Eastern Michigan Eagles football
The Eastern Michigan Eagles are a college football program at Eastern Michigan University. They compete in Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) and the Mid-American Conference. Past names include "Michigan State Normal College Normalites" (1899 to 1928), "Michigan State Normal College Hurons" (1929 to 1955), and "Eastern Michigan Hurons" (1956 to 1990).
Eastern Michigan Eagles football | |||
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First season | 1891; 133 years ago | ||
Athletic director | Scott Wetherbee | ||
Head coach | Chris Creighton 11th season, 57–72 (.442) | ||
Stadium | Rynearson Stadium (capacity: 26,188) | ||
Field surface | FieldTurf | ||
Location | Ypsilanti, Michigan | ||
NCAA division | Division I FBS | ||
Conference | Mid-American Conference | ||
Division | West | ||
Past conferences | MIAA (1894–1926) MCC (1927–1930) IIAC (1950–1961) PAC (1964–1965) | ||
All-time record | 495–627–47 (.444) | ||
Bowl record | 2–6 (.250) | ||
Conference titles | 10 (1896, 1925, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1954, 1955, 1957, 1987)[1] | ||
Rivalries | Central Michigan (rivalry), Western Michigan (rivalry) | ||
Current uniform | |||
Colors | Green and white[2] | ||
Fight song | "Eagles Fight Song", "Go Green", "Our Pledge" | ||
Mascot | Swoop | ||
Marching band | Pride of the Peninsula | ||
Outfitter | Adidas | ||
Website | EMUEagles.com |
Since 1891, Eastern Michigan University has compiled an all-time record of 490–622–47, fielding a team in each year except 1944. The team has achieved five undefeated seasons, in 1906, 1925, 1927, 1943 (holding opponents scoreless), and 1945. The team saw its greatest period of success from 1925 through 1939 under head coach Elton Rynearson, for whom their home field, Rynearson Stadium, is named. Among the lowest periods in the team's history was a 27-game losing streak in the early 1980s; under head coach Mike Stock the team was held scoreless seven times and posted an average margin of loss of 18 points per game.
History
editEarly history (1891–1977)
editMichigan State Normal School first fielded a football team in 1891.[3] Initially the team had no official nickname, being known variously as the "Normalites" or the "Men from Ypsi". From 1892 to 1926, the team competed in the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association, winning conference championships in 1896 and 1925. (Although the MIAA did not recognize football as an official sport until 1894, MIAA teams competed against each other as early as 1891.)[4] After playing football for three years at the University of Michigan, including being on the undefeated 1898 Michigan Wolverines football team that won the university's first Western Conference championship, Clayton Teetzel travelled six miles east to Ypsilanti, where he became the first person to coach the Michigan State Normal College football team for more than one year. From 1900 through 1902, his teams compiled a 6–14–1 record.[5]
The 1916 season was cut short after four games when Coach Elmer Mitchell and four players contracted smallpox; the last game was played October 28 against the University of Detroit.[6]
Following the smallpox–shortened 1916 season,[6] Elton Rynearson was hired to replace Elmer Mitchell. Although Rynearson's offense was more effective, outscoring opponents 111 to 82, more than half of the scoring came in a single game, a 63–0 rout of Central Michigan, and the team ended the season with a 3–4 record. After the shortened 3-game 1918 season was coached by Lynn Bell, Rynearson returned to coach the 1919 squad to their first winning season in four years.[7] After another winning season in 1920, other coaches assumed the duties for four years, during which the team managed a 9–15–4 record.[8] Rynearson's return in 1925 sparked the most successful period in school history. From 1925 through 1930, the team achieved a 40–4–2 record, including perfect seasons in 1925 and 1927. From 1925 through 1927 they outscored opponents 405 points to 31 and registered 19 shutouts. They won the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association Championship in 1925, and won the Michigan Collegiate Conference championships in 1927, 1928, 1929, and 1930.[9][10] In 1929, the Michigan State Normal College Men's Union sponsored a contest to determine a nickname. A three-person committee chose "Hurons" from the contest entries; the runner-up name was "Pioneers". The name Hurons was submitted by Gretchen Borst and George Hanner, both MSNC students. It is likely that Hanner got the idea from the Huron Hotel in downtown Ypsilanti, where he was employed.[11]
