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Mark Mangino

Mark Thomas Mangino (born August 26, 1956) is a former American football coach. He served as the head football coach at the University of Kansas from 2002 to 2009. In 2007, Mangino received several national coach of the year honors after leading the Jayhawks to their only 12-win season in school history and an Orange Bowl victory. However, he resigned as coach at Kansas two seasons later following allegations of mistreatment of players.[9] While at Kansas, Mangino coached in four bowl games with a 3–1 record, the lone loss coming in the 2003 Tangerine Bowl. Additionally, in five of his eight seasons at Kansas, the Jayhawks were Bowl eligible, they were only bowl eligible five times in the previous thirty seasons. He held multiple assistant coaching jobs before becoming the head coach at Kansas, the longest being an eight season stint at Kansas State as their running game coordinator.

Mark Mangino
Mangino in 2007
Biographical details
Born (1956-08-26) August 26, 1956 (age 67)
New Castle, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Alma materYoungstown State
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985–1986Youngstown State (assistant)
1987–1989Geneva (OC/OL)
1990Lincoln HS (PA)
1991–1998Kansas State (RGC)
1999Oklahoma (OL)
2000–2001Oklahoma (OC)
2002–2009Kansas
2013Youngstown State (AHC/TE)
2014–2015Iowa State (OC/TE)
Head coaching record
Overall50–48
Bowls3–1
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 Big 12 North Division (2007)
Awards
Frank Broyles Award (2000)
AFCA Coach of the Year (2007)[1]
AP Coach of the Year (2007)[2]
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year (2007)[3]
George Munger Award (2007)[4]
The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award (2007)[5]

Paul "Bear" Bryant Award (2007)[6]
Sporting News Coach of the Year (2007)
Walter Camp Coach of the Year (2007)[7]

Woody Hayes Coach of the Year (2007)[6]
Big 12 Coach of the Year (2007)[8]

Early life Edit

Mangino was born and raised in New Castle, Pennsylvania. After high school, he was offered a football scholarship at Youngstown State. Mangino played semi-pro baseball in western Pennsylvania until he became an EMT. In his late 20s he returned to Youngstown State to complete his studies and earn his degree.[10]

Coaching career Edit

Early positions Edit

Mangino graduated from Youngstown State University in 1987, serving as an assistant coach there in his last two years under then-head coach Jim Tressel. He also coached at Lincoln High School in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania and at Geneva College, before being hired as an assistant coach at Kansas State University in 1991. Prior to the 1999 season, Mangino left Kansas State to take an assistant position at the University of Oklahoma. While there, he served as the offensive coordinator for the Oklahoma team that beat the defending national champion Florida State Seminoles in the 2000 national championship. Following that season, he was awarded the Frank Broyles Award as the nation's top assistant coach.

Kansas Edit

Mangino was hired as Kansas' head football coach in December 2001. The program had not posted a winning season in any of the 6 seasons prior to his arrival. In 2003, his second season at KU, Mangino led the Jayhawks to an appearance in the 2003 Tangerine Bowl (now known as the Camping World Bowl). This was the first bowl appearance for Kansas since 1995. In 2005, his fourth season at KU, the team finished the regular season 6–5, to post its first winning record under Mangino, and went on to the Fort Worth Bowl, its second bowl game in three seasons. Among the Jayhawks' wins was a 40–15 victory over Nebraska, breaking a losing streak against the Cornhuskers that had begun in 1969, which was the second-longest such streak of consecutive losses in NCAA history. The same year Mangino also built a defense that ranked 11th nationally (based on yards allowed per game) and featured third-team All-American and Big 12 Conference Defensive Player of the Year linebacker Nick Reid. The 2005 team also ranked 6th nationally in total punts.

In 2007, Mangino led the Jayhawks to arguably the greatest season in school history. The Jayhawks finished with a 12–1 record and a share of the Big 12 North title, rising as high as second in both major polls at one point. Only a loss to then third-ranked Missouri cost the Jayhawks a berth in the Big 12 Championship Game. The Jayhawks won the 2008 Orange Bowl (their first ever BCS appearance, and only the third major-bowl appearance in school history). The 12 wins are a school record for wins in a season; it was only the fourth 10-win season in school history. Mangino's defense was ranked 12th in the nation, and 4th in scoring defense. On the other side of the ball, the Jayhawks finished 2nd in scoring offense.[11]

Following the win against the Iowa State Cyclones, Mangino became the first KU football coach with a winning career record since Jack Mitchell in 1966. Mangino's Jayhawks spent 19 consecutive weeks ranked in the AP and/or USA Today polls (2007–08), won 20 games in a 2-year period for the first time in school history, set home attendance average records in each of the last 4 seasons (2004–2008), tallied KU's first appearance in national polls since 1996 and to the school’s highest ranking ever at #2, produced the top 3 total offense seasons in school history, the top two passing seasons and two of the top three scoring seasons and won three Bowl games—the same number they had won in their entire 102-year football history prior to his arrival.

