Woody Widenhofer Explained

Woody Widenhofer
Birth Date:20 January 1943
Birth Place:Butler, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Player Years1:1961–1964
Player Team1:Missouri
Player Positions:Linebacker
Coach Years1:1969–1970
Coach Team1:Michigan State (DL)
Coach Years2:1971
Coach Team2:Eastern Michigan (LB)
Coach Years3:1972
Coach Team3:Minnesota (LB)
Coach Years4:1973–1978
Coach Team4:Pittsburgh Steelers (LB)
Coach Years5:1979–1983
Coach Team5:Pittsburgh Steelers (DC)
Coach Years6:1984
Coach Team6:Oklahoma Outlaws
Coach Years7:1985–1988
Coach Team7:Missouri
Coach Years8:1989–1992
Coach Team8:Detroit Lions (DC)
Coach Years9:1993–1994
Coach Team9:Cleveland Browns (LB)
Coach Years10:1995–1996
Coach Team10:Vanderbilt (DC)
Coach Years11:1997–2001
Coach Team11:Vanderbilt
Coach Years12:2003–2004
Coach Team12:Southeastern Louisiana (DC)
Coach Years13:2005–2007
Coach Team13:New Mexico State (DC)
Overall Record:27–71–1 (college)

Robert "Woody" Widenhofer (January 20, 1943 – March 22, 2020)[1] was an American college football head coach and longtime assistant coach in the National Football League (NFL). Widenhofer is best known for helping the Pittsburgh Steelers "Steel Curtain" defense that won four Super Bowls in the 1970s. He later served unsuccessful tenures as head coach at the University of Missouri and Vanderbilt University.

Widenhofer attended Riverview High School in Riverview, Michigan, and played linebacker at Missouri from 1961 to 1964 under coach Dan Devine. He went on to receive a master's degree at Michigan State University.

Coaching career

After graduating from the University of Missouri in 1964, Widenhofer became an assistant coach under head coach Tom McCartney at Detroit Holy Redeemer High School in the fall of 1965. He began his college coaching career as a graduate assistant at Michigan State where he coached the defensive line. Widenhofer then moved to Eastern Michigan and Minnesota where he served as linebackers coach. After several years as a college assistant, Widenhofer was hired to coach linebackers for the Steelers in 1973. He was promoted to defensive coordinator in 1979. By the time he left after the 1983 season, Widenhofer had won four Super Bowls and made the postseason nine times.

He spent one year as head coach of the short-lived United States Football League team, the Oklahoma Outlaws, before landing an opportunity at his alma mater, bolstered by a much-remembered ad campaign that urged Tigers fans to "climb on Woody's Wagon". While Widenhofer's team showed slow improvements, he only managed a 12–33–1 record in four seasons at Missouri from 1985 to 1988.

Widenhofer returned to the NFL for six years as an assistant coach, serving as defensive coordinator for the Detroit Lions under head coach Wayne Fontes, followed by two years as linebackers coach with the Cleveland Browns under head coach Bill Belichick. He then joined friend Rod Dowhower's staff at Vanderbilt to serve as defensive coordinator. When Dowhower was fired after the 1996 season, Widenhofer was promoted to head coach. In 1997, his Vanderbilt team led the SEC in total defense. However, his second tenure as head coach was no easier than the first, as Widenhofer compiled only a 15–37 record in five seasons at the helm for VU. Widenhofer resigned in 2001. While unsuccessful on the field, the NCAA announced that Vanderbilt led the nation in football graduation percentage with a perfect 100% the year he left.

Widenhofer considered retiring, but ultimately joined friend Hal Mumme as an assistant at Southeastern Louisiana University and later New Mexico State University. Widenhofer announced he was retiring from coaching following the season finale game against Fresno State on November 30, 2007.[2]

In January 2009 he was announced as the head coach of the Alabama Blackbirds of the United National Gridiron League, a new minor league that was scheduled to begin play in February 2009. The league's debut was repeatedly postponed due to financing issues, and in 2010 it suspended operations.

Personal life

Widenhofer had five children: Kim, Stacy, Ryan, Ross, Katlyn and grandchildren Addison, Mia, Jackson, and Sophie. After his recent retirement from football, Widenhofer resided in Florida with his wife Sabrina.[3]

After leaving the Vanderbilt campus in 2001, Woody worked in a toll booth in Destin, Florida for three years. Woody stated that he didn't have anything else to do and enjoyed meeting people. However, his wife Sabrina, who works for Spirit Airlines, got transferred to Dallas, TX. Woody did not return to the Vanderbilt campus since his departure.[4] He died on March 22, 2020, aged 77.

Head coaching record

USFL

Team Year Regular Season Postseason
Won LostTiesWin %FinishWonLostWin %
OKL19846120.3334th in Central Div.0 0 .000
Total 6120.333

College

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Former Vanderbilt football coach Woody Widenhofer has died at 77 . Organ . Mike . March 23, 2020 . The Tennessean . en . March 28, 2020.
  2. Web site: Widenhofer Announces Retirement from Football . Nmotsc.com . August 31, 2010.
  3. Web site: Pat Forde kicks off the season by introducing us to the most interesting men in Gridworld - ESPN . . January 1, 2008 . August 31, 2010.
  4. Web site: For Woody Widenhofer, life after Vanderbilt took toll . . June 30, 2013 . June 30, 2013.