List of Southern Oregon Raiders head football coaches

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The Southern Oregon Raiders football program is a college football team that represents Southern Oregon University in the Frontier Conference, a part of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). The team has had 14 head coaches since its first recorded football game in 1927. The current coach is Craig Howard who first took the position for the 2011 season.[1]

Key

Key to symbols in coaches list
General Overall Conference Postseason[A 1]
# Order of coaches[A 2] GC Games coached CW Conference wins PW Postseason wins
DC Division championships OW Overall wins CL Conference losses PL Postseason losses
CC Conference championships OL Overall losses CT Conference ties PT Postseason ties
NC National championships OT Overall ties[A 3] C% Conference winning percentage
dagger Elected to the College Football Hall of Fame O% Overall winning percentage[A 4]


Coaches

# Name Term GC OW OL OT O% CW CL CT C% PW PL CCs Awards
1 Roy McNeal 1927–1931 27 13 9 5 .574
2 Howard Hobson 1932–1934 20 12 7 1 .625
3 Jean Eberheart 1935–1938 24 3 18 3 .188
4 Al Simpson 1946–1950 44 27 16 1 .625
5 William Abbey 1951 9 1 8 0 .111
6 Alex Petersen 1952–1954 22 8 14 0 .364
7 Al Akins 1955–1969 136 71 62 3 .533
8 Larry Kramer 1970–1971 20 3 17 0 .150
9 Scott Johnson 1972–1979 74 35 39 0 .417
10 Chuck Mills 1980–1988 92 44 47 1 .484
11 Jim Palazzolo 1989–1995 63 30 31 2 .492
12 Jeff Olson 1996–2004 86 50 36 0 .581
13 Shay McClure 2005 10 1 9 0 .100
14 Steve Helminiak 2006–2010 47 16 31 0 .340
15 Craig Howard 2011–present 48 34 14 0 .708 23 7 0 .767 5 2 1

Notes

  1. Although the first Rose Bowl Game was played in 1902, it has been continuously played since the 1916 game, and is recognized as the oldest bowl game by the NCAA. "—" indicates any season prior to 1916 when postseason games were not played.[2]
  2. A running total of the number of head coaches, with coaches who served separate tenures being counted only once. Interim head coaches are represented with "Int" and are not counted in the running total. "—" indicates the team played but either without a coach or no coach is on record. "X" indicates an interim year without play.
  3. Overtime rules in college football were introduced in 1996, making ties impossible in the period since.[3]
  4. When computing the win–loss percentage, a tie counts as half a win and half a loss.[4]

References

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