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Tony Levine

Tony Levine (born October 28, 1972)[1] is a former American football coach who last coached at Purdue as the special teams coordinator, co-offensive coordinator, and tight ends coach. He is a former head coach for the Houston Cougars football team. Levine now owns and operates a Chick-fil-A restaurant in the Houston suburb of Missouri City, Texas.

Tony Levine
Biographical details
Born (1972-10-28) October 28, 1972 (age 51)
Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S.
Playing career
1992–1995Minnesota
1996Minnesota Fighting Pike
Position(s)Wide receiver
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1996Highland Park HS (MN) (freshman)
1997–1999Texas State (WR/TE)
2000–2001Auburn (GA)
2002Louisiana Tech (ST/TE)
2003Louisville (football ops)
2004–2005Louisville (ST/OLB)
2006–2007Carolina Panthers (asst. S&C/asst. ST)
2008–2011Houston (ST/TE/outside WR)
2011–2014Houston
2016Western Kentucky (ST/TE)
2017Purdue (co-OC/ST/TE)
Head coaching record
Overall21–17
Bowls1–1

A walk-on wide receiver for the Minnesota Golden Gophers under Jim Wacker, Levine became a three-year starter and was twice named to the Academic All-Big Ten team. After his graduation from Minnesota, Levine played arena football for the Minnesota Fighting Pike and started his own sports marketing company (Levine Marketing Group) in 1996.[2] Before coming to Houston, the St. Paul native coached at Texas State, Auburn, Louisiana Tech, Louisville and the NFL's Carolina Panthers.

Early and personal life edit

Levine was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Marvin and Harriet Levine.[3][4][5] His father, Marvin Levine, worked as a certified public accountant and played big-band trumpet.[6][7] His mother, Harriet, was a high school guidance counselor.[6] His brother, Jeffrey Levine, is a band and orchestra director at Jefferson High School in Bloomington, Minnesota and is also one of the most accomplished trumpet players on the Minnesota music scene.[8] Levine and his wife Erin have four children (Ben, Asher, Willa, and Eli).[4]

High school and college edit

Attending Highland Park High School in Saint Paul, Levine finished ranked in the top 10% of his graduating class and was a multi-sport athlete, playing tennis, soccer, basketball, track, baseball and football. Levine was also a member of the marching band and jazz band, where he excelled at saxophone. He was named a high school All-American saxophone performer in both his junior and senior years.[3][7]

As a high school junior, he joined the football team for the first time and played free safety. His senior year, Levine moved to wide receiver and was chosen for the Minnesota All-State team.[7] He graduated from HPHS in 1991, and had considered studying music at University of Rochester, Indiana University, University of North Texas and University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire, however he ultimately did not pursue a degree in music.[3]

In football, Levine was recruited by several Division II and Division III schools, but did not receive any scholarship offers.[3] However, he received a call from a Minnesota graduate assistant coach, Dave Spiegler, to invite him to walk-on as a receiver, which he accepted.[3][9][4] Levine paid for his first two years at Minnesota independently.[10] During the second game of the 1993 season against Indiana State, Levine started for injured teammate Omar Douglas. In that game, he caught seven passes for 121 yards and a touchdown. Head coach Jim Wacker then offered Levine a scholarship, and eventually made Levine a starter for the team in the 1994 and 1995 seasons. In his three years playing for the team, he was a two-time Academic All-Big Ten Team member. [4]

Levine earned two master's degrees, one in physical education from Texas State in 1999 and one as an educational specialist in adult education from Auburn in 2003.[4][11]

Professional playing career edit

After finishing his career at Minnesota, Levine joined the Minnesota Fighting Pike of the Arena Football League. However, his professional career only lasted the 1996 season, as the team folded thereafter. In his season with the Fighting Pike, Levine caught 8 passes for 83 yards and 1 touchdown.[1]

Coaching career edit

Early coaching career edit

In 1996 Levine began his career as a coach, when he returned to his high school alma mater, Highland Park High School. He served as head coach of the freshmen team before he departed for Texas for a position at Texas State. During his time there, Levine rented an apartment at Pennington Funeral Home in Downtown San Marcos.[12] His monthly salary was $976, and he did not own an automobile. Levine walked approximately one mile to campus each day. He simultaneously attended classes as a student, and earned his first master's degree in physical education from the university in 1999.

