacksonville State |
9-4 |
7-1 |
Conference USA Champions, Conference USA Coach of the Year,
|
| Jacksonville State Totals | 27-10 (.730) |
18-3 (.857) |
||
2025 |
West Virginia |
|||
| Career Totals |
192-134-2
(.588)
|
116-85 (.577) | ||

Tony
Fields II
Fields II

Stanley
Berryhill

Gary
Brightwell

JJ
Taylor

Dane
Cruikshank

Jace
Wittaker

Demetrius
Flannigan-Fowles

Scooby
Wright

Shaquille
Richardson

Marquis
Flowers

Reggie
Gilbert

Patrick
Onwuasor

Ka'Deem
Carey

Devin
Gardner

Blake
Countess

Frank
Clark

Jake
Ryan

Matt
Wile

David
Molk

Michael
Schofield

Thomas
Rawls

Thomas
Gordon

Cameron
Gordon

Taylor
Lewan

Fitzgerald
Toussaint

Jordan
Kovacs

William
Campbell

Stephen
Schilling

Michael
Cox

Denard
Robinson

Zoltan
Mesko

Morgan
Trent

Stevie
Brown

Kenny
Demens

Jonas
Mouton

Mike
Martin

Tim
Jamison

Brandon
Graham

Junior
Hemingway

James
Rodgers

Toney
Clemons

Keith
Tandy

Najee
Goode

J.T.
Thomas

Selvish
Capers

Alric
Arnett

Ellis
Lankster

Ryan
Mundy

Chris
Neild

Will
Johnson

Brandon
Hogan

Dan
Mozes

Mike
Lorello

Mortty
Ivy

Keilen
Dykes

Pat
McAfee

Darius
Reynaud

Owen
Schmitt

Pat
White

Steve
Slaton

Chris
Henry

Kay-Jay
Harris

Adam
Jones

Lance
Frazier

James
Davis

Antonio
Brown

Quincy
Wilson

Avon
Cobourne

Rasheed
Marshall

Scott
Otis

Chris
George











