Dave Kragthorpe | |
Birth Date: | 1 May 1933 |
Player Years1: | 1951–1954 |
Player Team1: | Utah State |
Player Positions: | Tackle |
Coach Years1: | 1958–1959 |
Coach Team1: | Idaho Falls HS (ID) (assistant) |
Coach Years2: | 1960–1963 |
Coach Team2: | Wyandotte HS (MI) |
Coach Years3: | 1965–1966 |
Coach Team3: | Montana (assistant) |
Coach Years4: | 1967–1968 |
Coach Team4: | South Dakota State (assistant) |
Coach Years5: | 1969 |
Coach Team5: | South Dakota State |
Coach Years6: | 1970–1975 |
Coach Team6: | BYU (OC/OL) |
Coach Years7: | 1976–1979 |
Coach Team7: | BYU (AHC/OL) |
Coach Years8: | 1980–1982 |
Coach Team8: | Idaho State |
Coach Years9: | 1985–1990 |
Coach Team9: | Oregon State |
Coach Years10: | 1991 |
Coach Team10: | New Mexico (OL) |
Admin Years1: | 1983–1985 |
Admin Team1: | Utah State |
Overall Record: | 41–69–2 |
Tournament Record: | 3–0 (NCAA D-I-AA playoffs) |
Championships: | 1 NCAA Division I-AA (1981) 1 Big Sky (1981) |
Awards: | Pac-10 Coach of the Year (1989) |
Dave Kragthorpe (born May 1, 1933) is a former American football player He was the head football coach at South Dakota State University in 1969, Idaho State University from 1980 to 1982, and Oregon State University from 1985 to 1990, compiling a career college football record of 41–69–2.
Kragthorpe attended Utah State University in Logan, where he excelled as a two-way tackle for the Aggies from 1951 to 1954. In addition, he was also on the baseball team. Despite all his athletic obligations, Kragthorpe graduated with double bachelor's degrees in physical education and recreation education in 1955. He played one season for the New York Giants as a guard, being taken 188th overall in the 1955 NFL draft.[1] [2] A short time later, he returned to Utah State and earned his master's degree in secondary education.
Kragthorpe was an assistant coach for two seasons at Montana and two at South Dakota State; he was promoted to head coach at SDSU in 1969, and posted a He then served as offensive line coach and offensive coordinator at Brigham Young University, under former USU teammate LaVell Edwards from 1970 to 1975. Under Edwards' and Kragthorpe's leadership, the Cougars became one of the first programs committed to throwing the football in the 1970s, a time when "three yards and a cloud of dust" was still the dominant sentiment in college football. Kragthorpe continued to coach the offensive line under new offensive coordinator Doug Scovil from 1976 to 1979.
After a winless season in 1979 under Bud Hake, Idaho State athletic director, I. J. "Babe" Caccia decided to try to import some of the passing magic to Pocatello from nearby Provo, Utah. He hired Kragthorpe as his head coach in and the Bengals improved to in 1980 and came within nine points of eventual national champion Boise State in the season finale.
The best results were definitely in his second season in 1981, when the Bengals won the Big Sky Conference title, hosted two playoff wins, and won the Division I-AA championship in Texas for a season. They were led by senior quarterback Mike Machurek, a junior college transfer from California; he was a sixth round pick in the 1982 NFL draft, serving as a reserve player with the Detroit Lions. During the 1981 season, Idaho State outscored its opponents The following year, the Bengals fell to Kragthorpe was in three seasons at ISU, from 1980 to 1982.
In June 1983, Kragthorpe stepped away from the sidelines to take over as athletics director at his alma mater, Utah State in Logan.[3]
Eighteen months later in December 1984, he returned to coaching,[4] [5] [6] when he was hired to replace Joe Avezzano at Oregon State University Once again, he implemented a pass-oriented offense for the 1985 season, penned the "Air Express." This offense did not correlate to much success in the Pacific-10 Conference, as Kragthorpe failed to have a winning record in any of his six seasons with Oregon State, compiling an overall record of In recognition of how difficult the Oregon State job was perceived to be in those days, Kragthorpe won the Pac-10 Coach of the Year honors in 1989, despite having a losing record that year with the Beavers. Kragthorpe resigned from Oregon State on November 21, 1990, after an especially disappointing 1–10 result that season.[7]
Despite Kragthorpe's record at Oregon State, he will be forever linked to one of the greatest wins in Oregon State history. In his first season at the helm of Oregon State, Kragthorpe took his in to Husky Stadium in Seattle to take on the Washington Huskies as 38-point underdogs. After sixty minutes of play, and a blocked punt with 1:29 left to go in the game that was recovered for a Beaver touchdown, Oregon State pulled off what was then the largest upset by point spread in college football history,
In 1994, Kragthorpe was hired by the USU Alumni Association to resurrect the university's alumni chapters program. Despite officially retiring in 2001, Kragthorpe can still be found at his desk in the Alumni Office, overseeing the USU alumni chapters in Idaho and northern Nevada.
Kragthorpe is a member of the Old Main Society, Alumni Sustaining Membership program, Big Blue Club, and the Emeriti Association. In 2005, he received the Distinguished Alumnus Award. His son, Kurt, is a sportswriter for the Salt Lake Tribune, while another son, Steve, served as head coach at Tulsa and Louisville. Grandson Brad Kragthorpe is an assistant for the Cincinnati Bengals.[8]
Kragthorpe and his wife, Barbara, split their time between Logan, Utah and Louisville, Kentucky.