Mangino's 50 wins are the second-most in school history. He is also the only coach since the end of World War II to leave Kansas with a winning record.

2007 Coach of the Year awards Edit

For his accomplishments in 2007, Mangino was named the 2007 National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press,[12] ESPN/ABC,[5] The Sporting News, Football Writers Association,[3] Walter Camp Football Foundation,[7] National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association,[6] American Football Coaches Association, the Maxwell Football Club (George Munger Award),[4] and he has been named the Woody Hayes National Coach of the Year.[13] He was named the Big 12 Coach of the Year by the Big 12 Coaches and Big 12 Co-Coach of the Year by the Associated Press. Upon winning these Coach of the Year awards, he became the only NCAA coach in history to win both the Frank Broyles Award as the nation's top assistant coach and all the major National Coach of the Year awards.[14]

Youngstown State Edit

On March 1, 2013, Mangino was hired at his alma mater, Youngstown State, as the team's assistant head coach and tight ends coach.[15]

Iowa State Edit

On January 6, 2014, Mangino was hired at Iowa State to be the team's offensive coordinator and tight ends coach.[16] In his first season as coach, Mangino returned to Lawrence to face Kansas for the first time since his resignation following the 2009 season, a game the Cyclones lost 14–34.[17] After disagreements about the direction of the offense with head coach Paul Rhoads, Mangino was relieved of his position on October 26, 2015.[18] After Mangino's release, he posted a negative twitter comment that was widely believed to be aimed at the Iowa State program and their defeat at the hands of Kansas State, despite his son Tommy still serving as wide receivers coach for Iowa State.[citation needed]

Controversies Edit

Lincoln High controversy Edit

After Mangino went 1–9 in his first season as the head coach of Lincoln High School in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania, a group of parents went to the school board and demanded his firing because of his "language, and harsh approach to people". The board elected not to fire Mangino, but he left the school after only one year and did not complete the year as a teacher.[19]

High school referee incident Edit

On September 21, 2002, Mangino yelled at the officiating crew assigned to the Lawrence High SchoolOlathe East football game in which Mangino's son, Tommy, was playing. Mangino apparently became angry after referees failed to call what he believed was a late hit on Tommy, the Lawrence High quarterback.

Lawrence High School officials took undisclosed action against Mangino after the game for violating a Kansas High School rule barring abuse of game officials by coaches, players and fans.[20]

2004 Kansas–Texas game Edit

In 2004, Mangino paid a $5,000 fine for suggesting that officials acted with favoritism in a questionable offensive pass interference call that affected the outcome of a game against Texas. Mangino implied that money and a BCS berth for the Big 12 Conference influenced the officials to make a call in favor of Texas.[21] He and athletic director Lew Perkins issued public apologies the day after the incident.

NCAA penalties and probation Edit

In 2005, the University of Kansas self-reported to the NCAA that five major rules violations, including academic fraud, had been committed by some of the football team's student-athletes.[22] In 2006, these major violations, along with four others that has allegedly occurred in other KU sports programs, contributed to the NCAA charging the athletics department displaying a "lack of institutional control".[23] A graduate assistant was found to have supplied answers for some of the correspondence courses taken by some prospective recruits from junior colleges. As a result, the football program's ability to recruit players transferring in from junior college was reduced for two years; and, the program lost two scholarships for each of the 2007 and 2008 seasons.[24]

Raimond Pendleton incident Edit

During the first game of the 2007 season in which the University of Kansas beat Central Michigan University, KU's Raimond Pendleton ran a CMU punt back 77 yards for a touchdown; but, as he approached the endzone, he slowed down in order to jump into it in a dramatic fashion. The officials threw a penalty flag for "excessive celebration", and gave the Jayhawks a 15-yard "unsportsmanlike conduct" penalty that forced KU to kick off 15 yards closer to their own endzone. When Pendleton returned to the sideline, an irate Mangino took Pendleton aside and gave him an expletive-laden tongue-lashing.[25] The incident was caught on video, and transmitted by local TV stations in the Topeka and Kansas City areas, eventually finding a wider audience after a copy of it was uploaded to YouTube.[26]