His next career move was to move to Auburn. Similar to his time spent at Texas State, Levine attended classes at the university, and eventually earned a degree at Auburn as an Educational specialist in adult education in 2003. He later held coaching positions at Louisiana Tech, Louisville and the NFL's Carolina Panthers.

Houston edit

Tony Levine was hired by Houston head coach Kevin Sumlin to be the special teams coordinator in 2008. During his time in this position, Houston achieved great success, and finished the 2011 season undefeated in regular season play.

He was named interim head football coach of the Cougars immediately after Sumlin left his team for Texas A&M; however, on December 21 — eleven days before the Cougars were due to play in the 2012 TicketCity Bowl — Houston dropped the "interim" from Levine's title and formally named him as the school's 12th head coach. The Cougars then defeated No. 22 Penn State in the TicketCity Bowl.[13][14][15] Houston finished No. 14 in the Coaches Poll for 2011.

Levine was relieved after three seasons at Houston on December 8, 2014, with an overall record of 21–17, and three bowl appearances.[5] On what seemed to be a promising year, the Cougars lost their inaugural game in TDECU Stadium to UTSA 27-7 – a disappointment compounded by the loss in the season opener to Texas State 30-13 two years prior.[16]

Western Kentucky edit

Levine returned to coaching after sitting out the 2015 season, joining Jeff Brohm's staff at Western Kentucky as co-offensive coordinator, special teams coordinator and tight ends coach. WKU finished the 2016 season with an 11–3 record and ranked No. 23 in the nation as Conference USA Champions. WKU finished the season 1st nationally in scoring offense (45.5 points per game), 5th in total offense (523 yards per game) and 5th in passing offense (336 yards per game).

Levine was named the National Special Teams Coach of the Year by Phil Steele Magazine at the conclusion of the 2016 season.

Purdue edit

After Brohm was hired as the new head coach at Purdue after the 2016 season, he brought Levine along to fill the same roles he had at Western Kentucky, with the official announcement made on December 31.[17] Levine announced his resignation after one season in January 2018, saying it was "the right time" to leave.[18]

After coaching edit

During Levine's hiatus from coaching in the 2015 season, he thought about a career change; as ESPN journalist Adam Rittenberg noted in a 2018 story, Levine wished "to still impact others while spending more time with his wife and four young children. And, ideally, not leave Houston." As part of this process, he called Eric Johnson, who had left the Iowa staff in 2014 to open a Culver's restaurant in the Nashville area, at Johnson's new restaurant, asking for advice. While he went back to coaching at that time, Levine eventually applied to become a Chick-fil-A franchisee, despite having had no restaurant experience. The company's franchisee selection process is notoriously selective—the company receives more than 50,000 annual franchise inquiries, but opens roughly 100 new locations each year. Nonetheless, the skills he practiced as a coach in leadership, recruiting, and player development transferred well to the company's selection process, and he was approved to open a new location five minutes' drive from his home.[18]

While preparing to open his new restaurant, he went through about 700 job candidates before hiring 110 of them—which, by coincidence, is about the same size as a typical playing roster in Division I FBS. In Rittenberg's story, Levine said about his staff,[18]

They're from age 15 to 65 and from every type of background, culture, race, religion. It reminded me of sitting in homes again when I was coaching. It's similar, the evaluation of team members and putting them in the right position. Who's more up for the fast pace, won't get rattled when there's cars wrapped around a restaurant, can handle the stress and intensity of the drive-through?

The new restaurant opened on May 17, 2018, with festivities lasting a week. Before the opening, Levine held a free lunch and dinner as what he called "a live simulation scrimmage" for his staff, and the festivities also included a dinner for Levine's former Houston players and assistants. In the Rittenberg story, he made a telling point about the difference between his past life in coaching and his current career, saying, "Yesterday, my cell phone did not ring one time. If you've been coaching at the college level, you're normally not able to say that, if ever."[18]

