The Marshall Thundering Herd football team is an intercollegiate varsity sports program of Marshall University. The team represents the university as a member of the Sun Belt Conference East Division of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, playing at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level.
Marshall Thundering Herd football | |||
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First season | 1895; 129 years ago | ||
Athletic director | Christian Spears | ||
Head coach | Charles Huff 3rd season, 25–19 (.568) | ||
Stadium | Joan C. Edwards Stadium (capacity: 30,475) | ||
Field | James F. Edwards Field | ||
Field surface | AstroTurf | ||
Location | Huntington, West Virginia | ||
NCAA division | Division I FBS | ||
Conference | Sun Belt Conference | ||
Division | East | ||
Past conferences | WVIAC (1925–1932) Buckeye (1933–1938) OVC (1948–1951) MAC (1954–1968, 1997–2004) SoCon (1977–1996) C-USA (2005–2021) | ||
All-time record | 629–572–47 [1] (.523) | ||
Bowl record | 13–7 (.650) | ||
Claimed national titles | Div. I FCS: 2 (1992, 1996)[2] | ||
Conference titles | 13 | ||
Division titles | 9 | ||
Rivalries | App State (rivalry) Ohio (rivalry) East Carolina (rivalry) West Virginia (rivalry) | ||
Consensus All-Americans | 1 | ||
Colors | Kelly green and white[3] | ||
Fight song | Sons of Marshall | ||
Mascot | Marco the Bison | ||
Marching band | Marching Thunder | ||
Outfitter | Nike | ||
Website | HerdZone.com |
Marshall plays at Joan C. Edwards Stadium, which seats 38,227[4] and is expandable to 55,000. At the end of the 2022 football season, Marshall had a 181–44 record at Joan C. Edwards Stadium for a winning percentage of .804. The stadium opened in 1991 as Marshall University Stadium with a crowd of 33,116 for a 24–23 win over New Hampshire. On September 10, 2010, Marshall played the in-state rival West Virginia Mountaineers in Huntington in front of a record crowd of 41,382. Joan C. Edwards Stadium is one of two Division I stadiums named for a woman. The playing field is named James F. Edwards Field after Joan Edwards' husband, who was a businessman and philanthropist.
History
editEarly history (1895–1916)
editBoyd Chambers was Marshall's head football coach from 1909 to 1916. He is best known for calling the "Tower Play", where one receiver lifted another up on his shoulders to complete a pass, during the 1915 season.[5]
Rick Tolley era (1969–1970)
editRick Tolley was Marshall's head football coach for two seasons, coming to Marshall from his post as defensive line coach for Wake Forest and posting records of 3–7 and 3–6. Tolley was killed on November 14, 1970, in a plane crash which killed all 75 passengers, including 37 players, five coaches, administrators, family, friends, and the Southern Airways five-person crew, as it returned to West Virginia after a game against East Carolina.[6]
Jack Lengyel era (1971–1974)
editMarshall athletic director, Joe McMullen, hired Jack Lengyel to be head coach in 1971. To rebuild following the plane crash, Lengyel recruited athletes from the baseball and basketball teams. Lengyel's record as Marshall's head coach was 9–33.[citation needed]
Frank Ellwood era (1975–1978)
editMarshall hired Ohio University assistant Frank Ellwood, a Dover, Ohio, native who led the program for four seasons. The team went 2-9 during his first season and 5-6 during the 1976 campaign, a year in which the Thundering Herd upset 20th-ranked Miami (Ohio) on Sept. 12, 1976 at Fairfield Stadium in Huntington. The Herd had not defeated Miami since 1939. Marshall finished 2-9 and 1–10 in 1977 and 1978, respectively, failing to win a Southern Conference game in either season.
Sonny Randle era (1979–1983)
editSonny Randle became head coach following the 1978 season. Randle had been the head coach at East Carolina and Virginia. He went 12-42-1 during his five seasons in Huntington, which included a 5-26-1 record in Southern Conference play. Randle mentored Marshall Athletics Hall of Famer Carl Lee during his tenure.