Although less dominant, Rynearson's teams continued to have success throughout the 1930s, never having a losing season until the teams of 1940 and 1941 combined for a 2–10–3 record. The 1943 and 1945 teams (there was no team in 1944) were again successful, combining for a 7–0–1 record. However, following the end of World War II, Rynearson's teams again struggled, and he ended his coaching career on a streak of three losing seasons from 1946 through 1948.[12] His 26 seasons as head coach are double those of the next-longest serving coach, Fred Trosko, and no Eastern Michigan University football coach has reached even half of Rynearson's win total of 114 games.[5] Following Rynearson's retirement in 1948, Harry Ockerman was the head coach for three undistinguished years, in which he compiled a 7–19–0 record, including a winless first season. For the 1952 season, Fred Trosko was hired as head coach, and over the next several seasons the team improved markedly, attaining a 7–1–1 record in 1953, an 8–1–0 record in 1954, and a 7–2–0 record in 1955. The team was not able to sustain the success, however, and for the remained of his thirteen seasons Trosko's teams struggled, finishing two consecutive seasons winless (1960 and 1961, both 0–8–1), and only managing two additional winning seasons, going 6–3–0 in 1957 and 4–3–0 in 1964, Trosko's final year. In thirteen seasons, the second longest tenure of any head coach at the school, Trosko had nearly as many losses as Rynearson had in twenty-six seasons.[3]
In July 1952, Fred Trosko was hired as head football coach at Michigan State Normal College.[13] Trosko had been a star college running back at Michigan under head coach Fritz Crisler. The team improved markedly during Trosko's early years as head coach. In his first seven seasons, the team attained a record of 41–19–2, including a 7–1–1 record in 1953 and an 8–1–0 record in 1954.[3] His teams won Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference ("IIAC") championships in 1954 and 1957.[14] The team's success came to an abrupt end in 1959. Trosko's teams had a 29-game winless streak (0–27–2) starting with the third game of the 1959 season and continuing through the fifth game of the 1962 season.[3][14] The precipitous decline followed the decision of the Eastern Michigan administration not to follow an IIAC policy that allowed member schools to award scholarships. Competing with non-scholarship athletes against conference schools with scholarship athletes, Trosko's Eastern Michigan teams were unable to compete.[14] In August 1965, Trosko announced his resignation as the school's head football coach, and it was reported that the resignation was the result of "an apparent break with school administrators over policy."[15] Trosko had the second longest tenure of any head coach at the school.[14] He also taught at Eastern Michigan and remained on the faculty at Eastern Michigan after retiring as football coach.[15] He ultimately retired in 1981 as a professor emeritus.[14] In 1982, he was inducted into the Eastern Michigan Sports Hall of Fame.[16] Jerry Raymond was the head football coach of the Hurons for the 1965 and 1966 seasons,[17] and his coaching record at the school was 8 wins, 7 losses and 2 ties. As of the conclusion of the 2010 season, this ranks him No. 12 at Eastern Michigan in total wins and No. 13 at the school in winning percentage (.529).[18]
In July 1967, Dan Boisture was hired as head coach at Eastern Michigan University.[19] He later commented that he was willing to go to a smaller school, saying, "There weren't many jobs open...Joan and I looked at the campus. It was a cute campus."[20] Under his leadership, the team produced the longest period of sustained success since Elton Rynearson's days. The team posted winning seasons in all seven years of Boisture's coaching, including a 13-game winning streak that remains a school record.[21] His 1971 squad finished the regular season 7–0–2, only allowing one touchdown in the last five games,[22] before losing to Louisiana Tech in the Pioneer Bowl, the first bowl trip in school history.[23] Boisture was named NCAA District Four "coach of the year" in 1971.[24] Boisture's tenure at Eastern Michigan is also notable for the construction of Rynearson Stadium. Boisture's teams played their first two seasons at the old field, near the corner of Oakwood and Washtenaw, just west of McKenny Union.[25] In 1969, the new stadium, which was considered off-campus at the time, opened with a capacity of 15,500. Boisture's bowl-bound 1971 team played for one of the few sellout crowds in the stadium's history, a 0–0 tie against Eastern Kentucky on October 16, 1971, which drew 17,360 spectators.[26] In February 1974, Boisture left Eastern Michigan to coach the Detroit Wheels, in the Central Division of the World Football League. The Wheels played their home games at Rynearson Stadium after they were unable to secure an agreement with Tiger Stadium in Detroit or Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor.[27][28] In 1972, Eastern Michigan joined the Mid-American Conference, in which they still compete.
