Rick Stockstill | |
Current Title: | Offensive analyst |
Current Team: | Florida State |
Current Conference: | ACC |
Birth Date: | 23 December 1957 |
Birth Place: | Sidney, Ohio, U.S. |
Player Years1: | 1977–1981 |
Player Team1: | Florida State |
Player Positions: | Quarterback |
Coach Years1: | 1983–1984 |
Coach Team1: | Bethune–Cookman (OC/QB) |
Coach Years2: | 1985–1988 |
Coach Team2: | UCF (AHC/WR) |
Coach Years3: | 1989–1992 |
Coach Team3: | Clemson (QB) |
Coach Years4: | 1993 |
Coach Team4: | Clemson (PGC/QB) |
Coach Years5: | 1994–1995 |
Coach Team5: | Clemson (co-OC/WR) |
Coach Years6: | 1996–1998 |
Coach Team6: | Clemson (WR) |
Coach Years7: | 1999–2002 |
Coach Team7: | Clemson (WR/RC) |
Coach Years8: | 2003 |
Coach Team8: | East Carolina (OC/QB) |
Coach Years9: | 2004 |
Coach Team9: | South Carolina (WR/RC) |
Coach Years10: | 2005 |
Coach Team10: | South Carolina (TE/RC) |
Coach Years11: | 2006–2023 |
Coach Team11: | Middle Tennessee |
Coach Years12: | 2024–present |
Coach Team12: | Florida State (OA) |
Overall Record: | 113–111 |
Bowl Record: | 4–6 |
Championships: | 1 Sun Belt (2006) 1 C-USA East Division (2018) |
Awards: | 2× Sun Belt Coach of the Year (2006, 2009) C-USA Coach of the Year (2018) |
Richard Wilson Stockstill[1] (born December 23, 1957) is an American college football coach. He is an offensive analyst for Florida State University, his alma mater, a position he has held since 2024. He was the head coach at Middle Tennessee from 2006 to 2023. Stockstill was a Florida State quarterback under coach Bobby Bowden from 1977 to 1981. On December 12, 2005, Stockstill was hired as the 14th head coach of the Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders.[2] [3]
Stockstill was born in Sidney, Ohio, on December 23, 1957. However, he grew up in Georgetown, KY and moved to Fernandina Beach, Florida, for his senior year of high school. He was inducted into the Fernandina Hall of Fame in 2006. He attended Florida State University and was a three-year letterman there as a quarterback where he was team captain and earned honorable mention All-American honors in 1981 under coach Bobby Bowden.
Stockstill served as an assistant at numerous locations for 24 years prior to getting his first head coaching job. He began at Bethune–Cookman University as an offensive coordinator and later went on to coach wide receivers at the University of Central Florida. For the 1989 season, Stockstill began a long stint as a wide receivers and quarterbacks coach with the Clemson Tigers, where he stayed until 2002. He served under coaches Danny Ford, Ken Hatfield, Tommy West and Tommy Bowden while at Clemson. Stockstill also worked under coaches Lou Holtz and Steve Spurrier at South Carolina after working one season for East Carolina University as an offensive coordinator.
In 2006, Stockstill got his first head coaching job at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro. In his first season, Stockstill led the Blue Raiders to the program's second bowl game as well as a share of the Sun Belt Conference title. He was later that year named the conference coach of the year. The 2007 and 2008 seasons saw the Blue Raiders take a small step back with back-to-back 5–7 seasons. However, in 2009, Stockstill and the Blue Raiders went 10–3 and won the New Orleans Bowl, which was the second bowl victory in school history. Again, Stockstill was named conference coach of the year for the 2009 season. The Blue Raiders went to another bowl in 2010, and they finished the season 6–7 after losing the GoDaddy.com Bowl.
After the successful 2009 season, he turned down several offers from other schools, including Conference USA's East Carolina[4] and Memphis,[5] citing that it was not the right time to leave the Blue Raiders.[6] Despite a .500 overall record, Stockstill is 20–70 against teams with eventual winning records, of which a record of 6–31 is coming against non-conference FBS opponents (1–1 against FCS). Stockstill led MTSU to ten bowl games in 18 years, winning 4.
In September 2022, Stockstill led MTSU to a win over the Miami Hurricanes, 45–31. On November 27, 2023, Stockstill was fired after his 18th season as head coach at Middle Tennessee.[7]
Stockstill and his wife, the former Sara Fleischman, have a son, Brent, and a daughter, Emily. His son Brent was awarded a scholarship to play football at the University of Cincinnati beginning in the fall of 2013 but was released to play under his father at MTSU.[8] Brent was the Blue Raiders' primary quarterback for the 2015 through 2018 seasons,[9] culminating with an appearance in the 2018 New Orleans Bowl.