Bill Lynch

Bill Lynch (born June 12, 1954) is a former American football coach. He was most recently the head football coach at DePauw University, a position he held in 2004 and re-assumed in December 2012 until his retirement after the 2019 season.[1] Lynch also served as the head football coach at Butler University (1985–1989), Ball State University (1995–2002), and Indiana University Bloomington (2007–2010). He was inducted into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame in 2005.

Bill Lynch
Lynch, 2014
Biographical details
Born (1954-06-12) June 12, 1954
Indianapolis, Indiana
Playing career
1973–1976Butler
Position(s)Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1977Butler (QB)
1978Butler (WR)
1979–1983Butler (OC)
1984Northern Illinois (OC/QB)
1985Orlando Renegades (QB)
1985–1989Butler
1990–1992Ball State (OC/QB)
1993–1994Indiana (QB)
1995–2002Ball State
2004DePauw
2005–2007Indiana (OC/TE)
2007–2010Indiana
2013–2019DePauw
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
2011–2012Butler (associate AD)
Head coaching record
Overall145–122–3
Bowls0–2
Tournaments0–1 (NCAA D-II playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
4 HCC (1985, 1987–1989)
1 MAC (1996)

High school and college

Lynch graduated from Bishop Chatard High School in Indianapolis in 1972. He moved on to Butler University where was a four-year letterwinner as the quarterback for the football squad and a captain of the basketball team. He quarterbacked the football team to a 28–12 record, led the nation in pass percentage in 1975, and often jokes that he "held" Larry Bird to 42 points in his final college basketball game.

Early coaching career

After graduating from Butler, Lynch spent seven seasons as an assistant there, where his positions included wide receivers coach, quarterbacks coach, recruiting coordinator, and offensive coordinator. He then moved on to Northern Illinois University to assist former Indiana University coach Lee Corso for the 1984 season as the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator. During the winter of 1984, Lynch followed Corso and coached quarterbacks for the Orlando Renegades of the short-lived USFL.

In 1985, Lynch returned to Butler for five seasons as head coach. In four of those five years, his teams finished in the Top 20 Division II Poll. Lynch was then hired at Ball State University and worked from 1990 to 1992 as the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator before heading to Bloomington for the 1993 and 1994 seasons as quarterbacks coach for Bill Mallory's Indiana Hoosiers football team.

In 1995, Lynch returned to Ball State as head coach. His most successful year in Muncie came in 1996 when Lynch's Cardinals went 8–4, won the Mid-American Conference title, and played in the Las Vegas Bowl. Lynch was let go as head coach after the 2002 season. After a year off, Lynch was hired as the head coach at DePauw University. He led the Tigers football team to an 8–2 record and was named co-Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in his only season as head coach.

Indiana University

Following his 2004 campaign at DePauw, Lynch resigned his duties as head coach to join long-time friend Terry Hoeppner, who had been hired as head coach at Indiana. There Lynch assumed the positions of assistant head coach, offensive coordinator, and tight ends coach.[2] Under Lynch in 2006, the Hoosiers offense scored their most points since 2001 and quarterback Kellen Lewis enjoyed one of the best freshman seasons in school history.

In the spring of 2007, when Hoeppner took a leave of absence to attend to his health, Lynch took over spring practices and the daily work of head coach indefinitely. As Hoeppner 's illness became worse, Lynch was named interim head coach for the 2007 season. Four days after this announcement, on June 19, Hoeppner died from complications of brain cancer.

In his first season as head coach, Lynch led the 2007 Hoosiers to a 7–6 record, the best for any Hoosier head coach in his first year since 1905 and the best record for an Indiana football team since 1993. The Hoosiers also earned their first bowl berth since 1993 with an invitation to the Insight Bowl to play Oklahoma State. After much speculation, Lynch signed a contract extension to coach the Hoosiers through 2012.[3]

The 2008 Indiana team was hampered by a number of injuries. Against Wisconsin, the Hoosiers were forced to play three quarterbacks and four centers. 13 starters in total were injured during the year. Still, Lynch was able to pull in the one the strongest recruiting classes in recent history.