Internal investigations Edit

In November 2009, the recurring issue of Mangino's chronic, alleged misconduct towards his players became the subject of an internal investigation by the University of Kansas Athletic Department. Reportedly, matters came to a head after Mangino grabbed linebacker Arist Wright, yelled at him and poked him in the chest before a game against Colorado.[27][28] He was formally accused of boorish and violent actions, and several players threatened to transfer after they felt Mangino did not speak to them in a respectful manner.[28] A separate investigation was conducted in 2007, related to Mangino's repeated parking tickets on campus and alleged verbal abuse and negative behavior toward campus staff issuing those tickets.[29]

The Jayhawks regressed significantly in 2009, falling to 5-7. After a prolonged period of negotiations, the university and Mangino's attorneys agreed on a buyout amount that was large enough to secure his quiet resignation in December 2009.[30] Kansas would not win more than three games in a season following Mangino's departure until their 2022 season 13 years later.

Personal life Edit

Mangino and his wife live in his hometown of New Castle, Pennsylvania.[31] His wife was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2011.[32] Mangino lost over 125 lbs between 2012 and 2013. [33]

Head coaching record Edit

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Kansas Jayhawks (Big 12 Conference) (2002–2009)
2002 Kansas 2–10 0–8 6th (North)
2003 Kansas 6–7 3–5 T–4th (North) L Tangerine
2004 Kansas 4–7 2–6 T–5th (North)
2005 Kansas 7–5 3–5 5th (North) W Fort Worth
2006 Kansas 6–6 3–5 4th (North)
2007 Kansas 12–1 7–1 2nd (North) W Orange 7 7
2008 Kansas 8–5 4–4 3rd (North) W Insight
2009 Kansas 5–7 1–7 6th (North)
Kansas: 50–48 23–41
Total: 50–48

[34][35]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Mangino snares 8th coach of the year award" Archived July 7, 2012, at archive.today, CJOnline, January 10, 2008.
  2. ^ "Kansas' Mangino wins AP Coach of the Year". CBSSports.com. December 19, 2007. Retrieved November 3, 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Kansas' Mangino Wins 2007 Eddie Robinson Award" (Press release). Football Writers Association of America. Retrieved January 6, 2008.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on October 1, 2009.
  5. ^ a b Fusco, Asher (December 7, 2007). "Mangino earns coach of the year award". The University Daily Kansan. Archived from the original on April 22, 2007. Retrieved January 6, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c "Mangino Earns Coach Of The Year Honor From Peers" March 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, KU Athletics, January 10, 2008.
  7. ^ a b (Press release). Walter Camp Foundation. Archived from the original on June 10, 2008. Retrieved December 11, 2007.
  8. ^ "2007 All-Big 12 Football Awards Announced" (Press release). Big 12 Sports. November 27, 2007. Archived from the original on July 29, 2007. Retrieved November 27, 2007.
  9. ^ . Official Website of Kansas Athletics. Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Athletic Department. December 3, 2009. Archived from the original on December 7, 2009. Retrieved October 16, 2012. Mark Mangino has resigned his position as head football coach at the University of Kansas, effective immediately.
  10. ^ Evans, Thayer (November 24, 2007). "The Detours of a Coaching Life". The New York Times. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  11. ^ "Kansas ( 12 – 1 – 0 ) Thru: 01/07/08". NCAA. Retrieved February 23, 2008.
  12. ^ Wood, Ryan."Mangino named AP National Coach of the Year", Lawrence Journal World, December 19, 2007.
  13. ^ McCollough, J. Brady. "KU’s Mangino, MU’s Pinkel top AP coach of the year voting", Kansas City Star, December 19, 2007.
  14. ^ Kansas Football Notable from 2008 Kansas Big 12 Football Media Day August 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Mark Mangino hired as assistant head coach at Youngstown State". KansasCity.com.
  16. ^ "Iowa State hires Mark Mangino". ESPN.com.
  17. ^ "Iowa State Falls To Kansas, 34-14". Cyclones.com. Iowa State Athletics. November 8, 2014. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
  18. ^ "Paul Rhoads ousts Mark Mangino as Iowa State offensive coordinator". desmoinesregister.com. October 26, 2015.
  19. ^ McCollough, J. Brady. "Mangino's approach split team at first job," Wichita Eagle, November 20, 2009. (accessed October 16, 2013)
  20. ^ "The Mangino calls incident 'regrettable'". cjonline.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  21. ^ Heuben, Liz (November 13, 2004). "Mangino livid about penalty on Gordon". KUsports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  22. ^ Woodling, Chuck (July 16, 2005). "KU reveals NCAA violations". KUsports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  23. ^ Wood, Ryan (April 22, 2006). "NCAA: Kansas lost institutional control". KUsports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  24. ^ "KU probation extended". ESPN.com. October 12, 2006. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  25. ^ "Simple PlanStrict discipline and hard work is how Mark Mangino turned Kansas around". NewsOK.com. November 8, 2007. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  26. ^ "Kansas football wide receiver Raimond Pendleton punt return Mark Mangino YouTube J. Brady McCollough". www.coveringsports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  27. ^ "Sources: Mangino-Wright incident triggers KU investigation". kansas. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  28. ^ a b "Kansas investigating matter related to Mangino". ESPN.com. November 17, 2009. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  29. ^ Fagan, Mark. "Documents show what it looks like when Mangino loses his temper," KUsports.com, November 17, 2009. (accessed October 16, 2013)
  30. ^ "College football - Mark Mangino, Kansas reach settlement for him to resign as coach". The Seattle Times. December 3, 2009. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  31. ^ "Tom Keegan: Mark Mangino opens window to his Kansas success, obsession with job". KUsports.com. August 31, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  32. ^ "Oklahoma football: After wife's cancer treatments, Mark Mangino is ready to get back to coaching". NewsOK.com. October 18, 2012. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  33. ^ Yosay, Robert K. (August 17, 2013). "Ex-KU coach Mark Mangino building happy, healthy life at alma mater". KUsports.com. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  34. ^ "NCAA Football Rankings, 2002–present". ESPN. Retrieved February 23, 2008.
  35. ^ (PDF) (Press release). Fansonly.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 26, 2007. Retrieved February 23, 2008.