Jim Donnan era (1990–1995)
editLed by head coach Jim Donnan, who came to Marshall from his post as offensive coordinator at Oklahoma, Marshall won the Division I-AA national championship in 1992 over Youngstown State (31–28) and was national runner-up in 1991, 1993 and 1995.[7][8] Marshall set a I-AA record with five consecutive seasons making the semifinals of the I-AA playoffs from 1991 to 1996. Donnan was named NCAA Division I-AA Coach of the Year twice during his tenure at Marshall and resigned after the 1995 season to accept the head football coach position at Georgia.[9]
Bob Pruett era (1996–2004)
editBob Pruett left his post as defensive coordinator at Florida to become head football coach at Marshall, where he served from 1996 to 2004.[10] During his tenure at Marshall, the Thundering Herd compiled a record of 94–23, featured two undefeated seasons, won six conference championships, won five of seven bowl games, and captured the I-AA National Championship in 1996. Marshall moved to Division I-A and the Mid-American Conference in all sports in 1997. The 1996 team, ranked No. 1 all season, was 15–0 and won each game by more than two touchdowns. The 1996 team included future NFL players Chad Pennington, Randy Moss, John Wade, Chris Hanson, Eric Kresser, Doug Chapman. Marshall won the MAC title five of its eight seasons (1997-2000, 2002) and were runners up in 2001 in the conference before moving to Conference USA in 2005.
Since moving back to Division I-A, Marshall has finished in the Top 25 four times, in 1999, 2001, 2002 and 2014. From 1997 to 2000, Marshall appeared in the Motor City Bowl, losing in 1997 to Ole Miss before winning the next three bowl games against Louisville, BYU and Cincinnati.[11][12] Marshall beat East Carolina 64-61 a double-overtime game in the 2001 GMAC Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. Marshall trailed 38–8 at halftime before rallying behind five Byron Leftwich touchdown passes.[12] Marshall lost 32–14 to Cincinnati in the 2004 Plains Capital Fort Worth Bowl at Amon G. Carter Stadium in Pruett's final game as head coach before his retirement.[12][13]
Mark Snyder era (2005–2009)
editFormer Marshall football player Mark Snyder became head football coach, leaving his position as defensive coordinator for Ohio State.[14] Snyder coached Ahmad Bradshaw, Lee Smith, Vinny Curry, Albert McClellan and Cody Slate during his time as head coach at Marshall. Snyder's best season was 6–6 in 2009. He resigned after five seasons that included one bowl berth, the 2009 Little Caesar's Pizza Bowl.[15]
Doc Holliday era (2010–2020)
editOn December 17, 2009, Doc Holliday, an assistant coach at West Virginia University, became Marshall's head coach after signing a five-year contract at $600,000 per season.[16][17] Holliday led Marshall to a 10–4 season in 2013, capped with a victory in the Military Bowl. In the 2014 season, he led the team to a 13–1 season, winning the school's first C-USA Championship and the inaugural Boca Raton Bowl against Northern Illinois 52–23.[18] In 2015, Holliday led the Herd to their first victory over a Big Ten school after beating the Purdue Boilermakers en route to a 10–3 season, including a win in the 2015 St. Petersburg Bowl.[19][20] In 2020, Holliday led Marshall to a 7–0 start and a No. 15 Associated Press ranking. A three-game losing streak followed and the team finished 7–3. Marshall won the Conference USA East Division title, before losing to the University of Alabama at Birmingham in the 2020 Conference USA Championship game. Holliday was named Coach of the Year in 2020 by Conference USA. In January 2021, Doc Holliday's contract was not extended.
