Tim Place

Tim Place is an American football coach. He served as head football coach at Chowan University in Murfreesboro, North Carolina from 2008 - 2019.[1] Prior to his arrival at Chowan, Place was the head football coach at Urbana University in Urbana, Ohio for two seasons (2006–2007), talling an 11–11 record.[2]

Tim Place
Playing career
c. 1989Washington and Lee
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1992–1995Greene Central HS (NC) (assistant)
1996Hartwick (assistant)
1997–1999Eureka (assistant)
2000–2001Ravenna HS (OH)
2002–2005Urbana (DC)
2006–2007Urbana
2008–2019Chowan
Head coaching record
Overall56–82 (college)

Head coaching record

College

Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs
Urbana Blue Knights (Mid-States Football Association) (2006–2007)
2006 Urbana 5–62–56th (MEL)
2007 Urbana 6–53–45th (MEL)
Urbana: 11–11
Chowan Hawks (Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (2008–2019)
2008 Chowan 2–81–56th (Western)
2009 Chowan 2–82–5T–4th (Western)
2010 Chowan 3–73–4T–4th (Northern)
2011 Chowan 3–72–5T–5th (Northern)
2012 Chowan 6–45–22nd (Northern)
2013 Chowan 4–63–4T–3rd (Northern)
2014 Chowan 2–81–6T–5th (Northern)
2015 Chowan 6–44–3T–2nd (Northern)
2016 Chowan 6–44–3T–3rd (Northern)
2017 Chowan 4–64–34th (Northern)
2018 Chowan 6–44–23rd (Northern)
2019 Chowan 1–5[n 1]0–3[n 1](Northern)[n 1]
Chowan: 45–7131–40
Total:56–82

Notes

  1. Place served as head football coach for the first six games of the season before he was placed on administrative leave. Mark Hall was appointed interim head coach and lead the team for the final four games. Chowan the season with an overall record of 3–7 and a conference mark of and 2–5, trying for fourth place in the Northern Division.
gollark: You were apparently happy to self-learn much of the mathological stuff from the textbook or whatever.
gollark: no.
gollark: Oh dear.
gollark: Obviously to encourage independent study.
gollark: Revenant product industry.

References

  1. "2017 Chowan Football Media Guide". Chowan University. 2017. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  2. "Football Year-by-Year Archive". Urbana University. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.