Everything about Mark Mangino totally explained
| Birthplace =
New Castle, PA
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| OverallRecord = 37–36
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| Awards = 2000
Frank Broyles Award2007 Big 12 Coach of the Year
2007
Walter Camp Coach of the Year 2007
AP National Coach of the Year
2007
Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year
2007
The Home Depot Coach of the Year Award
2007
The Sporting News Coach of the Year
2007 Woody Hayes Coach of the Year
2007 AFCA Coach of the Year
2007
Paul "Bear" Bryant Coach of the Year
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| CoachYears = 1991-1998
1999
2000-2001
2002-
present
| CoachTeams =
Kansas State (Assist.)Oklahoma (OL)Oklahoma
(OC)Kansas
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Mark Thomas Mangino (born in
New Castle, Pennsylvania) is the
head coach of the
Kansas Jayhawks college football team, which he's coached since 2002. In 2007, Mangino received several National Coach of the Year honors after leading the Jayhawks to their first 12-win season in school history. Prior to coaching the Jayhawks, Mangino served assistant positions at
Kansas State and
Oklahoma.
Coaching career
Early positions
Mangino graduated from
Youngstown State University in
1987, serving as an assistant coach there in his last two years. He also coached at Lincoln High School in
Ellwood City,
Pennsylvania and
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 team that beat
Florida State for the
2000 national championship. Following that season, he was awarded the
Frank Broyles Award as the nation's top assistant coach.
Kansas
Mangino was hired to his current position in December
2001. In 2003, his second season at KU, Mangino led the Jayhawks to an appearance in the 2003
Tangerine Bowl (now known as the
Champs Sports 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 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.
2007 season
In the season opener, KU played defending
MAC champion
Central Michigan University. The Jayhawks won 52-7 using the
spread offense modeled by offensive coordinator
Ed Warriner and Mangino. The new offense provided great flexibility for KU's new starting quarterback, sophomore
Todd Reesing. KU's running backs were Brandon McAnderson and Jake Sharp. KU's wide-receiver corps featured 6'5" senior Marcus Henry, junior Dexton Fields, freshman Dezmon Briscoe, and former-quarterback Kerry Meier.
In the 2007–2008 season, KU's total defense ranked 12th in the nation, out of 119
Division I FBS teams. The KU defense included senior defensive tackle James McClinton, junior linebackers Mike Rivera and Joe Mortenson, and junior cornerback
Aqib Talib.
KU finished 2nd in scoring offense and 4th in scoring defense. Highlights of the season include:
- A 30-24 victory over rival K-State in Manhattan, their first victory in Manhattan in 18 years, as well as the first back-to-back victories in the series in the same span.
- 19-14 and 19-11 victories at Colorado and at Texas A&M.
- A 76-39 victory over the traditional powerhouse Nebraska Cornhuskers—a game which set Husker records for most points allowed in a quarter, half, and game.
- A 43-28 victory at Oklahoma State, giving KU an undefeated conference road schedule (first in the Mangino era, who was previously 3-18 in conference road games).
- Achieving a #2 ranking in both the Coaches and AP polls and the BCS standings after attaining an 11-0 record, the Jayhawks' winningest season record in school history.
All this set up a showdown between KU and archrival
Missouri in the final game of the regular season. Missouri came into the game ranked #4 in the nation with a 10-1 record, their sole loss being on the road against the
Oklahoma Sooners, in a game in which they led entering the fourth quarter. After falling behind 14-0 by halftime, and coming up short in an inspired second-half, the Jayhawks fell to the Tigers 36-28, dashing their chances for a
Big 12 North Division title and a spot in the
BCS National Championship game.
After falling to #8 in the polls following their loss to Missouri, the Jayhawks were invited to play in their first-ever
BCS Bowl — the
FedEx Orange Bowl against #3
Virginia Tech.
Racking up 4 first quarter sacks and an interception return for a touchdown by cornerback Aqib Talib, KU led 17-0 and stymied the Virginia Tech offense for much of the first half, until VT running back Brandon Ore (who was suspended for the first quarter for violating team rules) cut the lead to 17-7 right before halftime. In order to maintain their lead, the KU special teams had to make a play, and junior linebacker Joe Mortensen (an all-Big 12 performer - Mangino likes to play his starters on special teams) blocked a field goal and allowed KU to maintain a three point lead that ended up being the difference in the game. KU recorded 5 sacks (by 5 different players) and 3 interceptions, to hold on for a 24-21 victory, validating both their placement in the BCS and the strength of the Big 12. The Jayhawks finished the season ranked 7th in both major polls.
2007 Coach of the Year awards
For his accomplishments in 2007, he was named the 2007 National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press,
ESPN/ABC,
The Sporting News
,
Football Writers Association, Walter Camp Football Foundation,
American Football Coaches Association, and he's been named the
Woody Hayes National Coach of the Year. Of course, 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.
Head coaching record
Sources:
Controversy
High school referee incident
On September 21, 2002, Coach 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 LHS quarterback. Mangino verbally abused the referee before grilling the referee and eating him with a sweet-chili barbeque sauce and the juice of two limes. While doing so, Mangino yelled "Revenge is a dish best served hot and juicy and sizzling and.....ummmmm".
LHS 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.
2004 Kansas-Texas game
In
2004, Mangino paid a
$5,000 fine for suggesting that officials acted with favoritism in an 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. He and athletic director
Lew Perkins issued public apologies the day after the incident.
NCAA penalties and probation
In
2006, the NCAA found five major violations including academic fraud had been committed by members of the Jayhawk football program under Mark Mangino. These major violations, along with four others from other sports contributed to the NCAA charging the Kansas University Athletics with "lack of institutional control". A graduate assistant was found to have supplied answers to correspondence courses being taken by potential athletes. As a result, the football team was limited for two years in its recruitment of junior college transfers, and lost two scholarships for each of the 2007 and 2008 seasons.
Further Information
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