Charles Huff era (2021–present)
editOn January 17, 2021, Marshall hired Alabama running backs coach Charles Huff as its head coach.[21] In his first season, Huff led Marshall to a 7–6 record. Marshall lost to the No. 23-ranked Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns 36–21 in the 2021 New Orleans Bowl.[22] The school officially joined the Sun Belt conference in June 2022. On September 10, 2022, Huff led Marshall to their second all-time victory over a top-10 opponent after defeating the No. 8-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish 26–21 at Notre Dame Stadium.[23] Huff earned his first bowl win as a head coach in the 2022 Myrtle Beach Bowl against the UConn Huskies 28–14, finishing the year 9–4.[24] During the 2023 season, Huff guided Marshall to their first win over the Virginia Tech Hokies since 1940 with a 24–17 victory in Huntington.[25] Despite a 4–0 start, Marshall would finish the regular season 6–6 and lose to the UTSA Roadrunners 35–17 in the 2023 Frisco Bowl to finish the year 6–7.[26]
Conference affiliations
edit- Independent (1895–1925, 1952–1953, 1969–1976)
- West Virginia Athletic Conference (1925–1932)
- Buckeye Conference (1933–1938)
- WVIAC (non-competing member, membership in regards to school being accredited college) (1939–1947)
- Ohio Valley Conference (1948–1951)
- Mid-American Conference (1954–1968, 1997–2004)
- Southern Conference (1977–1996)
- Conference USA (2005–2021)
- Sun Belt Conference (2022–present)
Championships
editNational championships
editMarshall has won two NCAA Division I-AA national championships.
Season | Coach | Selector | Record | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | Jim Donnan | NCAA Division I-AA | 12–3 | Youngstown State | W 31–28 |
1996 | Bob Pruett | 15–0 | Montana | W 49–29 |
Conference championships
editMarshall has won 13 conference championships, 12 outright and one shared.[27]
Season | Conference | Coach | Conference record | Overall record |
---|---|---|---|---|
1925 | West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | Charles Tallman | 3–0–2 | 4–1–4 |
1928 | 5–0 | 8–1–1 | ||
1931 | Tom Dandelet | 4–1 | 6–3 | |
1937 | Buckeye Conference | Cam Henderson | 4–0–1 | 9–0–1 |
1988† | Southern Conference | George Chaump | 6–1 | 11–2 |
1994 | Jim Donnan | 7–1 | 12–2 | |
1996 | Bob Pruett | 8–0 | 15–0 | |
1997 | Mid-American Conference | 8–1 | 10–3 | |
1998 | 8–1 | 12–1 | ||
1999 | 9–0 | 13–0 | ||
2000 | 6–3 | 8–5 | ||
2002 | 8–1 | 11–2 | ||
2014 | Conference USA | Doc Holliday | 7–1 | 13–1 |
† Co-champions
Division championships
editMarshall has nine division championships.[27]
Season | Division | Coach | Opponent | CG result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | MAC East | Bob Pruett | Toledo | W 34–14 |
1998† | Toledo | W 23–17 | ||
1999 | Western Michigan | W 34–30 | ||
2000† | Western Michigan | W 19–14 | ||
2001 | Toledo | L 36–41 | ||
2002 | Toledo | W 49–45 | ||
2013 | C-USA East | Doc Holliday | Rice | L 24–41 |
2014 | Louisiana Tech | W 26–23 | ||
2020 | UAB | L 13–22 |
† Co-champions
Bowl games
editMarshall has been invited to play in 19 bowl games, compiling a record of 13–7 through the 2023 season.[28][27] The Tangerine Bowl was unsanctioned by the NCAA until 1968. As such, the 1948 appearance in the game is not included in the official NCAA bowl listing for Marshall.[29]
Season | Coach | Bowl | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1947 | Cam Henderson | Tangerine Bowl | Catawba | L 0–7 |
1997 | Bob Pruett | Motor City Bowl | Ole Miss | L 31–34 |
1998 | Motor City Bowl | Louisville | W 48–29 | |
1999 | Motor City Bowl | BYU | W 21–3 | |
2000 | Motor City Bowl | Cincinnati | W 25–14 | |
2001 | GMAC Bowl | East Carolina | W 64–612OT | |
2002 | GMAC Bowl | Louisville | W 38–15 | |
2004 | Fort Worth Bowl | Cincinnati | L 14–32 | |
2009 | Rick Minter | Little Caesars Pizza Bowl | Ohio | W 21–17 |
2011 | Doc Holliday | Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl | FIU | W 20–10 |
2013 | Military Bowl | Maryland | W 31–20 | |
2014 | Boca Raton Bowl | Northern Illinois | W 52–23 | |
2015 | St. Petersburg Bowl | Connecticut | W 16–10 | |
2017 | New Mexico Bowl | Colorado State | W 31–28 | |
2018 | Gasparilla Bowl | South Florida | W 38–20 | |
2019 | Gasparilla Bowl | UCF | L 25–48 | |
2020 | Camellia Bowl | Buffalo | L 10–17 | |
2021 | Charles Huff | New Orleans Bowl | Louisiana | L 21–36 |
2022 | Myrtle Beach Bowl | Connecticut | W 28–14 | |
2023 | Frisco Bowl | UTSA | L 17–35 |
Uniforms and Logos
editTraditionally, the logo for Marshall athletics has been usually a green "M" letter logo, usually in trim, on what usually has been white helmets. Kelly and white are the primary colors of the football uniforms. The program also has three logos featuring a bull head mascot, one with the mascot head inside of the "M" logo with the wordmark "MARSHALL", and the other with the stylized "The Herd" wordmark.
