Dan Hawkins

Danny Clarence Hawkins[1] (born November 10, 1960) is an American football coach. He served as the head football coach at Willamette University from 1993 to 1997, Boise State University from 2001 to 2005, and the University of Colorado Boulder from 2006 to 2010, and the University of California, Davis from 2017 to 2023, compiling a career college football head coaching record of 156–92–1. Hawkins was the head coach of the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League (CFL) for five games in 2013 before he was fired mid-season. Between 2011 and 2016, he worked as a college football analyst for ESPN.

Dan Hawkins
Hawkins in April 2007
Biographical details
Born (1960-11-10) November 10, 1960 (age 63)
Fall River Mills, California, U.S.
Playing career
1978–1980Siskiyous
1981–1982UC Davis
Position(s)Fullback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1983–1985UC Davis (assistant)
1986–1987Christian Bros. HS (CA)
1988–1991Siskiyous (OC)
1992Sonoma State (DC)
1993–1997Willamette
1998–2000Boise State (OC/TE/ST/RC)
2001–2005Boise State
2006–2010Colorado
2013Montreal Alouettes
2015United States national team
2015Carlstad Crusaders (OC)
2016Vienna Vikings (OC)
2017–2023UC Davis
Head coaching record
Overall156–92–1 (college)
Bowls2–3
Tournaments4–2 (NAIA playoffs)
1–2 (NCAA D-I playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 NWC (1996–1997)
4 WAC (2002–2005)
1 Big Sky (2018)
1 CFA Mount Hood Division (1995)
Awards
Eddie Robinson Award (2018)
Big Sky Coach of the Year (2018)
WAC Coach of the Year
Medal record
Men’s American football
Representing  United States
World Championship
Gold medal – first place2015 USATeam Competition

Education and early positions

Danny Clarence Hawkins grew up in Bieber, California, in the northeast corner of the state. [2] He attended junior college at College of the Siskiyous in Weed and transferred to UC Davis, where he played fullback,[3] and earned a bachelor's degree in physical education in 1984. He later completed a master's degree in educational administration from St. Mary's College in 1993.

He began his coaching career at UC Davis under coach Jim Sochor the fall before he graduated, spending three years there (1983–1985). He then served as head coach at Christian Brothers High School in Sacramento for the 1986 and 1987 seasons. He spent four seasons (1988–1991) as the offensive coordinator at the College of the Siskiyous, then served as defensive coordinator at Sonoma State in 1992.

Head coaching career

Willamette

In 1993, Hawkins became the head coach at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, and led the Bearcats to a 40–11–1 overall record (.779) in five seasons. In his final season Willamette was 13–1, falling 14–7 in the 1997 NAIA Division II National Championship Game.

Boise State

Hawkins moved up to NCAA Division I-A football at Boise State in 1998 as an assistant under first-year head coach Dirk Koetter. After three seasons, Koetter accepted the head coaching job at Arizona State, and Hawkins was promoted from assistant head coach to head coach on December 2, 2000. In 2004, Hawkins was honored with his second Western Athletic Conference (WAC) Coach of the Year title in three years. Through the 2005 season, he compiled a 53–11 record (.828) in five seasons as Boise State's head coach, including a 37–3 record (.925) in WAC competition with four straight WAC titles. Only Walter Camp, George Washington Woodruff and Bob Pruett had more total wins in their first five years of head coaching. He holds a 31–game WAC winning streak, the longest in conference history.[4] One of his first hires at Boise State was Chris Petersen as his offensive coordinator; Petersen was a quarterback at UC Davis while Hawkins was an assistant coach, and was the wide receivers coach at Oregon under head coach Mike Bellotti. Petersen succeeded Hawkins as head coach following the 2005 season, when Hawkins departed for Colorado.

Colorado

Hawkins was introduced as head football coach at the University of Colorado on December 16, 2005.[5] Hawkins was signed to a five-year contract paying him $900,000 annually with incentives totaling to $1.5 million.[6] Hawkins took over the Colorado football program from Gary Barnett, who had spent some of his tenure mired in controversy.

Hawkins earned national attention in February 2007 during the National Signing Day press conference. He passionately expressed his disappointment in the attitude of a player's parent who had anonymously complained about the reduction in the players' time off before the summer conditioning program started, famously saying "It's Division I football! It's the Big 12! It ain't intramurals! You've got two weeks after finals. You've got a week at July 4th. You've got a week before camp starts. That's a month! That's probably more vacation than you guys (reporters) get. And we're a little bummed out that we don't get three weeks? Go play intramurals, brother. Go play intramurals."[7]

Prior to the 2009 season, Hawkins, under fire for his performance at Colorado thus far, publicly pledged "ten wins no excuses". The team ended that year with a 3–9 record. On November 26, 2009, Colorado athletic director Mike Bohn announced that Hawkins would return as head football coach for the 2010 season, despite an overall record at Colorado of 16–33.