Head coaching record edit

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Houston Cougars (Conference USA) (2011–2012)
2011 Houston 1–0[note 1] 0–0[note 1] 1st (West) W TicketCity[note 1] 14 18
2012 Houston 5–7 4–4 T–3rd (West)
Houston Cougars (American Athletic Conference) (2013–2014)
2013 Houston 8–5 5–3 4th L BBVA Compass
2014 Houston 7–5 5–3 T–4th Armed Forces[note 2]
Houston: 21–17 14–10
Total: 21–17
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Levine coached the 2012 TicketCity Bowl after head coach Kevin Sumlin resigned with a 12–1 (8–0 C-USA) record.
  2. ^ David Gibbs coached the 2015 Armed Forces Bowl after Levine was fired.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Tony Levine". ArenaFan. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  2. ^ Todd Zolecki (May 10, 1996). "Levine extends football career with Minnesota Fighting Pike". Minnesota Daily. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e Jones, David (December 30, 2011). "Penn State will face jazzy Houston Cougars offense and their jazz-loving new coach Tony Levine". The Patriot-News. Retrieved October 17, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e UH coach takes pride in family, football
  5. ^ a b Levine joins Jewish exodus of Houston sports scene
  6. ^ a b Meet Tony Levine: The Most Popular Football Coach in Houston – Tablet Magazine
  7. ^ a b c Levine travels lengthy path to UH's top job - The Daily Cougar
  8. ^ "Leadership - Jefferson Band Booster Club". www.jeffersonbandboosterclub.com. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  9. ^ Valderas, Andrew (October 18, 2013). "Levine travels lengthy path to UH's top job". The Daily Cougar. Retrieved October 18, 2013.
  10. ^ Walters, Charley (April 7, 2012). "Charley Walters: Notre Dame's Harrison Smith fits Vikings' needs". St. Paul Pioneer Press. Retrieved October 15, 2012.
  11. ^ PURDUESPORTS.COM - Tony Levine Bio - Purdue University Official Athletic Site
  12. ^ Duarte, Joseph (August 28, 2012). "UH coach Levine's old home was deathly quiet". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved October 30, 2012.
  13. ^ Berman, Mark. Kevin Sumlin is Leaving the University of Houston. KRIV, December 10, 2011.
  14. ^ Khan, Sam Jr. Sumlin leaves post as UH head coach. Houston Chronicle, December 10, 2011.
  15. ^ Source: Kevin Sumlin to coach A&M. ESPN, December 10, 2011.
  16. ^ "Houston coach Tony Levine fired after Cougars' 7-5 campaign"
  17. ^ Bruce Feldman (December 31, 2016). "Purdue's Jeff Brohm adds former Houston head coach Tony Levine to his staff". www.foxsports.com. Fox Sports. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
  18. ^ a b c d Rittenberg, Adam (July 30, 2018). "From cannabis to Chick-fil-A, former CFB coaches find new careers". ESPN.com. Retrieved July 31, 2018.

