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Steve Kragthorpe

Steven Jon Kragthorpe (born April 28, 1965) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently an administrative assistant for the Louisiana State University football program after previously serving as quarterbacks coach for the Tigers football team. He served as head coach at Louisville from 2007 to 2009, and for Tulsa from 2003 through 2006.

Steve Kragthorpe
Kragthorpe as Louisville head coach in October 2009
Current position
TitleAdministrative assistant
TeamLSU
ConferenceSEC
Biographical details
Born (1965-04-28) April 28, 1965 (age 58)
Missoula, Montana, U.S.
Playing career
1983–1984Eastern New Mexico
1985–1987West Texas
Position(s)Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1990–1991Northern Arizona (QB)
1992–1993Northern Arizona (OC)
1994–1995North Texas (OC)
1996Boston College (QB)
1997Texas A&M (QB)
1998–2000Texas A&M (OC)
2001–2002Buffalo Bills (QB)
2003–2006Tulsa
2007–2009Louisville
2011–2012LSU (QB)
Head coaching record
Overall44–43
Bowls1–2
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 C-USA (2005)

Early career edit

Kragthorpe was born in Missoula, Montana but attended Highland High School in Pocatello, Idaho. Kragthorpe played high school football with ESPN commentator Merril Hoge. Both graduated from Highland High School in 1983.[citation needed]

He was recruited by Bill Kelly to play at Eastern New Mexico University, where he played quarterback in 1983 and '84. When Kelly left ENMU for West Texas State (now West Texas A&M University), Kragthorpe followed him. After sitting out the 1985 season, he played in 1986 and '87. He started 11 games as a senior and completed 179-of-344 passes for 1,980 yards and nine TDs.

Kragthorpe earned a bachelor's degree in business administration in 1988 from West Texas State and received his MBA in 1989 from Oregon State University. He then spent more than a decade as an assistant coach at several colleges. At age 26, he became offensive coordinator under Steve Axman at Northern Arizona University. He left in 1994 to join Matt Simon's coaching staff at the University of North Texas. After leaving the state of Texas for one year, serving as quarterbacks coach under Dan Henning at Boston College in 1996, Kragthorpe came back to join R. C. Slocum's staff at Texas A&M. He served as quarterbacks coach in 1997 before replacing Steve Marshall as offensive coordinator in 1998. Texas A&M won a Big 12 championship in 1998.

In 2001, Kragthorpe left the collegiate ranks to become quarterback coach under head coach Gregg Williams for the Buffalo Bills. He coached quarterback Drew Bledsoe during one of Bledsoe's better seasons in the NFL. In 2003, Kragthorpe took over his first head coaching position, succeeding Keith Burns at the University of Tulsa.

Head coaching career edit

Tulsa edit

In his first season at Tulsa, Kragthorpe guided a program that had won just two games during the previous two seasons to an 8–5 record and its first bowl game appearance since 1991. In 2005, Tulsa won the Conference USA championship and then went on to beat Fresno State in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl.

Louisville edit

Kragthorpe took over the University of Louisville vacancy on January 9, 2007. He replaced former head coach, and fellow Montanan, Bobby Petrino, who agreed to serve as head coach of the Atlanta Falcons. Kragthorpe's contract was a 1.1 million dollar a year contract (with bonuses) for five years.[1] Louisville hired Kragthorpe in what many consider to be a "whirlwind courtship," becoming the head coach in less than 48 hours after Petrino submitted his resignation.[2] Kragthorpe was the third straight Louisville coach with Rocky Mountain ties. John L. Smith was an Idaho native, and Bobby Petrino was a fellow Montana native.[citation needed]

In 2007, Kragthorpe carried around a baseball bat in an attempt to motivate his players to become "Better After Today"[3] and placed mousetraps around the locker room in another effort at motivation.[4]

