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Tim Rose (American football)

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American football player and coach (born 1941) This article is about the American football coach. For the American musician, see Tim Rose. For the actor-puppeteer, see Timothy D. Rose.

Tim Rose
Current position
TitleDefensive coordinator & linebackers coach
TeamAshland
ConferenceG-MAC
Biographical details
Born (1941-10-14) October 14, 1941 (age 83)
Playing career
1960–1963Xavier
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1963–1964Elder HS (OH) (assistant)
1964–1966Moeller HS (OH) (assistant)
1967–1974Lorain St. Mary's HS (OH)
1975–1977Boulder HS (CO)
1978–1982Miami (OH) (DC)
1983–1989Miami (OH)
1992–1994Memphis State (DC)
1995Cincinnati (DC)
1996Minnesota (DC)
1997–1998Boston College (DC)
1999–2002East Carolina (DC)
2003Eastern Michigan (DC)
2004Louisiana Tech (DC)
2005–2008Toledo (DC)
2009–presentAshland (DC/LB)
Head coaching record
Overall31–44–3 (college)
Bowls0–1
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 MAC (1986)

Tim Rose (born October 14, 1941) is an American college football coach and former player. He is the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach for Ashland University, positions he has held since 2009. Rose served as the head football coach at Miami University from 1983 to 1989, compiling a record of 31–44–3. He has over 35 years of experience as a defensive coordinator at the college level including stints at Miami, the University of Memphis, the University of Cincinnati, the University of Minnesota, Boston College, East Carolina University, Eastern Michigan University, Louisiana Tech University and the University of Toledo.

Coaching career

Rose served as the head coach at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio from 1983 to 1989. He led the 1986 Miami squad to the Mid-American Conference (MAC) championship and a berth in the California Bowl. That season, Rose orchestrated perhaps the biggest win in the program's history with a 21–12 victory over No. 8 LSU in Baton Rouge. Even with his success in 1986, Rose only had two winning seasons in seven years at Miami and finished his tenure there with a record of 31–44–3 that included a streak of 20 games without a victory between 1987 and 1989. After the 1989 season, Rose's contract was not renewed and he was replaced by Randy Walker. Rose was the first coach since Edwin Sweetland in 1911 to leave Miami with a losing record. In 1999, while serving as defensive coordinator at East Carolina University, Rose was named as a finalist for the Broyles Award, given annually to the nation's top college football assistant coach.

Family

Rose is the father of Kurt Rose, an American football coach working in Japan as the head coach of the X-League's Tokyo Gas Creators, the company team for Tokyo Gas.

Head coaching record

College

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Miami Redskins (Mid-American Conference) (1983–1989)
1983 Miami 4–7 3–5 7th
1984 Miami 4–7 3–5 T–6th
1985 Miami 8–2–1 7–1–1 2nd
1986 Miami 8–4 6–2 1st L California
1987 Miami 5–6 5–3 T–2nd
1988 Miami 0–10–1 0–7–1 9th
1989 Miami 2–8–1 2–5–1 7th
Miami: 31–44–3 26–28–3
Total: 31–44–3
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References

External links

Miami RedHawks head football coaches

# denotes interim head coach

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