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John Thompson (American football coach)

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John Thompson
Biographical details
Born (1955-10-16) October 16, 1955 (age 69)
El Paso, Texas, U.S.
Playing career
1970sCentral Arkansas
Position(s)Defensive back
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1982Arkansas (GA)
1983–1986Northwestern State (DC)
1987Alabama (LB)
1988–1989Northwestern State (DC)
1990–1991Louisiana Tech (DC)
1992Southern Miss (DC)
1993–1998Southern Miss (AHC/DC)
1999Memphis (DC)
2000Arkansas (co-DC)
2001Arkansas (DC)
2002Florida (DC/MLB)
2003–2004East Carolina
2005South Carolina (co-DC/ILB)
2007Ole Miss (DC/DB)
2008–2011Georgia State (AHC/DC/ILB)
2012–2013Arkansas State (DC/LB)
2012Arkansas State (interim HC)
2013Arkansas State (interim HC)
2014–2015Texas State (DC)
2017–2018Blessed Trinity HS (GA) (DC/LB)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2006Central Arkansas
Head coaching record
Overall5–20
Bowls2–0

John Thompson (born October 16, 1955) is a former American football coach. He served as the head football coach at East Carolina University from 2003 to 2004 and at Arkansas State University on an interim basis twice—first during the 2013 GoDaddy.com Bowl and then in the 2014 GoDaddy Bowl. He has compiled a career college football coaching record of 5–20.[1]

Coaching career

[edit]

After playing defensive back at Central Arkansas, Thompson was defensive coordinator at Arkadelphia (AR) High School, working under John Outlaw and helping lead the Badgers to a state championship.[2] He later became a graduate assistant under Lou Holtz at Arkansas, which led to him landing the defensive coordinator job at Northwestern State in Natchitoches, LA. One of the players he coached at Northwestern State was Ed Orgeron.[3]

Thompson coached one year as outside linebackers coach for Alabama under Bill Curry, and became defensive coordinator at Louisiana Tech in 1990. He then landed the Southern Mississippi coordinator job where he stayed for most of the 1990's decade. Former Alabama offensive coordinator Rip Scherer hired Thompson at Memphis before Thompson coordinated for two years under Houston Nutt at Arkansas, and then a year under Ron Zook at Florida.

From 2003 to 2004, he was the head football coach at East Carolina. Thompson resigned after winning only 3 games in two years.[4]

In 2005, Thompson was hired by Steve Spurrier as co-defensive coordinator at South Carolina, but then left in 2006 to return to his alma mater, the University of Central Arkansas, as the athletics director. Thompson then worked as defensive coordinator at Ole Miss under his former player Orgeron in 2007.[5] The entire staff was fired after the 2007 season.

His latter defensive coordinator jobs on the college level included working for Curry again, this time helping start the football program at Georgia State, at Arkansas State under Gus Malzahn and then Bryan Harsin, and at Texas State under Dennis Franchione.

Keeping a home in Atlanta, Thompson entered the high school coaching ranks there after his college coaching career was over. He was the defensive coordinator for Blessed Trinity in Roswell in 2017-18. He moved into private business before coaching again at Fellowship Christian School, also in Roswell, as defensive coordinator in 2021-22. He was named head coach at Fellowship Christian in 2023.[6]

Head coaching record

[edit]
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
East Carolina Pirates (Conference USA) (2003–2004)
2003 East Carolina 1–11 1–7 10th
2004 East Carolina 2–9 2–6 T–10th
East Carolina: 3–20 3–13
Arkansas State Red Wolves (Sun Belt Conference) (2012–2013)
2012 Arkansas State 1–0* W GoDaddy.com Bowl
2013 Arkansas State 1–0* W GoDaddy Bowl
Arkansas State: 2–0 * Only coached bowl games
Total: 5–20

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wolken, Dan (August 19, 2015). "John Thompson has had football jobs at 14 colleges — six in the SEC — and zero regrets". USA Today. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  2. ^ Yates, Robert (December 24, 2011). "Outlaw, 'heck of coach,' dies". Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette. Retrieved November 30, 2024.
  3. ^ Solomon, Jon (November 10, 2016). "Mistakes prepared Ed Orgeron, the people's coach at LSU, for his dream job". CBS Sports. Retrieved November 30, 2024.
  4. ^ "East Carolina Head Football Coach John Thompson Resigns". ecupirates.com. November 17, 2004. Retrieved November 30, 2024.
  5. ^ Holt, Bob (August 1, 2007). "Fire still burning: Thompson can't shake desire to be on sideline". Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Retrieved November 30, 2024.
  6. ^ Holcomb, Todd (November 2, 2023). "4 Questions with Fellowship Christian head coach John Thompson". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved November 30, 2024.