Although Louisville started the 2007 season as #10 in the AP Poll and returned the majority of the 2007 Orange Bowl champion team, including Heisman Trophy candidate Brian Brohm at quarterback, the Cards finished the season a disappointing 6–6, including a loss to Syracuse in which the Cardinals were 37 point favorites. Nine consecutive winning seasons and bowl games came to an end under the direction of Kragthrope, even though he led a team that had enough talent to see five of its players taken in the NFL Draft. Rumors swirled on whether Kragthorpe would return for a second season. After days of speculation whether Kragthorpe could leave for the vacant head coaching job at Southern Methodist University, Louisville sports information director Rocco Gasparro confirmed on November 21, that there is a "50–50 chance" Kragthorpe will be at SMU in 2008.[5] In a press conference that same day Kragthorpe ruled out any speculations that he was entertaining an offer from SMU, saying he was "100 percent committed" to Louisville.[6] Following Louisville's dismal 2007 season, Kragthorpe released both offensive coordinator Charlie Stubbs and defensive coordinator Mike Cassity and then hired Michigan defensive coordinator Ron English to guide the Cardinals defense and handed the offensive coordinator duties to Jeff Brohm,[7] who was expected to install an offense similar to that run by former Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino.

2008 edit

Kragthorpe opened his second season at Louisville with very low expectations.[8] A year removed from being a preseason top 10 program, the Cardinals entered the 2008 season picked 7th in the 8 team Big East Conference by members of the media. Louisville hosted in-state rival Kentucky on Sunday, August 31, falling to the Wildcats 27–2 in Louisville's first opening day loss since 2002.[9] On October 25, 2008, Louisville defeated a ranked South Florida team 24–20. Kragthorpe also lost to Syracuse in back to back seasons, giving Syracuse head coach Greg Robinson two of his three Big East wins as a head coach. Following the Syracuse loss, Kragthorpe's Cardinals lost the next four games capped off by a 63–14 loss to Rutgers (Louisville's worst defeat since 1987.)[10][11] This marked the team's first losing season since 1997.

Following a second straight losing season in 2009, Louisville fired Kragthorpe shortly after the conclusion of the season.

Later coaching positions edit

Following his Louisville stint, Kragthorpe accepted the wide receivers coaching position at Texas A&M in February 2010,[12] but later resigned in July 2010 due to a family member's illness.[13][14] After spending the 2010 season out of football,[15] on January 20, 2011, he was hired as the new offensive coordinator at LSU.[16]

On August 4, 2011, Kragthorpe stepped down from the offensive coordinator position at LSU, due to Parkinson's disease.[17] He remained as quarterbacks coach through the 2012 season. Following the season, Kragthorpe assumed the role of special assistant to the head coach and chief of staff for the LSU football program.[18]

After LSU lost to Texas A&M 72–74 in seven overtime periods on November 28, 2018, Kragthorpe was reportedly punched in the chest by a Texas A&M team staff member.[19] The punch reportedly hit where Kragthorpe's brain pacemaker is implanted. Kevin Faulk, LSU Director of Player Development, physically retaliated against the Texas A&M staff member. The staff member was identified as Cole Fisher, Jimbo Fisher's nephew.[20] After the game, it was reported that Kragthorpe exaggerated the claim and that he was in fact simply shoved after getting into a verbal altercation with Cole Fisher.[21]

Personal life edit

Kragthorpe and his wife have three sons. His brother, Kurt, is a sports columnist for The Salt Lake Tribune; their father, Dave Kragthorpe, was also a college football coach, most notably at Oregon State. Steve's son, Brad, was the quarterback for Holland Hall, a private prep school in Tulsa, where he was rated as one of the top high school quarterbacks in the state.[13] Kragthorpe was recently diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. (NOLA.com)

Head coaching record edit

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Tulsa Golden Hurricane (Western Athletic Conference) (2003–2004)
2003 Tulsa 8–5 6–2 T–2nd L Humanitarian
2004 Tulsa 4–8 3–5 T–6th
Tulsa Golden Hurricane (Conference USA) (2005–2006)
2005 Tulsa 9–4 6–2 1st W Liberty
2006 Tulsa 8–5 5–3 3rd (West) L Armed Forces
Tulsa: 29–22 20–12
Louisville Cardinals (Big East Conference) (2007–2009)
2007 Louisville 6–6 3–4 T–5th
2008 Louisville 5–7 1–6 8th
2009 Louisville 4–8 1–6 7th
Louisville: 15–21 5–16
Total: 44–43
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References edit