2009 showed marked improvement on the field, although the record ledger failed to show it as the team took 4th quarter leads into three Big Ten road games before falling short.

During Lynch's tenure, the players established a Player's Leadership Council, which elect weekly game captains and select the community service organizations the team volunteers with. The Boys and Girls Club of Bloomington and Riley Children's Hospital of Indianapolis are two favorite causes of the team.

On November 28, 2010, it was announced that Lynch would not return for the 2011 season.

Later coaching career

After being let go by Indiana, Lynch became the associate athletic director at his alma mater, Butler University in Indianapolis. He held this position for nearly two years before being hired as the head football coach at DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana. Lynch previously held this position for the 2004 season, leading the Tigers to an 8–2 record. Lynch replaced interim head coach Scott Srnka, who was promoted after Robby Long was fired mid-season.

The 2013 Tigers opened with four losses but won four of their final six games, finishing 4–6. DePauw improved to 7–3 in 2014, finishing third in the NCAC, then took a second place conference finish in 2015 with an 8–2 mark, repeating that in 2016 and 2017. He retired after the 2019 season with a final coaching record of 145–122–3.[4]

Family

Lynch and his wife, Linda, have four children. His son, Billy, is the co-offensive coordinator at Rice University. Another son, Joey, is the offensive coordinator at Ball State University. His youngest son Kevin is the wide receivers coach at the University of Indianapolis. All three played college football. They also have a daughter, Kelly, and thirteen grandchildren.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs NCAA#
Butler Bulldogs (Heartland Collegiate Conference) (1985–1989)
1985 Butler 8–25–1T–1stT–12
1986 Butler 5–53–3T–3rd
1987 Butler 8–1–14–0–11st8
1988 Butler 8–2–13–0–11stL NCAA Division II First Round8
1989 Butler 7–2–14–01st20
Butler: 36–12–319–4–1
Ball State Cardinals (Mid-American Conference) (1995–2002)
1995 Ball State 7–46–2T–3rd
1996 Ball State 8–47–11stL Las Vegas
1997 Ball State 5–64–43rd (West)
1998 Ball State 1–101–76th (West)
1999 Ball State 0–110–86th (West)
2000 Ball State 5–64–4T–3rd (West)
2001 Ball State 5–64–4T–1st (West)
2002 Ball State 6–64–44th (West)
Ball State: 37–5330–34
DePauw Tigers (Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference) (2004)
2004 DePauw 8–25–12nd
Indiana Hoosiers (Big Ten Conference) (2007–2010)
2007 Indiana 7–63–5T–6thL Insight
2008 Indiana 3–91–711th
2009 Indiana 4–81–7T–10th
2010 Indiana 5–71–711th
Indiana: 19–306–26
DePauw Tigers (North Coast Athletic Conference) (2013–2019)
2013 DePauw 4–64–5T–5th
2014 DePauw 7–36–33rd
2015 DePauw 8–27–22nd
2016 DePauw 8–27–2T–2nd
2017 DePauw 8–27–2T–2nd
2018 DePauw 4–64–5T–5th
2019 DePauw 6–46–3T–2nd
DePauw: 53–2746–23
Total:145–122–3
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth
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References

  1. "DePauw Athletics". DePauw Athletics. Archived from the original on November 10, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  2. "DePauw Head Football Coach Bill Lynch Resigns, Heading to Indiana University". www.depauw.edu. Archived from the original on September 25, 2006. Retrieved December 12, 2007.?
  3. "Bill Lynch to Remain Hoosier's Coach". iuhoosiers.cstv.com. Archived from the original on November 28, 2007. Retrieved November 26, 2007.
  4. "DePauw's Bill Lynch to Retire after More Than 40 Years of Coaching". DePauw Athletics. November 19, 2019. Retrieved November 19, 2019.

Additional sources

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