External links Edit

    mark, mangino, mark, thomas, mangino, born, august, 1956, former, american, football, coach, served, head, football, coach, university, kansas, from, 2002, 2009, 2007, mangino, received, several, national, coach, year, honors, after, leading, jayhawks, their, . Mark Thomas Mangino born August 26 1956 is a former American football coach He served as the head football coach at the University of Kansas from 2002 to 2009 In 2007 Mangino received several national coach of the year honors after leading the Jayhawks to their only 12 win season in school history and an Orange Bowl victory However he resigned as coach at Kansas two seasons later following allegations of mistreatment of players 9 While at Kansas Mangino coached in four bowl games with a 3 1 record the lone loss coming in the 2003 Tangerine Bowl Additionally in five of his eight seasons at Kansas the Jayhawks were Bowl eligible they were only bowl eligible five times in the previous thirty seasons He held multiple assistant coaching jobs before becoming the head coach at Kansas the longest being an eight season stint at Kansas State as their running game coordinator Mark ManginoMangino in 2007Biographical detailsBorn 1956 08 26 August 26 1956 age 67 New Castle Pennsylvania U S Alma materYoungstown StateCoaching career HC unless noted 1985 1986Youngstown State assistant 1987 1989Geneva OC OL 1990Lincoln HS PA 1991 1998Kansas State RGC 1999Oklahoma OL 2000 2001Oklahoma OC 2002 2009Kansas2013Youngstown State AHC TE 2014 2015Iowa State OC TE Head coaching recordOverall50 48Bowls3 1Accomplishments and honorsChampionships1 Big 12 North Division 2007 AwardsFrank Broyles Award 2000 AFCA Coach of the Year 2007 1 AP Coach of the Year 2007 2 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year 2007 3 George Munger Award 2007 4 The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award 2007 5 Paul Bear Bryant Award 2007 6 Sporting News Coach of the Year 2007 Walter Camp Coach of the Year 2007 7 Woody Hayes Coach of the Year 2007 6 Big 12 Coach of the Year 2007 8 Contents 1 Early life 2 Coaching career 2 1 Early positions 2 2 Kansas 2 2 1 2007 Coach of the Year awards 2 3 Youngstown State 2 4 Iowa State 3 Controversies 3 1 Lincoln High controversy 3 2 High school referee incident 3 3 2004 Kansas Texas game 3 4 NCAA penalties and probation 3 5 Raimond Pendleton incident 3 6 Internal investigations 4 Personal life 5 Head coaching record 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditMangino was born and raised in New Castle Pennsylvania After high school he was offered a football scholarship at Youngstown State Mangino played semi pro baseball in western Pennsylvania until he became an EMT In his late 20s he returned to Youngstown State to complete his studies and earn his degree 10 Coaching career EditEarly positions Edit Mangino graduated from Youngstown State University in 1987 serving as an assistant coach there in his last two years under then head coach Jim Tressel He also coached at Lincoln High School in Ellwood City Pennsylvania and at Geneva College before being hired as an assistant coach at Kansas State University in 1991 Prior to the 1999 season Mangino left Kansas State to take an assistant position at the University of Oklahoma While there he served as the offensive coordinator for the Oklahoma team that beat the defending national champion Florida State Seminoles in the 2000 national championship Following that season he was awarded the Frank Broyles Award as the nation s top assistant coach Kansas Edit Mangino was hired as Kansas head football coach in December 2001 The program had not posted a winning season in any of the 6 seasons prior to his arrival In 2003 his second season at KU Mangino led the Jayhawks to an appearance in the 2003 Tangerine Bowl now known as the Camping World Bowl This was the first bowl appearance for Kansas since 1995 In 2005 his fourth season at KU the team finished the regular season 6 5 to post its first winning record under Mangino and went on to the Fort Worth Bowl its second bowl game in three seasons Among the Jayhawks wins was a 40 15 victory over Nebraska breaking a losing streak against the Cornhuskers that had begun in 1969 which was the second longest such streak of