External links edit

tony, levine, born, october, 1972, former, american, football, coach, last, coached, purdue, special, teams, coordinator, offensive, coordinator, tight, ends, coach, former, head, coach, houston, cougars, football, team, levine, owns, operates, chick, restaura. Tony Levine born October 28 1972 1 is a former American football coach who last coached at Purdue as the special teams coordinator co offensive coordinator and tight ends coach He is a former head coach for the Houston Cougars football team Levine now owns and operates a Chick fil A restaurant in the Houston suburb of Missouri City Texas Tony LevineBiographical detailsBorn 1972 10 28 October 28 1972 age 51 Saint Paul Minnesota U S Playing career1992 1995Minnesota1996Minnesota Fighting PikePosition s Wide receiverCoaching career HC unless noted 1996Highland Park HS MN freshman 1997 1999Texas State WR TE 2000 2001Auburn GA 2002Louisiana Tech ST TE 2003Louisville football ops 2004 2005Louisville ST OLB 2006 2007Carolina Panthers asst S amp C asst ST 2008 2011Houston ST TE outside WR 2011 2014Houston2016Western Kentucky ST TE 2017Purdue co OC ST TE Head coaching recordOverall21 17Bowls1 1 A walk on wide receiver for the Minnesota Golden Gophers under Jim Wacker Levine became a three year starter and was twice named to the Academic All Big Ten team After his graduation from Minnesota Levine played arena football for the Minnesota Fighting Pike and started his own sports marketing company Levine Marketing Group in 1996 2 Before coming to Houston the St Paul native coached at Texas State Auburn Louisiana Tech Louisville and the NFL s Carolina Panthers Contents 1 Early and personal life 2 High school and college 3 Professional playing career 4 Coaching career 4 1 Early coaching career 4 2 Houston 4 3 Western Kentucky 4 4 Purdue 5 After coaching 6 Head coaching record 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly and personal life editLevine was born in Saint Paul Minnesota to Marvin and Harriet Levine 3 4 5 His father Marvin Levine worked as a certified public accountant and played big band trumpet 6 7 His mother Harriet was a high school guidance counselor 6 His brother Jeffrey Levine is a band and orchestra director at Jefferson High School in Bloomington Minnesota and is also one of the most accomplished trumpet players on the Minnesota music scene 8 Levine and his wife Erin have four children Ben Asher Willa and Eli 4 High school and college editAttending Highland Park High School in Saint Paul Levine finished ranked in the top 10 of his graduating class and was a multi sport athlete playing tennis soccer basketball track baseball and football Levine was also a member of the marching band and jazz band where he excelled at saxophone He was named a high school All American saxophone performer in both his junior and senior years 3 7 As a high school junior he joined the football team for the first time and played free safety His senior year Levine moved to wide receiver and was chosen for the Minnesota All State team 7 He graduated from HPHS in 1991 and had considered studying music at University of Rochester Indiana University University of North Texas and University of Wisconsin Eau Claire however he ultimately did not pursue a degree in music 3 In football Levine was recruited by several Division II and Division III schools but did not receive any scholarship offers 3 However he received a call from a Minnesota graduate assistant coach Dave Spiegler to invite him to walk on as a receiver which he accepted 3 9 4 Levine paid for his first two years at Minnesota independently 10 During the second game of the 1993 season against Indiana State Levine started for injured teammate Omar Douglas In that game he caught seven passes for 121 yards and a touchdown Head coach Jim Wacker then offered Levine a scholarship and eventually made Levine a starter for the team in the 1994 and 1995 seasons In his three years playing for the team he was a two time Academic All Big Ten Team member 4 Levine earned two master s degrees one in physical education from Texas State in 1999 and one as an educational specialist in adult education from Auburn in 2003 4 11 Professional playing career editAfter finishing his career at Minnesota Levine joined the Minnesota Fighting Pike of the Arena Football League However his professional career only lasted the 1996 season as the team folded thereafter In his season with the Fighting Pike Levine caught 8 passes for 83 yards and 1 touchdown 1 Coaching career editEarly coaching career edit In 1996 Levine began his career as a coach when he returned to his high school alma mater Highland Park High School He served as head coach of the freshmen team before he departed for Texas for a position at Texas State During his time there Levine rented an apartment at Pennington Funeral Home in Downtown San Marcos 12 His monthly salary was 976 and he did not own an automobile Levine walked approximately one mile to campus each day He simultaneously attended classes as a student and earned his first master s degree in physical education from the university in 1999 His next career move was to move to Auburn Similar to his time spent at Texas State Levine attended classes at the university and eventually earned a degree at Auburn as an Educational specialist in adult education in 2003 He later held coaching positions at Louisiana Tech Louisville and the NFL s Carolina Panthers Houston edit Tony Levine was hired by Houston head coach Kevin Sumlin to be the special teams coordinator in 2008 During his time in this position Houston achieved great success and finished the 2011 season undefeated in regular season play He was named interim head football coach of the Cougars immediately after Sumlin left his team for Texas A amp M however on December 21 eleven days before the Cougars were due to play in the 2012 TicketCity Bowl Houston dropped the interim from Levine s title and formally named him as the school s 12th head coach The Cougars then defeated No 22 Penn State in the TicketCity Bowl 13 14 15 Houston finished No 14 in the Coaches Poll for 2011 Levine