The University of Mississippi Athletics
Football

- Ending Title:
- Assistant Coach/Offensive Coordinator
- Years at Ole Miss:
- 2019
- Alma Mater:
- West Virginia (1986)
Rich Rodriguez, considered one of the top offensive minds in college football, was announced as Ole Miss’ offensive coordinator on Dec. 30, 2018.
A 32-year coaching veteran, Rodriguez brings 24 years of head coaching experience, including stints at West Virginia, Michigan and Arizona, and has been named conference coach of the year five times in three different leagues. Rodriguez’s zone read concepts he invented more than two decades ago have since become a component of most modern-day college offenses.
Rodriguez last served as head coach at Arizona from 2012-17, earning Pac-12 Coach of the Year honors in 2014 after leading the Wildcats to their first 10-win season in over 15 years. His career also includes three 10-win seasons at WVU.
In his six years at Arizona, Rodriguez helped the Wildcats establish themselves as one of the most explosive offensive programs in the Pac-12. Arizona tied or set more than 100 offensive school records, including single-game records for categories such as most points, total yards, rushing yards, passing yards and even biggest comeback. New all-time leaders were set for career rushing and all-purpose yardage, while the top freshman rushing and passing seasons were also rewritten under Rodriguez’s tutelage.
Among the numerous accomplishments, Rodriguez led the Wildcats to 33 wins in his first four seasons, a tally that was the most in school history over a four-year period. Included were four consecutive bowl berths, another feat previously never accomplished at the school. Those four seasons all had one notable achievement in common: each earned a win over an Associated Press top-10 team.
In 2017, Rodriguez helped orchestrate a Wildcat offense that led the Pac-12 and finished top-15 nationally in rushing offense (309.3 ypg), total offense (489.5 ypg) and scoring (41.3 ppg). Arizona set school records in total points, rushing yards and rushing touchdowns in 2017.
In 2016, Rodriguez was able to produce the Pac-12’s top rushing attack, which churned out 235.0 yards per game, ninth-best in school history. The highlight was a season-ending blowout of rival Arizona State, in which the Wildcats set a school record with 511 rushing yards to claim the Territorial Cup championship for the second time in the last three seasons.
Rodriguez’s most successful season in Tucson came during the 2014 season which was highlighted by a 10-4 record, a Pac-12 South Championship, a Fiesta Bowl berth and winning the Territorial Cup game against ASU. Arizona finished the regular season with 10 wins for only the third time in program history as Rodriguez was named the Pac-12 Coach of the Year.
Prior to Arizona, Rodriguez served as head coach at Michigan from 2008 to 2010 where he once again tutored a young quarterback in Denard Robinson.
As a sophomore in 2010, Robinson set the single-season Division I FBS record for rushing yards by a quarterback and became the only player in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) history to both pass and rush for 1,500 yards on his way to earning first-team All-America honors.
Rodriguez made a Division I statement as head coach at West Virginia from 2001-07, where he compiled a 60-26 record, won four Big East Conference titles and was a two-time Big East Coach of the Year.
Rodriguez’s West Virginia teams were Big East Champions in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007 while appearing in two BCS bowls, the 2005 Sugar Bowl with a victory over Georgia for an 11-1 record and a victory over Oklahoma in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl to finish 10-2 shortly after Rodriguez had left for Michigan.
Before accepting the position at West Virginia, Rodriguez served as offensive coordinator and associate head coach for Tommy Bowden at Clemson in 1999 and 2000, with the Tigers recording a 15-9 record in two seasons. He was offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for Bowden at Tulane for two years prior to that, 1997-98, when he helped lead the Green Wave to a 19-4 mark, including an undefeated 12-0 season with the Conference USA Champs and Liberty Bowl victors in 1998.
Prior to West Virginia, Rodriguez served as head coach at NAIA Glenville State. While at Glenville State, his teams won or shared four consecutive West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference titles and he was named WVIAC Coach of the Year in 1993 and 1994, as well as the NAIA Coach of the Year after leading his team to a national runner-up finish. Rodriguez got his full-time coaching career started at Salem College. While at Salem, he was a secondary coach and special teams coordinator in 1986 and assistant head coach and defensive coordinator in 1987. He became the youngest head coach in college football when appointed by Salem in 1988 at age 24.
Rodriguez graduated from West Virginia in 1986, where he started as a walk-on in 1981 and became a three-year letterwinner as a defensive back from 1982-84. He added a master’s degree from Salem in 1987. He is a native of Grant Town, West Virginia, and graduated from North Marion High School.
Rodriguez, 56, and his wife Rita have two children Raquel and Rhett.
COACHING CAREER | ||
Year(s) | School | Position |
2019-Pres. | Ole Miss | Offensive Coordinator |
2012-17 | Arizona | Head Coach |
2008-10 | Michigan | Head Coach |
2001-07 | West Virginia | Head Coach |
1999-00 | Clemson | Offensive Coordinator and Associate Head Coach |
1997-98 | Tulane | Offensive Coordinator and Quarterbacks |
1990-96 | Glenville State | Head Coach |
1989 | West Virginia | Outside Linebackers |
1988 | Salem | Head Coach |
1987 | Salem | Assistant / Associate Head Coach |
1986 | Salem | Secondary Coach and Special Teams Coordinator |