consecutive losses in NCAA history The same year Mangino also built a defense that ranked 11th nationally based on yards allowed per game and featured third team All American and Big 12 Conference Defensive Player of the Year linebacker Nick Reid The 2005 team also ranked 6th nationally in total punts In 2007 Mangino led the Jayhawks to arguably the greatest season in school history The Jayhawks finished with a 12 1 record and a share of the Big 12 North title rising as high as second in both major polls at one point Only a loss to then third ranked Missouri cost the Jayhawks a berth in the Big 12 Championship Game The Jayhawks won the 2008 Orange Bowl their first ever BCS appearance and only the third major bowl appearance in school history The 12 wins are a school record for wins in a season it was only the fourth 10 win season in school history Mangino s defense was ranked 12th in the nation and 4th in scoring defense On the other side of the ball the Jayhawks finished 2nd in scoring offense 11 Following the win against the Iowa State Cyclones Mangino became the first KU football coach with a winning career record since Jack Mitchell in 1966 Mangino s Jayhawks spent 19 consecutive weeks ranked in the AP and or USA Today polls 2007 08 won 20 games in a 2 year period for the first time in school history set home attendance average records in each of the last 4 seasons 2004 2008 tallied KU s first appearance in national polls since 1996 and to the school s highest ranking ever at 2 produced the top 3 total offense seasons in school history the top two passing seasons and two of the top three scoring seasons and won three Bowl games the same number they had won in their entire 102 year football history prior to his arrival Mangino s 50 wins are the second most in school history He is also the only coach since the end of World War II to leave Kansas with a winning record 2007 Coach of the Year awards Edit For his accomplishments in 2007 Mangino was named the 2007 National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press 12 ESPN ABC 5 The Sporting News Football Writers Association 3 Walter Camp Football Foundation 7 National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association 6 American Football Coaches Association the Maxwell Football Club George Munger Award 4 and he has been named the Woody Hayes National Coach of the Year 13 He was named the Big 12 Coach of the Year by the Big 12 Coaches and Big 12 Co Coach of the Year by the Associated Press Upon winning these Coach of the Year awards he became the only NCAA coach in history to win both the Frank Broyles Award as the nation s top assistant coach and all the major National Coach of the Year awards 14 Youngstown State Edit On March 1 2013 Mangino was hired at his alma mater Youngstown State as the team s assistant head coach and tight ends coach 15 Iowa State Edit On January 6 2014 Mangino was hired at Iowa State to be the team s offensive coordinator and tight ends coach 16 In his first season as coach Mangino returned to Lawrence to face Kansas for the first time since his resignation following the 2009 season a game the Cyclones lost 14 34 17 After disagreements about the direction of the offense with head coach Paul Rhoads Mangino was relieved of his position on October 26 2015 18 After Mangino s release he posted a negative twitter comment that was widely believed to be aimed at the Iowa State program and their defeat at the hands of Kansas State despite his son Tommy still serving as wide receivers coach for Iowa State citation needed Controversies EditLincoln High controversy Edit After Mangino went 1 9 in his first season as the head coach of Lincoln High School in Ellwood City Pennsylvania a group of parents went to the school board and demanded his firing because of his language and harsh approach to people The board elected not to fire Mangino but he left the school after only one year and did not complete the year as a teacher 19 High school referee incident Edit On September 21 2002 Mangino yelled at the officiating crew assigned to the Lawrence High School Olathe East football game in which Mangino s son Tommy was playing Mangino apparently became angry after referees failed to call what he believed was a late hit on