In February 1974, Michigan assistant coach George Mans was hired as the head football coach of the Eagles,[29] where he remained for the 1974 and 1975 seasons. In his first season as head coach, Mans' team started the season with only one win in the first six games, but the team finished strong, going 3–1–1 in the final five games.[30] In May 1976, Mans announced his resignation as Eastern Michigan's coach in what the Associated Press described as a "surprise move."[31] According to one newspaper report, Mans resigned "when it became apparent that EMU would place a greater emphasis on basketball, hiring former Detroit Pistons Coach Ray Scott."[32] Mans compiled an 8–12–1 record in two seasons as the head football coach at Eastern Michigan.[33] Coach Ed Chlebek came to Eastern Michigan from the University of Notre Dame, where he was an assistant under Dan Devine and coached future Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana. Chlebek's Eagles compiled a 10–12 record from 1976 to 1977.[34] After an impressive 8–3 campaign in 1977, Chlebek left EMU to accept the position of head football coach at Boston College.[35]
Mike Stock era (1978–1982)
editMike Stock's tenure as head coach is primarily remembered for a school-record 27-game losing streak from 1980 through 1982, including a winless season in 1981.[36] He was fired after the team lost the first three games of 1982, including a 49–12 pasting at Louisiana Tech and 35–0 shutout at Miami University, bringing the losing streak to 22 games; the team went on to lose five more consecutive games under interim coach Bob LaPointe before the streak was broken with a 9–7 win over Kent State on November 6, 1982.[37] Stock's teams were held scoreless seven times, his teams were outscored by a total of 809 points — nearly 18 points per game, and his final record of 6–38–1 gives him a 14.4% win percentage, easily the lowest of any coach to remain at Eastern more than one season.[5] Stock continued to coach football both at the collegiate level and the professional level, both in the United States Football League and the National Football League, until his retirement following the 2008 NFL season, but this was his only head coaching position.[38][39]
Jim Harkema era (1983–1992)
editCoach Jim Harkema came to EMU from Grand Valley State and lead EMU to four consecutive winning seasons from 1986 to 1989,[40] including Eastern's only MAC championship in 1987, when the team went to the 1987 California Bowl and upset 17½ point favorite San Jose State for the only bowl game win in school history until the 2022 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, when they again beat San Jose State. The 1988 and 1989 teams each finished in second place in the conference. Harkema's teams struggled from 1990 to 1992, and Harkema was fired after an 0–4 start to the 1992 season after 2–9 and 3–7–1 campaigns in 1990 and 1991.[41]
In October 1988, the Michigan Department of Civil Rights issued a report suggesting that all schools using Native American logos or imagery should drop them. An EMU committee considered the change and recommended three possible replacement nicknames, Eagles, Green Hornets, and Express, from which the Board of Regents voted to accept the nickname "Eagles". The change became official on May 22, 1991. The controversy over the nickname continues to this day, as many former students and faculty were angered that a unique name like Hurons was replaced by a common name like Eagles, and many alumni have refused to donate money to the school until the name Hurons is restored. An official chapter of the EMU Alumni Association, the Huron Restoration Chapter, seeks to bring back the name and claims to have the support of Chief Leaford Bearskin of the Wyandot Tribe of Oklahoma and former Grand Chief Max Gros-Louis of the Huron-Wendat Nation of Quebec.[42]
Ron Cooper era (1993–1994)
editNext, EMU turned to a young, up-and-coming assistant coach to right the ship. Ron Cooper was hired as EMU's head coach.[43] Cooper had been an assistant at Notre Dame and Minnesota under head coach Lou Holtz.[43][44] Cooper had also been an assistant at East Carolina and UNLV.[43][45] Cooper's Eagles compiled a 4–7 mark in 1993 and a 5–6 record in 1995.[46] Cooper left EMU after two seasons to accept the position of head football coach at Louisville.[47]
Rick Rasnick era (1995–1999)
editOn January 3, 1995, Utah offensive coordinator Rick Rasnick was interviewed by Eastern Michigan,[48] and the following day he was hired as head coach[49] with a five-year contract.[50] Rasnick brought a more open, pass-oriented offense to Eastern Michigan than his predecessor, Ron Cooper had used. Rasnick's offense featured Charlie Batch as quarterback in 1995 and 1997 (Batch sat out 1996 with an injury).[51]
During his time at EMU, Rasnick's recruiting noticeably favored junior-college transfers rather than high school seniors.[52] On November 16, 1999, three days after a 29–26 loss at Central Michigan,[53] Eastern Michigan Athletic Director Dave Diles held a press conference to announce that he had fired Rasnick as head coach.[54]