Historically, there has also been a black alternate uniform. Historically, the football team has worn a white helmet, with a kelly green stripe surrounded by two white and black stripes across the middle of the helmet, with the "M" letter logo in kelly green with white and black trim; they have also worn a silver, or a kelly green helmet with the same striping as the white helmets, with both the same "M" logo in black (or white trim). For a period in the mid / late 1970s, they also wore a silver helmet which featured a kelly green logo of the state of West Virginia with the "M" logo inside of it.
The Thundering Herd athletic program has had a long standing relationship with Nike as their official outfitter. In 2023, the Marshall sports program extended their partnership with Nike and BSN Sports as the official provider of Marshall's athletic apparel, as well as footwear and other equipment needs in a multi-year deal.[30]
In 2019, Marshall released 2 new (black home and white away) jerseys with 3 pants (black white, and kelly green.) The black and kelly green jerseys had the stylized "The Herd" alternate logo on the front. The white home jersey had the "Marshall" wordmark on the logo's front, with the Nike "swoosh" logo on both the jerseys and pants, which also had the "M" / "The Herd" wordmark logo also on the pants. The jersey numbers were in block font style on the road / alternate jerseys, as they had historically been, and in a varsity font style on the home white jerseys. The striping pattern which had been traditionally on the pants (white, black and kelly green) were removed.[31]
The football team presently also wears, at times, two alternate black helmets, one with the same logo, and the other, with a charging bull logo, both have a white stripe surrounded by two thinner black and kelly green striping pattern going across the middle of the helmet.
In 2020, the football program introduced the current new set of Nike home uniforms, which featured the same traditional striping pattern across the helmets (white, black and a slightly lighter kelly green), jerseys and pants, as well as a new jersey number font style on the jerseys, a double outline varsity jersey number font (which were placed on the home jerseys in 2019) which now appears on all of the jerseys, and a contrasting black collar.[32]
Another later notable change occurred in 2022, that the change of the conference which the team plays in, being as of 2022, the switch from Conference USA to the Sun Belt Conference, indicative in the conference logo on the jerseys.
