Joe Cox | |
Current Title: | Tight ends coach |
Birth Date: | 27 November 1986 |
Birth Place: | Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Georgia |
Player Years1: | 2005–2009 |
Player Team1: | Georgia |
Player Positions: | Quarterback |
Coach Years1: | 2014 |
Coach Team1: | Mallard Creek HS (OC) |
Coach Years2: | 2015 |
Coach Team2: | Colorado State (GA) |
Coach Years3: | 2016–2019 |
Coach Team3: | Colorado State (TE) |
Coach Years4: | 2020 |
Coach Team4: | South Carolina (WR) |
Coach Years5: | 2021 |
Coach Team5: | Charlotte (TE) |
Coach Years6: | 2022–2023 |
Coach Team6: | Alabama (TE) |
Coach Years7: | 2024–present |
Coach Team7: | Ole Miss (TE) |
Joseph Howell Cox (born November 27, 1986) is an American football coach and former college football quarterback. He played college football for four seasons at the University of Georgia, and was the team's starting quarterback for the 2009 season.[1]
Cox started at Independence High School in Charlotte, North Carolina. He was named to the 2004 "Parade Magazine" All-America Team and "Super Prep" All-Mid Atlantic Team. He was the North Carolina Gatorade Player of the Year.[2] He was on the Associated Press first-team All-State team and was twice a Charlotte Observer Offensive Player of the Year. He also played in the Shrine Bowl of the Carolinas and impressed scouts by going 31–0 as a starting quarterback. He was twice a team captain and was rated the number 7 quarterback in the country by Rivals and Tom Lemming of ESPN. He set a North Carolina record with 66 touchdown passes while taking his team to its fifth consecutive state championship his senior year. He was named the MVP of the state title game twice. As a junior, he threw for nearly 4,000 yards and over 40 touchdowns. As a senior, he completed 240 out of 363 passes for over 4,500 yards and only five interceptions.[3]
Cox was redshirted in his freshman year in 2005. During the first four years of his career at the University of Georgia, Cox had scattered playing time and completed 33 out of 58 pass attempts for 432 yards with five touchdowns and one interception.[3] As a redshirt freshman in 2006, with Georgia trailing Colorado 0–13 at home late in the third quarter, Cox was put in the game to relieve the ineffective starter Matthew Stafford. Cox threw for 153 yards and two touchdowns late in the game to lead Georgia to a comeback win, 14–13.[4] Cox started one more game in the season, in a 14–9 victory over Ole Miss, but eventually lost his starting place to the highly-touted Stafford, who ended up being the first overall pick in the 2009 NFL draft.
While Cox threw for over 1,200 yards and 11 touchdowns and had a 146.4 quarterback rating in his first four games of the 2009 season, he did not perform as well in the next few games.[5] Georgia finished the season 8–5 with Cox as the starter. In Georgia's 52–41 win over Arkansas in Fayetteville, he threw for a career-high 375 yards and matched a team record with five touchdown passes. Against the #1-ranked Florida Gators, he completed 11 of 20 pass attempts for two touchdowns, which was as many as the Gators had allowed all season, but also threw three interceptions in the 17–41 loss. In his final game at Sanford Stadium, the Bulldogs had a 14-point half-time lead, but Cox threw two interceptions in the fourth quarter. Along with a red-zone fumble (as Georgia was attempting to tie the game), these interceptions sealed a loss against Kentucky, Georgia's first home loss to the Wildcats since 1977. However, Cox was not asked to do much in the final regular season game against the #7-ranked Georgia Tech. With Bulldog tailbacks Caleb King and Washaun Ealey combining for 349 rushing yards, he managed the game well, completing 8 of 14 passes for just 76 yards and a touchdown in Georgia's 30–24 victory.
In June 2013, Cox joined the coaching staff at Mallard Creek High School in Charlotte, North Carolina,[6] as the quarterbacks' position coach. On December 14, 2013, the Mallard Creek team won its first state championship. In 2014, he became the offensive co-ordinator for Mallard Creek and led the Maverick offense to its second state title on December 13, 2014.
On February 3, 2015, it was announced that Cox had left Mallard Creek High School to become a graduate assistant for the Colorado State Rams.[7] In January 2016, he was promoted to tight ends coach for Colorado State.
On January 10, 2020, it was announced that Cox had joined the coaching staff of the South Carolina Gamecocks football as tight ends coach.[8]
Following the departure of the former offensive co-ordinator/wide receivers coach Bryan McClendon to Oregon, Will Muschamp moved Bobby Bentley back to tight ends and Cox was moved to wide receivers.
In December 2020, the new South Carolina head coach, Shane Beamer, announced he had hired a new team of coaches, and that Cox would not be retained.[9] He was replaced by the former Arkansas wide receivers coach, Justin Stepp.[10]
On February 15, 2021, Cox was named the Charlotte 49ers' tight ends coach.[11]
On February 4, 2022, Cox was named tight ends coach for the University of Alabama.