  1. ^ "Government Salaries". Louisville Courier Journal. October 9, 2009. Retrieved October 9, 2009.
  2. ^ "Kragthorpe leaves Tulsa for Louisville". ESPN.com news services. January 9, 2007. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  3. ^ Prisbell, Eric (August 20, 2007). "Louisville's Kragthorpe Wants to Be a Real Hit". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  4. ^ "College Football: No. 8 Louisville 58, Middle Tennessee 42". Associated Press via International Herald Tribune. September 7, 2007. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  5. ^ . Web.archive.org (November 21, 2007). Retrieved on April 17, 2013.
  6. ^ . Associated Press. Retrieved on April 17, 2013.
  7. ^ Louisville Courier-Journal: Kragthorpe announces changes on his staff. December 2, 2007.
  8. ^ . BIG EAST Conference (July 29, 2008).
  9. ^ Louisville Football – Cardinals Drop Season Opener October 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Uoflsports.com (August 31, 2008). Retrieved on April 17, 2013.
  10. ^ Crawford, Eric (December 5, 2008). "Questions on Cards should focus on future". The Courier-Journal. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  11. ^ Brown, C. L. (December 5, 2008). "A Scarlet fever epidemic". The Courier-Journal. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
  12. ^ . aggieathletics.com, February 13, 2010
  13. ^ a b Baker, Matt (October 15, 2010). "Holland Hall's Brad Kragthorpe benefits from dad's coaching experience", Tulsa World.
  14. ^ "Kragthorpe resigns as Texas A&M assistant". July 26, 2010.
  15. ^ Bailey, Eric (January 12, 2011). "TU search will not include ex-coach: Kragthorpe surprised he won't be considered for Hurricane opening." Tulsa World.
  16. ^ Kleinpeter, Jim (January 20, 2011) "LSU football: Steve Kragthorpe hired as offensive coordinator", Times-Picayune.
  17. ^ "Kragthorpe stepping down as LSU's offensive coordinator", Sporting News, August 4, 2011.
  18. ^ "Kragthorpe enjoys moment in limelight".
  19. ^ /http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/25370822/kevin-faulk-lsu-involved-skirmish-texas-game
  20. ^ "Sources: Jimbo Fisher's nephew is man who reportedly punched LSU's Steve Kragthorpe".
  21. ^ "Video appears to dispute LSU coach's version of postgame melee at Texas A&M". November 27, 2018.