Head coaches
editTenure | Coach | Record | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|
1903–1904 | George Ford | 4–4–4 | .500 |
1905 | Alfred McCray | 6–2 | .750 |
1906 | Pearl Rardin | 4–1 | .800 |
1908 | William G. Vinal | 0–6 | .000 |
1909–1916 | Boyd Chambers | 32–27–4 | .539 |
1917 | Burton Shipley | 1–7–1 | .167 |
1919 | Archer Reilly | 8–0 | 1.000 |
1920 | Herbert Cramer | 0–8 | .000 |
1921–1922 | Skeeter Shelton | 11–6–1 | .639 |
1923 | Harrison Briggs | 1–7 | .125 |
1924 | Russ Meredith | 4–4 | .500 |
1925–1928 | Charles Tallman | 22–9–7 | .671 |
1929–1930 | John Maulbetsch | 8–8–2 | .500 |
1931–1934 | Tom Dandelet | 18–16–2 | .528 |
1935–1949 | Cam Henderson | 68–46–5 | .592 |
1950–1952 | Pete Pederson | 9–19–3 | .339 |
1953–1958 | Herb Royer | 21–31–2 | .407 |
1959–1967 | Charlie Snyder | 28–58–3 | .331 |
1968 | Perry Moss | 0–9–1 | .050 |
1969–1970 | Rick Tolley | 6–13–0 | .316 |
1971–1974 | Jack Lengyel | 9–33–0 | .272 |
1975–1978 | Frank Ellwood | 10–34–0 | .227 |
1979–1983 | Sonny Randle | 12–42–1 | .227 |
1984–1985 | Stan Parrish | 13–8–1 | .614 |
1986–1989 | George Chaump | 33–16–1 | .670 |
1990–1995 | Jim Donnan | 64–21 | .753 |
1996–2004 | Bob Pruett | 94–23 | .803 |
2005–2009 | Mark Snyder | 22–37 | .373 |
2009 | Rick Minter | 1–0 | 1.000 |
2010–2020 | Doc Holliday | 85–54 | .612 |
2021–present | Charles Huff | 23–18 | .561 |
Division I-AA playoff results
editMarshall has appeared in the I-AA playoffs eight times, compiling a record 23–6. They are two-time I-AA National Champions and four-time national runners-up.
Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
James Madison Weber State Appalachian State Northeast Louisiana |
W 41–12 W 51–23 W 24–10 L 42–43 |
1988 | First Round Quarterfinals |
North Texas Furman |
W 7–0 L 9–13 |
1991 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
Western Illinois Northern Iowa Eastern Kentucky Youngstown State |
W 20–17 OT W 41–13 W 14–7 L 17–25 |
1992 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
Eastern Kentucky Middle Tennessee State Delaware Youngstown State |
W 44–0 W 35–21 W 28–7 W 31–28 |
1993 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
Howard Delaware Troy State Youngstown State |
W 28–14 W 34–31 W 24–21 L 5–17 |
1994 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals |
Middle Tennessee James Madison Boise State |
W 49–14 W 28–21 OT L 24–28 |
1995 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
Jackson State Northern Iowa McNeese State Montana |
W 38–8 W 41–24 W 25–13 L 20–22 |
1996 | First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship Game |
Delaware Furman Northern Iowa Montana |
W 59–14 W 54–0 W 31–14 W 49–29 |
Rivalries
editAppalachian State
editKnown colloquially as The Old Mountain Feud, the rivalry with Appalachian State was played annually 1977–1996. The rivalry resumed annual play in the 2020 season and is set to continue as Marshall joins Appalachian State in the Sun Belt Conference East Division in 2022. The significance of the rivalry is that both schools are public universities in the Appalachian mountains, dominant in FCS and FBS Group of Five football, recruit the same players out of the same regions, and have a national reputation that exceeds most peer football programs of their size. An altercation at Kidd Brewer Stadium in 2021 made national news after a group of Mountaineer supporters taunted Marshall players on their way to the locker room.[33] Appalachian State leads the all-time series, 16–10.[34]
Ohio
editMarshall's regional rival is Ohio University. Both schools compete against one another in the Battle for the Bell, with a traveling bell trophy as the prize for the victor. Both schools also played in the same MAC Conference for a number of years until Marshall joined Conference USA in 2005 - causing the annual rivalry game to go on hiatus. The regularly scheduled series resumed between the two schools in 2010. The rivalry was renewed in 2009 when the Herd and Bobcats faced off in the 2009 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, which the Herd won 21–17. Ohio leads the all-time series over Marshall, however the Thundering Herd have won 10 of 15 meetings since rejoining the FBS in 1997. The six-year series contract between the two schools ran out following the 2015 season. The series has since been renewed, as both schools are set to play one another in a future matchup in 2027. Ohio leads the series 33–21–6 through the 2021 season.[35]
West Virginia
editMarshall played West Virginia in the annual Friends of Coal Bowl until 2012. Marshall and WVU first played in 1911, but it wasn't until 2006 before the two schools from the "Mountain State" faced off annually for the Governor's Cup. Some[who?] believe the rivalry began due to political pressure from the state government. The two last played in 2012, and there are no immediate plans to renew the rivalry. West Virginia holds a 12–0 lead in the series as of 2012.[36]
East Carolina
editMarshall and East Carolina have a "friendly" rivalry with one another. They are emotionally bonded by the tragic plane crash on November 14, 1970. The Thundering Herd were coming back from Greenville, North Carolina after a 17–14 loss to the Pirates when their plane crashed near Ceredo, West Virginia. The teams have been bonded ever since.