Jeff Woodruff era (2000–2003)
editJeff Woodruff was the head football coach at Eastern Michigan for four seasons, from 2000 until 2003.[55] Woodruff's first season, in which the team posted a 3–8 record turned out to be the best of his tenure.[56] Following a 38–10 loss to Central Michigan on November 1, 2003, athletic director Dave Diles, Jr. fired Woodruff, saying, "Jeff Woodruff has helped develop our program with quality young men, but the team is not on the competitive level that we felt should be after four years."[57]
Jeff Genyk era (2004–2008)
editIn 2004, EMU hired Northwestern quarterbacks coach Jeff Genyk as head coach.[58] In his first season, 2004, Genyk helped lead EMU to a 4–4 Mid-American Conference record, the best record since the 1999 squad went 4–4 in Mid-American Conference play, and a 4–7 overall record.[59] In addition, Genyk directed the Eagles to the Michigan MAC championship with wins over both in-state league rivals, Western Michigan and Central Michigan, for the first time since the 1986 season.
The 2005 season, Jeff Genyk's second as head coach, saw limited improvement as the Eagles finished with a 4–7 overall record (the same as 2004) and a 3–5 MAC mark. However, that final record could just as easily have been 6–5, 7–4, or even 8–3, as the Eagles dropped two one-point games (Miami University, Ball State), one two-point game (at Cincinnati), and one eight-point game (Western Michigan).[60] In 2006, EMU had just one win, the homecoming game against Toledo. Once again, the total could have been a lot higher, with six losses coming only by one possession. They lost two games by 8 (at Northwestern, at Kent State), one game in overtime by 7 (Central Michigan), one game by 6 (Ohio), and two games by 3 (at Bowling Green, at Western Michigan).[61]
After tallying a 3–9 record during the 2008 campaign and going 16–42 overall during his five years at the helm, Genyk was fired.[62] He coached the season's final game against Central Michigan, a 56–52 upset.
Ron English era (2009–2013)
editFollowing Genyk's firing, Ron English, former defensive coordinator at the University of Michigan and the University of Louisville, was named head coach of the Eastern Michigan football program.[63] At the time of his hiring, English was one of five African American head coaches in major college football; the others were Kansas's Turner Gill, Miami's Randy Shannon, Houston's Kevin Sumlin, New Mexico's Mike Locksley;.[64] Mike Haywood became the sixth when Miami University (Ohio) hired him just days later.[65] Although his hiring brought a lot of excitement to the program, he failed to capitalize in his first season, leading the team to an 0–12 record, the first winless season for EMU since 1981. Despite English's background as a defensive coach, the team allowed an average of more than 38 points per game, losing 10 games by double-digit margins, 6 of them by more than 20 points.
English was abruptly fired with three games to go in the 2014 season.[66] Less than 24 hours before the Eagles' game against Western Michigan, athletic director Heather Lyke obtained a tape of an obscenity-laced tirade English delivered to his secondary while reviewing film in October. The screed included at least one homophobic slur. Lyke said that English's language was "wholly inappropriate," and not acceptable in a student setting. English later apologized for what he described as a loss of poise.[67]
Chris Creighton era (2014–present)
editOn December 23, 2013, Drake head coach Chris Creighton was hired as English's replacement.[68] In his first season with the Eagles, they finished 2–10 and last in the Mid-American Conference. In his second season, they finished 1–11 with no conference wins, the first time since 2009. In his third season, the Eagles finished the regular season 7–5 (a six-game turnaround) while qualifying for the Bahamas Bowl, the first bowl game for the program in 29 years. Eastern Michigan lost to Old Dominion, 24–20. On March 1, 2017, the Eastern Michigan athletics office announced a proposed plan for athletic facilities upgrades, including a new building that can be utilized for indoor practice sessions. The new facility is anticipated to be approximately 70,000 square feet, utilize a turf playing surface, improved weight room, as well as the addition of up to ten suites facing the stadium. A new scoreboard inside of Rynearson Stadium would also be added.[69] In 2018, Creighton's fifth season, Eastern Michigan became bowl eligible once again with a 27–7 win over Akron. In eight quarters of play, including that game and a week earlier vs. Central Michigan, the EMU defense did not allow a single offensive score by their opponents.[citation needed] Creighton and the Eagles pulled road upsets of Big Ten Conference teams 3 consecutive years, from 2017 to 2019, with wins over Rutgers, Purdue, and Illinois. On September 17, 2022, Eastern Michigan defeated Arizona State, 30–21, in their first win over a Pac-12 Conference opponent.