Tommy the Lawrence High quarterback Lawrence High School officials took undisclosed action against Mangino after the game for violating a Kansas High School rule barring abuse of game officials by coaches players and fans 20 2004 Kansas Texas game Edit In 2004 Mangino paid a 5 000 fine for suggesting that officials acted with favoritism in a questionable offensive pass interference call that affected the outcome of a game against Texas Mangino implied that money and a BCS berth for the Big 12 Conference influenced the officials to make a call in favor of Texas 21 He and athletic director Lew Perkins issued public apologies the day after the incident NCAA penalties and probation Edit In 2005 the University of Kansas self reported to the NCAA that five major rules violations including academic fraud had been committed by some of the football team s student athletes 22 In 2006 these major violations along with four others that has allegedly occurred in other KU sports programs contributed to the NCAA charging the athletics department displaying a lack of institutional control 23 A graduate assistant was found to have supplied answers for some of the correspondence courses taken by some prospective recruits from junior colleges As a result the football program s ability to recruit players transferring in from junior college was reduced for two years and the program lost two scholarships for each of the 2007 and 2008 seasons 24 Raimond Pendleton incident Edit During the first game of the 2007 season in which the University of Kansas beat Central Michigan University KU s Raimond Pendleton ran a CMU punt back 77 yards for a touchdown but as he approached the endzone he slowed down in order to jump into it in a dramatic fashion The officials threw a penalty flag for excessive celebration and gave the Jayhawks a 15 yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty that forced KU to kick off 15 yards closer to their own endzone When Pendleton returned to the sideline an irate Mangino took Pendleton aside and gave him an expletive laden tongue lashing 25 The incident was caught on video and transmitted by local TV stations in the Topeka and Kansas City areas eventually finding a wider audience after a copy of it was uploaded to YouTube 26 Internal investigations Edit In November 2009 the recurring issue of Mangino s chronic alleged misconduct towards his players became the subject of an internal investigation by the University of Kansas Athletic Department Reportedly matters came to a head after Mangino grabbed linebacker Arist Wright yelled at him and poked him in the chest before a game against Colorado 27 28 He was formally accused of boorish and violent actions and several players threatened to transfer after they felt Mangino did not speak to them in a respectful manner 28 A separate investigation was conducted in 2007 related to Mangino s repeated parking tickets on campus and alleged verbal abuse and negative behavior toward campus staff issuing those tickets 29 The Jayhawks regressed significantly in 2009 falling to 5 7 After a prolonged period of negotiations the university and Mangino s attorneys agreed on a buyout amount that was large enough to secure his quiet resignation in December 2009 30 Kansas would not win more than three games in a season following Mangino s departure until their 2022 season 13 years later Personal life EditMangino and his wife live in his hometown of New Castle Pennsylvania 31 His wife was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2011 32 Mangino lost over 125 lbs between 2012 and 2013 33 Head coaching record EditYear Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl playoffs Coaches AP Kansas Jayhawks Big 12 Conference 2002 2009 2002 Kansas 2 10 0 8 6th North 2003 Kansas 6 7 3 5 T 4th North L Tangerine2004 Kansas 4 7 2 6 T 5th North 2005 Kansas 7 5 3 5 5th North W Fort Worth2006 Kansas 6 6 3 5 4th North 2007 Kansas 12 1 7 1 2nd North W Orange 7 72008 Kansas 8 5 4 4 3rd North W Insight2009 Kansas 5 7 1 7 6th North Kansas 50 48 23 41Total 50 48 Indicates BCS bowl Rankings from final Coaches Poll Rankings from final AP Poll 34 35 References Edit Mangino snares 8th coach of the year award Archived July 7 2012 at archive today CJOnline January 10 2008 Kansas