steve, kragthorpe, steven, kragthorpe, born, april, 1965, american, football, coach, former, player, currently, administrative, assistant, louisiana, state, university, football, program, after, previously, serving, quarterbacks, coach, tigers, football, team,. Steven Jon Kragthorpe born April 28 1965 is an American football coach and former player He is currently an administrative assistant for the Louisiana State University football program after previously serving as quarterbacks coach for the Tigers football team He served as head coach at Louisville from 2007 to 2009 and for Tulsa from 2003 through 2006 Steve KragthorpeKragthorpe as Louisville head coach in October 2009Current positionTitleAdministrative assistantTeamLSUConferenceSECBiographical detailsBorn 1965 04 28 April 28 1965 age 58 Missoula Montana U S Playing career1983 1984Eastern New Mexico1985 1987West TexasPosition s QuarterbackCoaching career HC unless noted 1990 1991Northern Arizona QB 1992 1993Northern Arizona OC 1994 1995North Texas OC 1996Boston College QB 1997Texas A amp M QB 1998 2000Texas A amp M OC 2001 2002Buffalo Bills QB 2003 2006Tulsa2007 2009Louisville2011 2012LSU QB Head coaching recordOverall44 43Bowls1 2Accomplishments and honorsChampionships1 C USA 2005 Contents 1 Early career 2 Head coaching career 2 1 Tulsa 2 2 Louisville 2 2 1 2008 3 Later coaching positions 4 Personal life 5 Head coaching record 6 ReferencesEarly career editKragthorpe was born in Missoula Montana but attended Highland High School in Pocatello Idaho Kragthorpe played high school football with ESPN commentator Merril Hoge Both graduated from Highland High School in 1983 citation needed He was recruited by Bill Kelly to play at Eastern New Mexico University where he played quarterback in 1983 and 84 When Kelly left ENMU for West Texas State now West Texas A amp M University Kragthorpe followed him After sitting out the 1985 season he played in 1986 and 87 He started 11 games as a senior and completed 179 of 344 passes for 1 980 yards and nine TDs Kragthorpe earned a bachelor s degree in business administration in 1988 from West Texas State and received his MBA in 1989 from Oregon State University He then spent more than a decade as an assistant coach at several colleges At age 26 he became offensive coordinator under Steve Axman at Northern Arizona University He left in 1994 to join Matt Simon s coaching staff at the University of North Texas After leaving the state of Texas for one year serving as quarterbacks coach under Dan Henning at Boston College in 1996 Kragthorpe came back to join R C Slocum s staff at Texas A amp M He served as quarterbacks coach in 1997 before replacing Steve Marshall as offensive coordinator in 1998 Texas A amp M won a Big 12 championship in 1998 In 2001 Kragthorpe left the collegiate ranks to become quarterback coach under head coach Gregg Williams for the Buffalo Bills He coached quarterback Drew Bledsoe during one of Bledsoe s better seasons in the NFL In 2003 Kragthorpe took over his first head coaching position succeeding Keith Burns at the University of Tulsa Head coaching career editTulsa edit In his first season at Tulsa Kragthorpe guided a program that had won just two games during the previous two seasons to an 8 5 record and its first bowl game appearance since 1991 In 2005 Tulsa won the Conference USA championship and then went on to beat Fresno State in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl Louisville edit Kragthorpe took over the University of Louisville vacancy on January 9 2007 He replaced former head coach and fellow Montanan Bobby Petrino who agreed to serve as head coach of the Atlanta Falcons Kragthorpe s contract was a 1 1 million dollar a year contract with bonuses for five years 1 Louisville hired Kragthorpe in what many consider to be a whirlwind courtship becoming the head coach in less than 48 hours after Petrino submitted his resignation 2 Kragthorpe was the third straight Louisville coach with Rocky Mountain ties John L Smith was an Idaho native and Bobby Petrino was a fellow Montana native citation needed In 2007 Kragthorpe carried around a baseball bat in an attempt to motivate his players to become Better After Today 3 and placed mousetraps around the locker room in another effort at motivation 4 Although Louisville started the 2007 season as 10 in the AP Poll and returned the majority of the 2007 Orange Bowl champion team including Heisman Trophy candidate Brian Brohm at quarterback the Cards finished the season a disappointing 6 6 including a loss to Syracuse in which the Cardinals were 37 point favorites Nine consecutive winning seasons and bowl games came to an end under the direction of Kragthrope even though he led a team that had enough talent to see five of its players taken in the NFL Draft Rumors swirled on whether Kragthorpe would return for a second season After days of speculation whether Kragthorpe could leave for the vacant head coaching job at Southern Methodist University Louisville sports information director Rocco Gasparro confirmed on November 21 that there is a 50 50 chance Kragthorpe will be at SMU in 2008 5 In a press conference that same day Kragthorpe ruled out any speculations that he was entertaining an offer from SMU saying he was 100 percent committed to Louisville 6 Following Louisville s dismal 2007 season Kragthorpe released both offensive coordinator Charlie Stubbs and defensive coordinator Mike Cassity and then hired Michigan defensive coordinator Ron English to guide the Cardinals defense and handed the offensive coordinator duties to Jeff Brohm 7 who was expected to install an offense