Conference affiliations
editEMU has been a member of the following conferences.[70]
- Independent (1891–1893)
- Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1894)
- Independent (1895)
- Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1896–1901)
- Independent (1902–1919)
- Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1920–1925)
- Independent (1926)
- Michigan Collegiate Conference (1927–1930)
- Independent (1931–1949)
- Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (1950–1961)
- Presidents' Athletic Conference (1964–1965)
- Independent (1966–1975)
- Mid-American Conference (1976–present)
Conference championships
editThe Eagles have won 10 conference titles.[71]: 160–168
Year | Conference | Coach | Record | Conference Record |
---|---|---|---|---|
1896 | Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association | Fred W. Green | 4–1 | 2–0 |
1925 | Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association | Elton Rynearson | 8–0 | 5–0 |
1927 | Michigan Collegiate Conference | Elton Rynearson | 8–0 | 3–0 |
1928 | Michigan Collegiate Conference | Elton Rynearson | 7–1 | 3–0 |
1929† | Michigan Collegiate Conference | Elton Rynearson | 5–1–2 | 2–0–1 |
1930 | Michigan Collegiate Conference | Elton Rynearson | 6–1 | 3–0 |
1954† | Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | Fred Trosko | 8–1 | 5–1 |
1955† | Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | Fred Trosko | 7–2 | 5–1 |
1957 | Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | Fred Trosko | 6–3 | 6–0 |
1987 | Mid-American Conference | Jim Harkema | 10–2 | 7–1 |
† Co-champions
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association
editMichigan State Normal College was admitted to the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association in 1892. Although the conference did not recognize football as an official sport until 1894, teams within the conference competed with each other as early as 1891.[4] MSNC's first game against an MIAA opponent was a 30–10 victory over Albion College on November 2, 1892.[72] In 1896, MSNC won their MIAA games by a combined score of 70–0, earning them the conference championship.[72][73] Despite an undefeated season in 1906,[74] the conference championship was won by Olivet College, whose team played, and won, more conference games.[73] In 1925, with the return of Rynearson as coach, the team achieved another undefeated season and again took the MIAA championship,[73] before leaving the conference a year later.
Michigan Collegiate Conference
editMichigan State Normal College dominated the brief history of the Michigan Collegiate Conference (which consisted of MSNC, Central Michigan University, and Western Michigan University), winning the conference championships in each of the four seasons (1927, 1928, 1929, and 1930) it lasted,[1] including an undefeated season in 1927. The team was never defeated in Michigan Collegiate Conference play. This marked what remains one of the most successful periods in the history of the team.
Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
editIn twelve seasons in the Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, Eastern Michigan won three championships: in 1954, in 1955, and in 1957.[1] All came under the leadership of head coach Fred Trosko.