Mangino wins AP Coach of the Year CBSSports com December 19 2007 Retrieved November 3 2012 a b Kansas Mangino Wins 2007 Eddie Robinson Award Press release Football Writers Association of America Retrieved January 6 2008 a b George Munger Award College Coach of the Year Archived from the original on October 1 2009 a b Fusco Asher December 7 2007 Mangino earns coach of the year award The University Daily Kansan Archived from the original on April 22 2007 Retrieved January 6 2008 a b c Mangino Earns Coach Of The Year Honor From Peers Archived March 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine KU Athletics January 10 2008 a b Kansas Mark Mangino Named 2007 Walter Camp Coach of the Year Press release Walter Camp Foundation Archived from the original on June 10 2008 Retrieved December 11 2007 2007 All Big 12 Football Awards Announced Press release Big 12 Sports November 27 2007 Archived from the original on July 29 2007 Retrieved November 27 2007 Mangino Resigns as Head Football Coach Official Website of Kansas Athletics Lawrence KS University of Kansas Athletic Department December 3 2009 Archived from the original on December 7 2009 Retrieved October 16 2012 Mark Mangino has resigned his position as head football coach at the University of Kansas effective immediately Evans Thayer November 24 2007 The Detours of a Coaching Life The New York Times Retrieved May 12 2010 Kansas 12 1 0 Thru 01 07 08 NCAA Retrieved February 23 2008 Wood Ryan Mangino named AP National Coach of the Year Lawrence Journal World December 19 2007 McCollough J Brady KU s Mangino MU s Pinkel top AP coach of the year voting Kansas City Star December 19 2007 Kansas Football Notable from 2008 Kansas Big 12 Football Media Day Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine Mark Mangino hired as assistant head coach at Youngstown State KansasCity com Iowa State hires Mark Mangino ESPN com Iowa State Falls To Kansas 34 14 Cyclones com Iowa State Athletics November 8 2014 Retrieved December 3 2014 Paul Rhoads ousts Mark Mangino as Iowa State offensive coordinator desmoinesregister com October 26 2015 McCollough J Brady Mangino s approach split team at first job Wichita Eagle November 20 2009 accessed October 16 2013 The Mangino calls incident regrettable cjonline com Retrieved December 13 2018 Heuben Liz November 13 2004 Mangino livid about penalty on Gordon KUsports com Retrieved December 13 2018 Woodling Chuck July 16 2005 KU reveals NCAA violations KUsports com Retrieved December 13 2018 Wood Ryan April 22 2006 NCAA Kansas lost institutional control KUsports com Retrieved December 13 2018 KU probation extended ESPN com October 12 2006 Retrieved December 13 2018 Simple PlanStrict discipline and hard work is how Mark Mangino turned Kansas around NewsOK com November 8 2007 Retrieved December 13 2018 Kansas football wide receiver Raimond Pendleton punt return Mark Mangino YouTube J Brady McCollough www coveringsports com Retrieved December 13 2018 Sources Mangino Wright incident triggers KU investigation kansas Retrieved December 13 2018 a b Kansas investigating matter related to Mangino ESPN com November 17 2009 Retrieved December 13 2018 Fagan Mark Documents show what it looks like when Mangino loses his temper KUsports com November 17 2009 accessed October 16 2013 College football Mark Mangino Kansas reach settlement for him to resign as coach The Seattle Times December 3 2009 Retrieved December 13 2018 Tom Keegan Mark Mangino opens window to his Kansas success obsession with job KUsports com August 31 2017 Retrieved December 13 2018 Oklahoma football After wife s cancer treatments Mark Mangino is ready to get back to coaching NewsOK com October 18 2012 Retrieved December 13 2018 Yosay Robert K August 17 2013 Ex KU coach Mark Mangino building happy healthy life at alma mater KUsports com Retrieved December 13 2018 NCAA Football Rankings 2002 present ESPN Retrieved February 23 2008 Big 12 Record Book PDF Press release Fansonly com Archived from the original PDF on January 26 2007 Retrieved February 23 2008 External links EditKansas profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mark Mangino amp oldid 1177815061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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