American gridiron football player and coach (1931–2003)
American football player
James Frederic Root (August 17, 1931 – May 26, 2003) was an American gridiron football player and coach. He played professionally as a quarterback in the National Football League (NFL) for two seasons with the Chicago Cardinals (1953, 1956) and in the Canadian Football League (CFL) for one season with the Ottawa Rough Riders (1954). Root served as the head football coach at the University of New Hampshire from 1968 to 1971 and at the College of William & Mary from 1972 to 1979, compiling a career college football record of 57–62–2 in 12 seasons. Root was a native of Toledo, Ohio. He played college football at Miami University under Woody Hayes and Ara Parseghian. Root began his coaching career in 1958 as the backfield coach at Tulane University. He moved to the University of Miami as backfield coach in 1960. Root then coached for one season, in 1964, as offensive backfield coach at Dartmouth College, before moving to Yale University, where he served in the same capacity for three seasons.[1]
Head coaching record
References
External links
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- Perry W. Jenkins (1889)
- Ted Migdal (1940)
- Mel Olix (1947–1949)
- Nobby Wirkowski (1950)
- Carmen Cozza (1951)
- Jim Root (1951–1952)
- Dick Hunter (1953–1954)
- Tom Dimitroff (1955–1956)
- Ernie Jarvis (1957)
- Nick Mourouzis (1958)
- Thomas Kilmurray (1959)
- Jack Gayheart (1960–1961)
- Ernie Kellerman (1962–1964)
- Bruce Matte (1965–1966)
- Kent Thompson (1967–1968)
- Jim Bengala (1969–1970)
- Stu Showalter (1971)
- Steve Williams (1972)
- Steve Sanna (1973–1974)
- Sherman Smith (1975)
- Larry Fortner (1976–1978)
- Chuck Hauck (1979)
- Mark Kelly (1980)
- John Appold (1981–1982)
- Todd Rollins (1983–1984)
- Terry Morris (1985–1986)
- Mike Bates (1987)
- Chris Ondrula (1988)
- Joe Napoli (1989)
- Jim Clement (1990–1991)
- Neil Dougherty (1992–1994)
- Danny Smith (1993)
- Sam Ricketts (1995–1997)
- Mike Bath (1998–2000)
- Ben Roethlisberger (2001–2003)
- Josh Betts (2004–2005)
- Mike Kokal (2006–2007)
- Clay Belton (2008)
- Dan Raudabaugh (2006–2009)
- Zac Dysert (2009–2012)
- Austin Boucher (2010, 2013)
- Austin Gearing (2013)
- Andrew Hendrix (2014)
- Drew Kummer (2015)
- Billy Bahl (2015–2017)
- Noah Wezensky (2016)
- Gus Ragland (2016–2018)
- Brett Gabbert (2019–2024)
- AJ Mayer (2020–2021)
- Aveon Smith (2022–2023)
- Henry Hesson (2023)
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# denotes interim head coach
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