One of Marshall and ECU's most memorable games was the 2001 GMAC Bowl as they combined for a bowl record, 125 points, as Marshall overcame a 30-point deficit to beat East Carolina 64–61 in double overtime. After Marshall defeated East Carolina in 2013, it marked ECU's last conference match-up as a member of Conference USA. On April 3, 2014, both schools announced that the two teams will meet again for a home and home seridatees in 2020 and 2021. East Carolina was supposed to host Marshall at Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium in Greenville, NC on September 5, 2020, but was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Marshall will host at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, West Virginia on September 11, 2021, before travelling to Greenville on September 9, 2023.[37][38]
ECU was 6–3 against the Herd from 2005 to 2013 when both schools were in Conference USA. East Carolina leads the series 11–6.[39]
Home venues
edit- Fairfield Stadium (1927–1990)
- Joan C. Edwards Stadium (1991–present)
Top 25 finishes
editI-AA Polls
editYear | NCAA rank | Sports network rank |
---|---|---|
1987 | No. 14 | |
1988 | No. 7 | |
1991 | No. 8 | |
1992 | No. 10 | |
1993 | No. 9 | |
1994 | No. 2 | |
1995 | No. 6 | |
1996 | No. 1 |
Sources:[40]
1-A/FBS Polls
editYear | APrRank | Coaches rank |
---|---|---|
1999 | No. 10 | No. 10 |
2001 | No. 21 | |
2002 | No. 24 | No. 19 |
2014 | No. 23 | No. 22 |
Sources:[40]
Individual honors
editAward winners
edit
|
|
All-Americans
editSources:[46]
- Rasheen Ali (2021)
- Mike Barber (1987, 1988)
- Mike Bartrum (1992)
- Rogers Beckett (1999)
- Troy Brown (1991, 1992)
- B. J. Cohen (1995, 1996)
- Melvin Cunningham (1995, 1996)
- Josh Davis (2001)
- Sean Doctor (1987, 1988)
- Johnathan Goddard (2004)
- Chris Hanson (1996)
- Eric Kresser (1996)
- Byron Leftwich (2001, 2002)
- Billy Lyon (1994, 1995, 1996)
- Albert McClellan (2005, 2006)
- Randy Moss (1996, 1997)
- Michael Payton (1991, 1992)
- Chad Pennington (1998, 1999)
- Steve Sciullo (2002)
- Cody Slate (2006)
- Mark Snyder (1987)
- Darius Watts (2001, 2002)
- Tyler Williams (2012)
Hall of Fame
editMarshall has six players and one coach in the College Football Hall of Fame.
- Harry "Cy" Young starred in football and baseball at Marshall College (University status in 1961) from 1910 to 1912. Young then left Marshall, and was a two-sport All-American at Washington & Lee. He is a member of the W&L HOF, MU HOF, WV Sportswriters HOF and Virginia Sports HOF besides the College FB HOF.
- Jackie Hunt (1939–41) set a national scoring record in 1940 with 27 touchdowns in a ten-game season. He rushed for nearly 4,000 yards for Thundering Herd, a hometown star for the Huntington High Pony Express before joining Marshall. He was drafted by the Chicago Bears and was a two-time All-American, playing in the Blue-Gray Game following his career.
- Mike Barber (1985–88) was a record-setting receiver for Marshall who helped lead the Herd to its first I-AA title game in 1987 and its first Southern Conference title in 1988. He still holds the receiving yardage record at MU with over 4,200 yards and was a two-time All-American before he was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the fourth round in 1989. Barber also played for the Arizona Cardinals and Cincinnati Bengals.
