Barry Switzer
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Barry Switzer (born October 5, 1937 in Crossett, Arkansas) is a former American football coach, in the college and professional ranks, between 1962 and 1997. He has one of the highest winning percentages of any college football coach in history, and is one of only two head coaches to win both a college football national championship and a Super Bowl.
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Early life and career
Switzer was the son of a bootlegger and money-lender who spent time in prison for his activities. Switzer, however, saw other avenues open for him as a star on the local high school football team, and earned a scholarship to the University of Arkansas. He played center and linebacker for four years for coach Frank Broyles and was a starter on the 1964 National Championship team (along with Jimmy Johnson and Jerry Jones), did a brief stint in the U.S. Army and then returned to Arkansas as a coach.
Switzer spent two years at his alma mater, coaching among others, future rival Jimmy Johnson and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones. In 1966, he moved to the University of Oklahoma as an assistant coach and spent nine seasons in that capacity. By 1971, he was the team's offensive coordinator as the team set NCAA team rushing records that still stand today. He is often credited by Sooner fans as having perfected the use of the Wishbone formation offense.
Head Coach, University of Oklahoma
Switzer became head coach at Oklahoma in 1973, leading the team to undefeated seasons that year (10-0-1) and the next, when the Sooners went 11-0 and shared the national championship with USC. They were outright national champions in 1975, winning 11 games against just one defeat. His teams won or shared the Big Eight Conference title every year between 1973 and 1980, including 1978 Heisman winner Billy Sims and played for another championship in 1977, but lost.
Oklahoma slumped slightly in the early 1980s, but rebounded with another conference title in 1984, when the Sooners again played for the national championship and lost. They won it the next year, going 11-1 and upsetting top-ranked Penn State in the Orange Bowl. The next two years, they posted the same record but finished ranked third in the final polls both seasons.
Switzer resigned from his coaching position at Oklahoma early in 1989, with a career record of 157-29-4. His winning percentage of .837 is fourth-best all-time, and he posted remarkable records against several famous contemporaries, going 3-0-1 against Darrell Royal, 12-5 against Tom Osborne, 5-3 against Jimmy Johnson, 2-0 against Bobby Bowden and 1-0 against Joe Paterno, Bo Schembechler and Woody Hayes. It should be noted that he was 5-0 against Johnson when Johnson coached at Oklahoma State but was 0-3 against Johnson when Johnson coached at the University of Miami and had some extremely talented teams.
On the other hand, Switzer's teams were racked by several scandals and placed on NCAA probation twice, and Switzer was frequently accused of lax discipline on his teams. It was a series of brushes with the law by his players following the 1988 season that contributed to the end of his coaching career at Oklahoma.
Head Coach, Dallas Cowboys
Barry Switzer resurfaced in coaching in 1994 with the Dallas Cowboys, replacing former player and longtime rival Jimmy Johnson on a team now owned by former player and longtime friend Jerry Jones. Switzer was successful with the Cowboys, going 13-5 his first season and 15-4 in his second, when Dallas won Super Bowl XXX over the Pittsburgh Steelers, 27-17.
Switzer was unable to halt the team's decline from age and free agency following the Super Bowl, and was again accused of lax discipline by some of his players, most notably quarterback Troy Aikman. The Cowboys won their division in 1996, but had a losing season the next year. Switzer resigned as Cowboys' coach with a 45-26 career NFL coaching record.
After football
The University of Oklahoma maintained some distance from Coach Switzer for many years after he left. Under Coach Bob Stoops however, the football program has renewed its relationship with the now-retired Switzer.
In 1990, Switzer released his autobiography, entitled "Bootlegger's Boy." Switzer was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2002. In 2004, he received the Jim Thorpe Lifetime Achievement Award.
In 2006, Switzer put respect over rivalry in announcing his support for Tom Osborne's campaign for governor of Nebraska.
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Categories: 1937 births | American football offensive linemen | American football linebackers | Arkansas Razorbacks football players | Arkansas Razorbacks football coaches | People from Arkansas | People associated with the University of Arkansas | Oklahoma Sooners football coaches | Dallas Cowboys coaches | Living people