Rome News-Tribune

Well-traveled coach Petrino gets new job

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SPRINGFIEL­D, Mo. — Bobby Petrino, a coach with a track record of on-the-field success and off-the-field embarrassm­ents, will be the next coach at Missouri State.

The Springfiel­d-based university said Wednesday that Petrino, 58, will be introduced at a news conference Thursday. He will replace Dave Steckel, who was fired last week after winning just 13 games in five seasons.

Petrino has a 119-56 record in 14 seasons at Arkansas, Western Kentucky and Louisville. He also spent part of one season coaching the NFL’S Atlanta Falcons, where he coached 13 games in 2007 before abruptly resigning.

Petrino was 31-9 at Louisville from 2003-06, including an Orange Bowl win after the 2006 season. He left to coach the Falcons, where he failed to last even one season. He resigned with three games remaining to return to college coaching at Arkansas.

His departure angered Falcons players, both in its timing and the way it was handled: Players showed up in the middle of the week to find a letter from Petrino.

“Out of my respect for you, I am letting you know that, with a heavy heart, I resigned today as the Head Coach of the Atlanta Falcons,” the letter stated.

Petrino was 34-17 in four seasons at Arkansas, leading the school to the Sugar Bowl following the 2010 season and a No. 5 final ranking the following season, when the Razorbacks won 11 games.

A few months after that season ended with Arkansas fans excited to see where the program was headed, Petrino was injured in a motorcycle accident that exposed an extra-marital affair with an athletic department employee. Petrino originally said he was riding alone but later revealed that the woman was a passenger, and that they were involved in a relationsh­ip. Petrino was fired.

He was out of football in 2012 before resurfacin­g at Western Kentucky. The Hilltopper­s were 8-4 in 2013 and beat Kentucky in Petrino’s only season there. He was rehired at Louisville for the 2014 season.

He had initial success at Louisville. During the 2016 season, the Cardinals went 9-4, reached as high as No. 3 in the AP poll and beat then-no. 2 Florida State, 63-20. Sophomore quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson, now a standout with the Baltimore Ravens, won the Heisman Trophy, and Louisville shared the ACC’S Atlantic Division title with Clemson.

But after going 8-5 in 2017, the bottom fell out the following season, when Petrino’s only wins came against FCS opponents Indiana State and Western Kentucky. With Jackson graduated, Louisville’s offense struggled. The Cardinals were 2-8 and were in the midst of a seven-game losing streak when Petrino was fired following a 54-23 loss to Syracuse. The university agreed to pay the remaining $14 million on his contract.

Petrino had been out of coaching since his ouster at Louisville.

Missouri State was just 13-42 under Steckel, who previously served as defensive coordinato­r for Gary Pinkel at Missouri, including 1-10 in 2019.

Steckel’s firing was somewhat surprising because Missouri State’s athletic director, Kyle Moats, said in November the university intended to honor Steckel’s contract through 2021.

Moats and Steckel met again recently “to discuss football-related matters, which ultimately led to this mutual agreement,” Moats said last week.

The Bears play in the Missouri Valley Conference and are part of the FCS. They haven’t had a winning season since 2009.

Former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue, who led the league from 1989-2006, was part of a group of figures in the NFL’S history to be named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Wednesday.

Former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue has made the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his fifth attempt.

Tagliabue and former New York Giants general manager George Young made it to the hall in Canton, Ohio, as contributo­rs. Ex-dallas Cowboys safety Cliff Harris and former Cleveland receiver Mac Speedie completed the centennial class announced Wednesday. The class of 10 senior candidates, three contributo­rs and two coaches are part of the hall’s celebratio­n of the NFL’S 100th season.

Tagliabue replaced Pete Rozelle as league commission­er in 1989 and served 17 years, during which there was labor peace, expansion to 32 teams and widespread upgrades in stadiums. The NFL’S television revenues under Tagliabue skyrockete­d, and he helped establish a pension system for former players.

The issue that seemed to keep him from earlier selection to the hall was how the NFL dealt with concussion­s and head trauma. But, as with all commission­ers, Tagliabue was doing the bidding of his bosses, the team owners. He made some unwise comments about the connection between concussion­s and football for which he later apologized.

“Deep appreciati­on to the Hall of Fame and just as much to all the people who worked with me for almost 50 years in the NFL,” Tagliabue said. “Football is the ultimate team sport, we were not playing the game on the field ... the team was people who worked for me at the NFL and the teams and our partners.”

Current commission­er Roger Goodell noted that Tagliabue is “a guy who

 ?? AP - D.J. Peters, file ??
AP - D.J. Peters, file

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