Rod Dowhower

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

Rodney Douglas Dowhower (born April 15, 1943) is a former American football player and coach. He was the head coach at Stanford University and Vanderbilt University; in between he was the head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Rod Dowhower
rdf:langString Rod Dowhower
rdf:langString Stanford
rdf:langString Vanderbilt
rdf:langString Rod Dowhower
xsd:date 1943-04-15
xsd:integer 7309907
xsd:integer 1080961703
xsd:integer 1979 1995
xsd:date 1943-04-15
rdf:langString * Super Bowl champion
xsd:integer 0 1 3
xsd:integer 2 4 5 9
rdf:langString coach
xsd:integer 1979 1995 1996
xsd:integer 1 3
rdf:langString no
rdf:langString Rodney Douglas Dowhower (born April 15, 1943) is a former American football player and coach. He was the head coach at Stanford University and Vanderbilt University; in between he was the head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL). Dowhower was promoted to head coach at Stanford on January 9, 1979, a day after predecessor Bill Walsh announced his departure to lead the NFL's San Francisco 49ers, After leading the Cardinal to a 5–5–1 record in 1979, he left in January 1980 to become the offensive coordinator for the NFL's Denver Broncos under head coach Red Miller. With a change in ownership in February 1981, Dan Reeves became the head coach the following month; Dowhower stayed on staff as the receivers coach. Dowhower was later the head coach for two seasons at Vanderbilt (1995, 1996), but won just four games for a career college football record of 9–23–1 (.288). Previously, he was the head coach of the NFL's Indianapolis Colts for two years (1985, 1986), where he tallied a record of 5–24 (.172), and was fired after losing the first thirteen games in 1986. Dowhower attended San Diego State University, where he played quarterback for the Aztecs. He served as an assistant coach at San Diego State, UCLA, and Boise State. Dowhower was an assistant coach for seven NFL teams: the St. Louis Cardinals, Denver Broncos, Atlanta Falcons, Washington Redskins, Cleveland Browns (under Bill Belichick), New York Giants, and the Philadelphia Eagles.
rdf:langString no
rdf:langString Denver Broncos
rdf:langString St. Louis Cardinals
rdf:langString Stanford
rdf:langString San Diego State
xsd:integer 1966 1967 1968 1973 1974 1976 1977 1979 1980 1981 1983 1985 1987 1990 1994 1995 1997 1999
xsd:integer 6
xsd:integer 1996
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString no
xsd:integer 5 9
xsd:integer 1963
rdf:langString no
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10395
xsd:string 5–24 (NFL)
xsd:string 9–23–1 (college)

data from the linked data cloud