On November 6, 2010, Colorado blew a 28-point fourth quarter lead over the Kansas Jayhawks and lost, 52–45, the biggest collapse in the 121-year history of Colorado football.[8] While still nursing that large lead in the fourth quarter, Hawkins continued to have his team throw the ball on offense instead of running it, allowing Kansas time to mount its comeback. There has been widespread suspicion Hawkins made that choice because he was more concerned about his quarterback, son Cody Hawkins, breaking the school's all-time passing record than winning the game.[9]

After the Kansas loss, Hawkins was criticized for cutting his contractually-obligated post-game interview with radio station KOA short after just two questions and 27 seconds. After the interviewer asked him why Colorado didn't run the ball more to protect their shrinking lead, he dismissively replied, "We were playing football moving it both ways. A tough day. Thanks, guys."[10]

As it turned out, it would be the last game Hawkins would coach at Colorado. He was fired on November 9, 2010.[11] He was making approximately $1.5 million a year including incentives and base salary; his buyout was approximately $2 million.[8] Longtime assistant Brian Cabral finished out the season.

Broadcasting

Between 2011 and 2016, Hawkins served as a college football analyst for ESPN.[12]

Montreal Alouettes

On February 19, 2013, Hawkins was named the new head coach of the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League. On June 27, 2013, Hawkins won his first game as Alouettes head coach, defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in Winnipeg. On August 1, 2013, he was fired by the team after starting the season 2–3. He was replaced by the general manager Jim Popp.[13]

US national team and Europe

Hawkins coached the 2015 United States national American football team at the 2015 IFAF World Championship to a gold medal.[14] In 2015, Hawkins served as offensive coordinator for Carlstad Crusaders in the Swedish Superserien winning the national title and European Champions League. In 2016 Hawkins served as offensive coordinator for Vikings Vienna in the Austrian Football League.[15]

UC Davis

On November 18, 2016, Hawkins accepted an offer to become head coach of the UC Davis Aggies. He had been slated to serve as offensive coordinator at Florida International under Butch Davis when he was offered the position with the Aggies.[16]

Personal life

Hawkins is married to Misti Rae Ann Hokanson, a registered nurse. They are the parents of four grown children, daughters Ashley and Brittany, and sons Cody[17] and Drew, former Boise state quarterback.[18]

Head coaching record

College

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffsCoaches#AP°
Willamette Bearcats (Columbia Football Association) (1993–1995)
1993Willamette5–43–2T–2nd (Mount Hood)
1994Willamette7–24–12nd (Mount Hood)
1995Willamette6–2–14–0–1T–1st (Mount Hood)
Willamette Bearcats (Northwest Conference) (1996–1997)
1996Willamette9–25–01stL NAIA Division II Quarterfinal
1997Willamette13–15–01stL NAIA Division Championship
Willamette:40–11–121–3–1
Boise State Broncos (Western Athletic Conference) (2001–2005)
2001Boise State8–46–22nd
2002Boise State12–18–01stW Humanitarian1215
2003Boise State13–18–01stW Fort Worth1516
2004Boise State11–18–01stL Liberty1312
2005Boise State9–47–1T–1stL MPC Computers
Boise State:53–1137–3
Colorado Buffaloes (Big 12 Conference) (2006–2010)
2006Colorado2–102–65th (North)
2007Colorado6–74–43rd (North)L Independence
2008Colorado5–72–6T–4th (North)
2009Colorado3–92–65th (North)
2010Colorado3–6[n 1]0–5[n 1]5th (North)
Colorado:19–3910–27
UC Davis Aggies (Big Sky Conference) (2017–2023)
2017UC Davis5–63–58th
2018UC Davis10–37–1T–1stL NCAA Division I Quarterfinal87
2019UC Davis5–73–5T–6th
2020UC Davis3–23–2T–3rd1213
2021UC Davis8–45–3T–5thL NCAA Division I First Round1617
2022UC Davis6–55–35th25
2023UC Davis7–45–35th24
UC Davis:44–3131–22
Total:156–92–1
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

CFL

TeamYearRegular seasonPost season
WonLostTiesWin %FinishWonLostResult
MTL20132300.400fired mid-seasonfired mid-season
Total2300.40000

Notes

References

External links