- Troy Brown (1991–92) considered the single-most dangerous scoring threat in all of Division I-AA during his two seasons in Huntington, few can match the heralded career of Marshall's record-breaking wide receiver. A dual threat on the playing field, Brown's elusive nature as a receiver and kick returner led the Thundering Herd to back-to-back trips to the Division I- AA (now FCS) National Championship game, garnering the NCAA title in 1992. He caught 139 receptions for 2,746 yards and 24 touchdowns in his career en route to earning First Team All-America honors his senior year. Brown went on to play 14 years in the NFL with the New England Patriots, where he became the franchise's all-time leading receiver and won three Super Bowls with the team.[48]
- Michael Payton (1989-1992) was the starting quarterback for the Thundering Herd, leading the team to its first FCS national championship in 1992. Peyton was the 1992 winner of the Walter Payton Award and was a consensus First-Team All-American.
- Jim Donnan (1990–1995) the only coach representing Marshall in the College Football Hall of Fame. Donnan spent six seasons with Marshall and posted a 64–21 record. He led the Thundering Herd to four Division I-AA National Championship games, winning the 1992 national title. In 1994, the Thundering Herd won the Southern Conference Championship. His 15–4 playoff record ranks second best in NCAA FCS history. He was named Division I- AA Coach of the Year in 1992 and 1995.[49]
- Randy Moss (1996-1997) Spent two seasons at Marshall
Pro football
edit- Frank Gatski, C, 1985. Gatski is the only Marshall player to have his jersey number retired and was Marshall's first player in the Professional Football Hall of Fame. The university retired Gatski's No. 72 during a halftime ceremony at Joan C. Edwards Stadium on October 15, 2005. Gatski died a month later, at age 86. During his career with the Cleveland Browns (1946–56) and the Detroit Lions (1957) he won eight championships in 11 title game appearances. Cleveland won the All-American Football Conference four straight years, going 14–0 in 1948, before joining the NFL. The Browns won NFL titles in 1950, 1954 and 1955 and were runners-up in 1951, 1952 and 1953. Gatski's Lions beat the Browns for his final title in 1957. The 31st Street Bridge, connecting Huntington to Proctorville, Ohio, is also named in Gatski's honor, joining U.S. Senator Robert Byrd (formerly the Sixth St. Bridge) and Congressman Nick Rahall (the former 17th St. Bridge) among three structures stretching across the Ohio River from West Virginia to Ohio.[50]
- Randy Moss, WR, 2018. Moss is the second player in the Professional Football Hall of Fame to have been a member of the Thundering Herd. In a career that spanned 14 seasons with the Minnesota Vikings, Oakland Raiders, New England Patriots, Tennessee Titans, and the San Francisco 49ers, Moss amassed the fourth-most receiving yards (15,292) and second-most receiving touchdowns (156) in NFL history. Moss appeared in two Super Bowls (losing both); Super Bowl XLII with the Patriots and Super Bowl XLVII with the 49ers. As of the end of the 2017 NFL season, Moss still holds the NFL record for 17 receiving touchdowns as a rookie (1998), when he also won the AP Offensive Rookie of the Year award, and most receiving touchdowns in a season (23), set back in 2007. Moss over his career also reached the 1,000-yard receiving mark eight times, was elected to six Pro Bowls (winning the MVP in 1999), made the First-team All-Pro four times, and selected as a member of the NFL 2000s All-Decade Team. In addition to his receiving abilities, Moss additionally accumulated two touchdown passes, one touchdown on a punt return, and an interception in his career.[51]
Marshall University Hall of Fame
editEstablished in 1984, members from the football team are listed below.[52]
- 1970 Crash Victims 1990 Honored
- Bob Adkins, '39 1984
- Mike Barber, '88 1994
- Mike Bartrum, '92 2007
- Ahmad Bradshaw, '06 2017
- Troy Brown, '92 2002
- Doug Chapman, '99 2010
- George Chaump, 2013
- B. J. Cohen, '97 2005
- Larry Coyer, '64 1987
- Chris Crocker, '02 2013
- Melvin Cunningham, '96 2016
- Vinny Curry, '12 2022
- Josh Davis, '04 2018
