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| Mike Shula (born June 3, 1965 in Baltimore, Maryland) is an American college football coach. He is currently the head coach at the University of Alabama, one of football's most storied programs, where he was also a standout quarterback. He is the son of Don Shula, the winningest coach in the history of the National Football League. Mike Shula's football career started with the Crimson Tide, where he was the starting quarterback in the 1984, 1985 and 1986 seasons. The team's record during his tenure was 24 wins, 11 losses and one tie, with wins in the Aloha Bowl and the Sun Bowl, plus key victories over the University of Southern California, Ohio State University and University of Notre Dame (the only time that Alabama has prevailed in meetings between the two legendary teams). Shula was drafted by the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but saw little playing time in 1987, his only season. Shula served in assistant coaching positions in the NFL, twice with the Miami Dolphins (his father's former team) plus stints with the Chicago Bears and the Buccaneers, where he was offensive coordinator from 1996 to 1999. His last NFL position was quarterbacks coach with the Dolphins. Shula took the Crimson Tide football program over during a time of turmoil. The university had recently hired Mike Price as its new coach in December of 2002, replacing Dennis Franchione, who had left to become coach at Texas A&M University. But before he coached his first game, Price was fired for an incident in a strip club and a hotel in Pensacola, Florida. Shula was hired three months before the first game of the 2003 season. At the time, he was the second-youngest coach in all of Division I-A football, at age 38. Despite injuries to several key players in 2004, including star Quarterback Brodie Croyle, Shula's team finished the regular season with a 6-5 record and earned a trip to the Music City Bowl in Nashville, Tennessee, Alabama's first bowl appearance in three seasons. In the 2005 regular season, Shula led the Crimson Tide to a 9-2 regular season record. The season included a 31-3 victory in Tuscaloosa over the heralded, then-No. 5 Florida Gators; and a 6-3 win over the Tennessee Volunteers, a team that began the season ranked number 3. The two losses Shula endured in the 2005 season were losses to SEC West Co-champions Louisiana State University (in overtime) and Auburn, Alabama's fierce in-state rival who dominated the Crimson Tide during the annual Iron Bowl. Shula and the Crimson Tide earned a bid to the Cotton Bowl where they defeated Texas Tech 13-10 on the last play of the game, a 46 yard field goal by Jamie Christensen. With the Cotton Bowl victory, the 2005 edition of the Crimson Tide closed the season with a final record of 10-2 giving Shula his first 10 win season in just his third year as a head coach. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Mike Shula ] Some related entries: Chris Krug | Carl Loadenthal | Willie Mosconi | Ryan Garko | John Bateman | Mark Kotsay | Chauncey Billups | Greg Davis | Jim Bridwell | Larry Foote | Chuck Williams This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Mike Shula; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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