Jimmye Laycock

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jimmye_Laycock an entity of type: Thing

Jimmye McFarland Laycock (born February 6, 1948) is a former American football coach. He served as the head football coach at the College of William & Mary from 1980 through 2018, retiring with the third-longest continuous head coaching tenure in NCAA Division I football history. He amassed an overall record of 249 wins, 194 losses, and two ties. Laycock graduated from William & Mary in 1970 and played quarterback under legendary coaches Marv Levy and Lou Holtz. Prior to taking over the Tribe head coaching position, Laycock coached at Newport News High School, Clemson University, The Citadel, and the University of Memphis. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jimmye Laycock
rdf:langString Jimmye Laycock
rdf:langString William & Mary
rdf:langString Jimmye Laycock
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rdf:langString AFCA FCS Region 1 Coach of the Year
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rdf:langString Jimmye McFarland Laycock (born February 6, 1948) is a former American football coach. He served as the head football coach at the College of William & Mary from 1980 through 2018, retiring with the third-longest continuous head coaching tenure in NCAA Division I football history. He amassed an overall record of 249 wins, 194 losses, and two ties. Laycock graduated from William & Mary in 1970 and played quarterback under legendary coaches Marv Levy and Lou Holtz. Prior to taking over the Tribe head coaching position, Laycock coached at Newport News High School, Clemson University, The Citadel, and the University of Memphis. Laycock has been the most successful head coach in the history of William & Mary Tribe football, leading the team to 24 winning seasons and 12 post-season appearances, including two national playoff semi-final appearances in 2004 and 2009. In 2010, he recorded his 200th win as an FCS head coach, making him only the third to reach that mark.
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rdf:langString Rankings from final NCAA Division I-AA Football Committee poll from 1986 to 1992, The Sports Network poll from 1993 to 2010, STATS poll in 2015
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xsd:string 249–194–2
xsd:string 7–10 (NCAA D-I-AA/D-I playoffs)

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