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Closer Look Sports - by Steve Gann

 

Tennessee Adds Steele To Staff

January 19th 2010 20:51
: Tennessee Adds Steele To Staff
Coach Dooley is rounding out his staff by adding Clemson defensive coordinator Kevin Steele to his staff. Steele has an impressive resume and is returning to the school where he played under Johnny Majors.

Kevin Steele bio:
Steele played three seasons of collegiate football as a linebacker. He spent his freshman year at Furman University before transferring to Tennessee, where he was a member of Johnny Majors' 1978 and 1979 squads.


Career as an Assistant
From 1989-94, Steele coached the linebackers under Nebraska legend Tom Osborne. During his six years in Lincoln, the Cornhuskers went 60-11, appeared in six bowl games, won four conference championships and captured the 1994 national championship with a 13-0 record. He coached Butkus Award winner Trev Alberts during that time. He has also served as an assistant coach at the Florida State University, University of Tennessee, Oklahoma State University and New Mexico State University. January 4, 2007 found Steele being hired by new Alabama coach Nick Saban as defensive coordinator for the Crimson Tide.
NFL years
In 1995, Steele made the jump to the NFL as the linebackers coach for the Carolina Panthers. Under head coach Dom Capers, the Panthers reached the NFC Championship Game in their second season.

A well publicized moment occurred during Steele's last year in Carolina. Linebacker Kevin Greene attacked Steele during a heated discussion, grabbing the coach by his clothing. The incident was captured on live television. Steele did not retaliate.


"Football is an emotional, aggressive game," Steele said. "Those guys are out there fighting. Kevin is a good person. We've talked about it and worked it out. That's all I have to say about it."

Head coaching career
Steele was the head coach at Baylor University from 1999 to 2002. Steele compiled a record of only 9-36 (1-31 in the Big 12 conference).

In Steele's first season (1999), Baylor finished with a 1-10 record (the school's worst since 1969). During the 1999 season, Steele's Baylor team was involved in what ESPN.com called one of the top 10 worst coaching decisions, in 1999, when he chose a running play rather than a kneel down with his team leading and possessing the ball in the game's final 12 seconds and the opponent (UNLV) out of timeouts. The ensuing Baylor fumble and UNLV return for a touchdown gave the Rebels a shocking win.[4].

Steele's second season began with a 2-1 non-conference record but was followed by eight straight Big 12 losses, only one closer than 24 points. A particularly rough stretch in October saw the Bears shut out in 3 consecutive games (the last of which was a 59-0 loss at Nebraska, where the Huskers led 38-0 after the first quarter). Part of BU's offensive woes were caused by the season ending collarbone injury to heralded offseason JUCO transfer quarterback Greg Cicero, who was injured in the season's second game.

Steele's third season in 2001 started with a 2-0 record (including an exciting overtime win over New Mexico). Conference play was again unkind to Steele's Bears as they lost eight straight conference games before winning their season finale against Southern Illinois (a sub .500 I-AA squad). The team was more competitive than in 2000, nearly upsetting Texas A&M and playing competitively into the second half against national powers Nebraska and Oklahoma. However, they also suffered a 63-19 homecoming loss to Texas Tech (trailing 49-0 in the second quarter).

Steele's fourth season (2002) had a terrible beginning. For opening day, Baylor traveled to Berkeley to play California. Since Cal had finished 1-10 the previous year, many felt this was a good matchup. However, Cal (who turned out to be greatly improved in '02) immediately took command of the game, jumping to a 35-0 lead and cruising to a 70-22 win. Although the team rallied from the defeat to win 3 of the next 4 games (the last a 35-32 win over Kansas for Steele's first Big 12 conference win), they could not sustain the momentum, losing their next four conference games by wide margins and Steele was fired after the fourth (a 62-11 loss to Texas Tech). After the firing, Steele elected to finish the season and continued as head coach for the season's last three games, all losses.


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