Mid-American Conference
editIn 1987, Eastern won its only Mid-American Conference championship, marking the high point of four consecutive winning seasons, and the completion of a turnaround from the school's 27-game losing streak earlier in the decade.[1]
Bowl games
editEastern Michigan has participated in seven bowl games. In 1971 as a Division II school in their last season as an independent team, Eastern Michigan went 7–0–2 in the regular season, before losing 3–14 to Louisiana Tech in the Pioneer Bowl in Wichita Falls, Texas.[75] In 1987, following the school's only MAC championship, and their first in any conference in 30 years, the team went on to upset 17½ point favorite San Jose State University in the California Bowl in Fresno, California, for the first bowl game win in school history.[76] In 2016, the Eagles participated in the Bahamas Bowl after finishing the regular season 7–5, their most wins in a season since 1989 when they also had 7 victories.[77] In 2022, Eastern played San Jose State again in the 2022 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. Despite being down early, a blocked extra point returned for 2 points turned the game around for an EMU victory, 41–27.[78]
Year | Bowl | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | Pioneer Bowl | Louisiana Tech | L 3–14 |
1987 | California Bowl | San Jose State | W 30–27 |
2016 | Bahamas Bowl | Old Dominion | L 20–24 |
2018 | Camellia Bowl | Georgia Southern | L 21–23 |
2019 | Quick Lane Bowl | Pittsburgh | L 30–34 |
2021 | LendingTree Bowl | Liberty | L 20–56 |
2022 | Famous Idaho Potato Bowl | San Jose State | W 41–27 |
2023 | 68 Ventures Bowl | South Alabama | L 10–59 |
Head coaches
editMany of EMU's head coaches have had brief tenures with the program; 18 head coaches served for one season or less.[5] Among the more notable head coaches at EMU have been Clayton Teetzel (1900–1902), Henry Schulte (1906–1908), Elton Rynearson (1917, 1919–1920, 1925–1948), Fred Trosko (1952–1964), Dan Boisture (1967–1973), George Mans (1974–75), Mike Stock (1978–1982), Jim Harkema (1983–1992), Rick Rasnick (1995–1999), Jeff Woodruff (2000–2003), Jeff Genyk (2004–2008), and Ron English (2009–2013). Rynearson was the longest-serving and winningest coach, with a record of 114-58-15 over 26 seasons, while Vern Bennett (1894) posted the highest winning percentage, 71.4%. Tony Lombardi was the shortest-tenured coach, leading the team only for the final game of the 1999 season.[71]: 177 [79]
No. | Coach | Years | Record | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | James M. Swift | 1891 | 0–2 | .000 |
2 | Dean W. Kelley | 1892–1892 | 2–1 | .667 |
3 | Ernest P. Goodrich | 1893–1893 | 4–2 | .667 |
4 | Verne S. Bennett | 1894–1894 | 5–2 | .714 |
5 | Marcus Cutler | 1895–1895 | 3–3 | .500 |
6 | Fred W. Green | 1896–1896 | 4–1 | .800 |
7 | A. Bird Glaspie | 1897–1897 | 2–3 | .400 |
8 | Enoch C. Thorne | 1898–1898 | 1–5–2 | .250 |
9 | Dwight Watson | 1899–1899 | 1–1–1 | .500 |
10 | Clayton T. Teetzel | 1900–1902 | 4–14–1 | .237 |
11 | Hunter Forest | 1903–1903 | 4–4 | .500 |
12 | Daniel H. Lawrence | 1904–1905 | 10–6 | .625 |
13 | Henry F. Schulte | 1906–1908 | 9–6–1 | .594 |
14 | Clare Hunter | 1909 | 2–4 | .333 |
15 | Curry Hicks | 1910 | 0–5–1 | .083 |
16 | Dwight Wilson | 1911 | 3–4 | .429 |
17 | Leroy Brown | 1912–1913 | 6–5–2 | .538 |
18 | Thomas Ransom | 1914 | 3–2–1 | .583 |
19 | Elmer Mitchell | 1915–1916 | 5–4–2 | .545 |
20 | Elton Rynearson | 1917, 1919–1920, 1925–1948 | 114–58–15 | .650 |
21 | Lynn Bell | 1918 | 1–2 | .333 |
22 | Joseph McCulloch | 1921–1922 | 6–5–2 | .538 |
23 | James M. Brown | 1923–1924 | 4–10–2 | .313 |
24 | Harry Ockerman | 1949–1951 | 7–19 | .269 |
25 | Fred Trosko | 1952–1964 | 50–56–4 | .473 |
26 | Jerry Raymond | 1965–1966 | 8–7–2 | .529 |
27 | Dan Boisture | 1967–1973 | 45–20–3 | .684 |
28 | George Mans | 1974–1975 | 8–12–1 | .405 |
29 | Ed Chlebek | 1976–1977 | 10–12 | .455 |
30 | Mike Stock | 1978–1982 | 6–38–1 | .144 |
31 | Bob LaPointe | 1982 | 1–6–1 | .188 |
32 | Jim Harkema | 1983–1992 | 41–57–5 | .422 |
33 | Jan Quarless | 1992 | 1–6 | .143 |
34 | Ron Cooper | 1993–1994 | 9–13 | .409 |
35 | Rick Rasnick | 1995–1999 | 20–34 | .370 |
36 | Tony Lombardi | 1999 | 0–1 | .000 |
37 | Jeff Woodruff | 2000–2003 | 9–34 | .209 |
38 | Al Lavan | 2003 | 2–1 | .667 |