was relieved after three seasons at Houston on December 8 2014 with an overall record of 21 17 and three bowl appearances 5 On what seemed to be a promising year the Cougars lost their inaugural game in TDECU Stadium to UTSA 27 7 a disappointment compounded by the loss in the season opener to Texas State 30 13 two years prior 16 Western Kentucky edit Levine returned to coaching after sitting out the 2015 season joining Jeff Brohm s staff at Western Kentucky as co offensive coordinator special teams coordinator and tight ends coach WKU finished the 2016 season with an 11 3 record and ranked No 23 in the nation as Conference USA Champions WKU finished the season 1st nationally in scoring offense 45 5 points per game 5th in total offense 523 yards per game and 5th in passing offense 336 yards per game Levine was named the National Special Teams Coach of the Year by Phil Steele Magazine at the conclusion of the 2016 season Purdue edit After Brohm was hired as the new head coach at Purdue after the 2016 season he brought Levine along to fill the same roles he had at Western Kentucky with the official announcement made on December 31 17 Levine announced his resignation after one season in January 2018 saying it was the right time to leave 18 After coaching editDuring Levine s hiatus from coaching in the 2015 season he thought about a career change as ESPN journalist Adam Rittenberg noted in a 2018 story Levine wished to still impact others while spending more time with his wife and four young children And ideally not leave Houston As part of this process he called Eric Johnson who had left the Iowa staff in 2014 to open a Culver s restaurant in the Nashville area at Johnson s new restaurant asking for advice While he went back to coaching at that time Levine eventually applied to become a Chick fil A franchisee despite having had no restaurant experience The company s franchisee selection process is notoriously selective the company receives more than 50 000 annual franchise inquiries but opens roughly 100 new locations each year Nonetheless the skills he practiced as a coach in leadership recruiting and player development transferred well to the company s selection process and he was approved to open a new location five minutes drive from his home 18 While preparing to open his new restaurant he went through about 700 job candidates before hiring 110 of them which by coincidence is about the same size as a typical playing roster in Division I FBS In Rittenberg s story Levine said about his staff 18 They re from age 15 to 65 and from every type of background culture race religion It reminded me of sitting in homes again when I was coaching It s similar the evaluation of team members and putting them in the right position Who s more up for the fast pace won t get rattled when there s cars wrapped around a restaurant can handle the stress and intensity of the drive through The new restaurant opened on May 17 2018 with festivities lasting a week Before the opening Levine held a free lunch and dinner as what he called a live simulation scrimmage for his staff and the festivities also included a dinner for Levine s former Houston players and assistants In the Rittenberg story he made a telling point about the difference between his past life in coaching and his current career saying Yesterday my cell phone did not ring one time If you ve been coaching at the college level you re normally not able to say that if ever 18 Head coaching record editYear Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl playoffs Coaches AP Houston Cougars Conference USA 2011 2012 2011 Houston 1 0 note 1 0 0 note 1 1st West W TicketCity note 1 14 18 2012 Houston 5 7 4 4 T 3rd West Houston Cougars American Athletic Conference 2013 2014 2013 Houston 8 5 5 3 4th L BBVA Compass 2014 Houston 7 5 5 3 T 4th Armed Forces note 2 Houston 21 17 14 10 Total 21 17 National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berthNotes edit a b c Levine coached the 2012 TicketCity Bowl after head coach Kevin Sumlin resigned with a 12 1 8 0 C USA record David Gibbs coached the 2015 Armed Forces Bowl after Levine was fired References edit a b Tony Levine ArenaFan Retrieved October 16 2012 Todd Zolecki May 10 1996 Levine extends football career with Minnesota Fighting Pike Minnesota Daily Retrieved August 17 2012 a b c d e Jones David December 30 2011 Penn State will face jazzy Houston Cougars offense and their jazz loving new coach Tony Levine The Patriot News Retrieved October 17 2012 a b c d e UH coach takes pride in family football a b Levine joins Jewish exodus of Houston sports scene a b Meet Tony Levine The Most Popular Football Coach in Houston Tablet Magazine a b c Levine travels lengthy path to UH s top job The Daily Cougar Leadership Jefferson Band Booster Club www jeffersonbandboosterclub com Retrieved November 3 2017 Valderas Andrew October 18 2013 Levine travels lengthy path to UH s top job The Daily Cougar Retrieved October 18 2013 Walters Charley April 7 2012 Charley Walters Notre Dame s Harrison Smith fits Vikings needs St Paul Pioneer Press Retrieved October 15 2012 PURDUESPORTS COM Tony Levine Bio Purdue University Official Athletic Site Duarte Joseph August 28 2012 UH coach Levine s old home was deathly quiet Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 30 2012 Berman Mark Kevin Sumlin is Leaving the University of Houston KRIV December 10 2011 Khan Sam Jr Sumlin leaves post as UH head coach Houston Chronicle December 10 2011 Source Kevin Sumlin to coach A amp M ESPN December 10 2011 Houston coach Tony Levine fired after Cougars 7 5 campaign Bruce Feldman December 31 2016 Purdue s Jeff Brohm adds former Houston head coach Tony Levine to his staff www foxsports com Fox Sports Retrieved December 31 2016 a b c d Rittenberg Adam July 30 2018 From cannabis to Chick fil A former CFB coaches find new careers ESPN com Retrieved July 31 2018 External links editTony Levine on Twitter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tony Levine amp oldid 1215453564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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