similar to that run by former Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino 2008 edit Kragthorpe opened his second season at Louisville with very low expectations 8 A year removed from being a preseason top 10 program the Cardinals entered the 2008 season picked 7th in the 8 team Big East Conference by members of the media Louisville hosted in state rival Kentucky on Sunday August 31 falling to the Wildcats 27 2 in Louisville s first opening day loss since 2002 9 On October 25 2008 Louisville defeated a ranked South Florida team 24 20 Kragthorpe also lost to Syracuse in back to back seasons giving Syracuse head coach Greg Robinson two of his three Big East wins as a head coach Following the Syracuse loss Kragthorpe s Cardinals lost the next four games capped off by a 63 14 loss to Rutgers Louisville s worst defeat since 1987 10 11 This marked the team s first losing season since 1997 Following a second straight losing season in 2009 Louisville fired Kragthorpe shortly after the conclusion of the season Later coaching positions editFollowing his Louisville stint Kragthorpe accepted the wide receivers coaching position at Texas A amp M in February 2010 12 but later resigned in July 2010 due to a family member s illness 13 14 After spending the 2010 season out of football 15 on January 20 2011 he was hired as the new offensive coordinator at LSU 16 On August 4 2011 Kragthorpe stepped down from the offensive coordinator position at LSU due to Parkinson s disease 17 He remained as quarterbacks coach through the 2012 season Following the season Kragthorpe assumed the role of special assistant to the head coach and chief of staff for the LSU football program 18 After LSU lost to Texas A amp M 72 74 in seven overtime periods on November 28 2018 Kragthorpe was reportedly punched in the chest by a Texas A amp M team staff member 19 The punch reportedly hit where Kragthorpe s brain pacemaker is implanted Kevin Faulk LSU Director of Player Development physically retaliated against the Texas A amp M staff member The staff member was identified as Cole Fisher Jimbo Fisher s nephew 20 After the game it was reported that Kragthorpe exaggerated the claim and that he was in fact simply shoved after getting into a verbal altercation with Cole Fisher 21 Personal life editKragthorpe and his wife have three sons His brother Kurt is a sports columnist for The Salt Lake Tribune their father Dave Kragthorpe was also a college football coach most notably at Oregon State Steve s son Brad was the quarterback for Holland Hall a private prep school in Tulsa where he was rated as one of the top high school quarterbacks in the state 13 Kragthorpe was recently diagnosed with Parkinson s Disease NOLA com Head coaching record editYear Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl playoffsTulsa Golden Hurricane Western Athletic Conference 2003 2004 2003 Tulsa 8 5 6 2 T 2nd L Humanitarian2004 Tulsa 4 8 3 5 T 6thTulsa Golden Hurricane Conference USA 2005 2006 2005 Tulsa 9 4 6 2 1st W Liberty2006 Tulsa 8 5 5 3 3rd West L Armed ForcesTulsa 29 22 20 12Louisville Cardinals Big East Conference 2007 2009 2007 Louisville 6 6 3 4 T 5th2008 Louisville 5 7 1 6 8th2009 Louisville 4 8 1 6 7thLouisville 15 21 5 16Total 44 43 National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berthReferences edit Government Salaries Louisville Courier Journal October 9 2009 Retrieved October 9 2009 Kragthorpe leaves Tulsa for Louisville ESPN com news services January 9 2007 Retrieved December 5 2008 Prisbell Eric August 20 2007 Louisville s Kragthorpe Wants to Be a Real Hit The Washington Post Retrieved December 5 2008 College Football No 8 Louisville 58 Middle Tennessee 42 Associated Press via International Herald Tribune September 7 2007 Retrieved December 5 2008 Kragthorpe could be leaving Web archive org November 21 2007 Retrieved on April 17 2013 FoxSports Kragthorpe shoots down SMU rumor Associated Press Retrieved on April 17 2013 Louisville Courier Journal Kragthorpe announces changes on his staff December 2 2007 2008 Football Media Day Commissioner Tranghese s Opening Remarks BIG EAST Conference July 29 2008 Louisville Football Cardinals Drop Season Opener Archived October 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Uoflsports com August 31 2008 Retrieved on April 17 2013 Crawford Eric December 5 2008 Questions on Cards should focus on future The Courier Journal Retrieved December 5 2008 Brown C L December 5 2008 A Scarlet fever epidemic The Courier Journal Retrieved December 5 2008 Sherman Completes Coaching Staff with Three Hirings aggieathletics com February 13 2010 a b Baker Matt October 15 2010 Holland Hall s Brad Kragthorpe benefits from dad s coaching experience Tulsa World Kragthorpe resigns as Texas A amp M assistant July 26 2010 Bailey Eric January 12 2011 TU search will not include ex coach Kragthorpe surprised he won t be considered for Hurricane opening Tulsa World Kleinpeter Jim January 20 2011 LSU football Steve Kragthorpe hired as offensive coordinator Times Picayune Kragthorpe stepping down as LSU s offensive coordinator Sporting News August 4 2011 Kragthorpe enjoys moment in limelight http www espn com college football story id 25370822 kevin faulk lsu involved skirmish texas game Sources Jimbo Fisher s nephew is man who reportedly punched LSU s Steve Kragthorpe Video appears to dispute LSU coach s version of postgame melee at Texas A amp M November 27 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steve Kragthorpe amp oldid 1211753442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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