39 | Jeff Genyk | 2004–2008 | 16–42 | .276 |
40 | Ron English | 2009–2013 | 11–46 | .193 |
41 | Stan Parrish | 2013 | 1–2 | .333 |
42 | Chris Creighton | 2014–present | 52–68 | .433 |
Facilities
editAround mid-century, Eastern Michigan played its home games at a small field near the corner of Oakwood and Washtenaw, just west of McKenny Union.[25] In 1969, the university constructed Rynearson Stadium, named for former coach Elton Rynearson. With a 30,200 person seating capacity, Rynearson Stadium is among the smallest to host an FBS team; the largest attendance at an EMU game at Rynearson was 25,009, on September 16, 1995, for a 51–6 win over UNLV. Rynearson is one of only two stadiums in the Mid-American Conference with a track around the football field. Lighting was added to the stadium in 1974, and the playing surface has been FieldTurf since 2005. The second and current FieldTurf surface, a gray surface, was installed in 2014. This made Rynearson Stadium only the second FBS venue with a non-traditional field color, after the famous blue surface of Albertsons Stadium at Boise State. Two EMU games at Rynearson have been sell-outs: a 24–31 loss to Western Michigan on October 22, 1988, drew 23,003 (listed capacity at the time was 22,227), and a 0–0 tie against Eastern Kentucky on October 16, 1971, drew 17,360 (capacity was 15,500).[26]
In late 2009, Eastern Michigan University broke ground on an indoor practice facility, which was completed that academic year. In addition to being used for football practices, the air-supported structure is used by Eastern Michigan's soccer, baseball, softball, and golf programs. This is one of only three such air-supported facilities used by Football Bowl Subdivision programs. According to then-Athletic Director Derrick Gragg a traditionally constructed facility of the same size would have cost approximately five times more.[80]
Rivalries
editCentral Michigan
editCentral Michigan holds a 62–30–6 lead in the series as of 2020.
Michigan MAC Trophy
editEastern Michigan participates in one trophy series, the Michigan MAC Trophy, against the Central Michigan Chippewas and Western Michigan Broncos. Since the Michigan MAC Trophy was created in 2005, Eastern Michigan has won it four times, sweeping the series in 2007,[81] and retaining it in 2008 when all three schools went 1–1 in the round robin series. After defeating both Central and Western in 2011, Eastern reclaimed the trophy, tying them with Central Michigan for the most Michigan MAC championships in the series. Again during the 2012 season, all three teams went 1–1 in the round robin series, and EMU again retained the trophy.
Pro Football Hall of Fame
editOne former Eastern Michigan alumnus has been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[82][83]
Name | Position | Inducted |
---|---|---|
George Allen | Head coach | 2006 |
Future non-conference opponents
editAnnounced schedules as of August 11, 2024.[84]
2024 | 2025 | 2026 | 2027 | 2028 | 2029 | 2030 | 2035 | 2036 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
at UMass | at Texas State | San Jose State | San Diego State | at Indiana | at San Jose State | at Michigan | at Middle Tennessee | Middle Tennessee |
at Washington | LIU | at Michigan State | at Michigan | Marshall | Georgia Southern | |||
Jacksonville State | at Kentucky | Lindenwood | at Georgia Southern | |||||
Saint Francis | Louisiana | at Marshall |
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Eastern Michigan Conference Championships". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved April 21, 2010.
- ^ "Colors - Division of Communications". Retrieved September 11, 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Fred Trosko Records by Year". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on March 10, 2012. Retrieved April 20, 2010.
- ^ a b "America's Oldest Collegiate Conference". Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association. Archived from the original on September 13, 2010. Retrieved April 19, 2010.
In 1889, at the second annual MIAA Field Day, Albion and Olivet engaged in an exhibition "football match." In 1891 Albion defeated Hillsdale at Hillsdale 36–4 in the first intercollegiate football game in the MIAA, but it wasn't until 1894 that football was recognized as an official league sport.
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