- Sean Doctor, '88 2000
- Jim Donnan, 2008
- Carl Fodor, '85 1991
- Frank Gatski, '42 1985
- John Grace, '99 2010
- Len Hellyer, '56 1988
- Cam Henderson, '33–55 1984
- Eric Ihnat, '90 2017
- Dewey Klein, '91 2018
- Carl Lee, '82 1995
- Byron Leftwich, '02 2007
- Jack Lengyel, '71-74 2022
- Billy Lyon, '96 2007
- Albert McClellan, '09 2020
- Giradie Mercer, '99 2019
- Randy Moss, '97 2010
- Reggie Oliver, '73 1984
- Tim Openlander, '96 2015
- Chris Parker '95 2000
- Chad Pennington, '99 2010
- Tony Petersen, '88 1994
- Bob Pruett, '65 1999
- Steve Sciullo, '02 2020
- Charlie Slack, '56 1985
- Ed Ulinski, '41 1986
- John Wade, '97 2010
- Darius Watts, '03 2014
- Norm Willey, '49 2003
- Jamie Wilson, '96 2019
- William "Bill" Richard Winter, '64 1990
- Max Yates, '01 2019
- John Zontini '35 1984
Marshall Thundering Herd Football Alumni
editRetired numbers
editNo. | Player | Pos. | Tenure | No. ret. | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
72 |
Frank Gatski | C | 1940–41 | 2005 | [53] |
Future non-conference opponents
editAnnounced schedules as of September 19, 2024.[54]
2025 | 2026 | 2027 | 2028 | 2029 |
---|---|---|---|---|
at Georgia | at Penn State | at Ohio | at Wisconsin | at Ohio |
vs Missouri State | vs Middle Tennessee | vs Boise State | vs Ohio | |
vs Eastern Kentucky | at Missouri State | vs Bowling Green | vs Central Connecticut | |
at Middle Tennessee | vs Eastern Michigan | at Eastern Michigan |
References
edit- ^ NCAA Statistics https://stats.ncaa.org/teams/history?utf8=✓&org_id=388&sport_code=MFB&commit=Search
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse. "Marshall's National Championship". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved June 1, 2009.
- ^ Marshall University Brand Guidelines (PDF). Retrieved December 18, 2023.
- ^ "Herd Notebook: Upstairs, Jerseys, Turf". Herdzone. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
- ^ Woody Woodrum. "Marshall-WVU Series Has Great, Short History – Marshall – Scout". Marshall.scout.com. Archived from the original on May 21, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
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(help) - ^ "Gallery: Marshall vs. Youngstown State, Dec. 19, 1992 | Recent News". herald-dispatch.com. July 11, 2012. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
- ^ "Georgia Reacts Quickly to Mason Snub, Names Donnan as Its Coach – latimes". Articles.latimes.com. Associated Press. December 26, 1995. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
- ^ "Marshall Hires Pruett as football coach". January 10, 1996. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
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(help) - ^ "Ole Miss Rebels Official Athletic Site Ole Miss Rebels Official Athletic Site – Football". Olemisssports.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2017. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Bowl History for Marshall". Archived from the original on December 16, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2013.
- ^ Wartman, Scott (March 9, 2005). "USATODAY.com – Marshall coach Bob Pruett announces his retirement". Usatoday30.usatoday.com. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
- ^ "Marshall Hires Snyder As Football Coach". Mopsquad. MOP Squad Sports. April 14, 2005. Retrieved January 16, 2022 – via Associated Press.
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- ^ "Marshall Thundering Herd Bowls". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
- ^ Bowl/All-Star Game Records, p. 128
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- ^ Lind, Andrew (August 22, 2020). "Marshall Thundering Herd Reveal New Home Uniforms". news.sportslogos.net. Retrieved September 24, 2023.
- ^ Gaydos, Ryan (September 24, 2021). "Appalachian State fans under fire for berating Marshall players: 'Pitiful behavior'". Fox News. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
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- ^ The 75 Reasons to Retire a Number By JACK BOGACZYK at Herdzone.com, 13 Nov 2015
- ^ "Marshall Thundering Herd Football Future Schedules". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved April 13, 2024.