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Jim Grobe

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Jim Grobe
Grobe in 2009
Biographical details
Born(1952-02-17)February 17, 1952(age 72)
Huntington, West Virginia,U.S.
Playing career
1971–1972Ferrum
1973–1974Virginia
Position(s)Guard,linebacker
Coaching career (HCunless noted)
1975Virginia(GA)
1976–1977Liberty HS (Bedford, VA)
1978Emory & Henry(LB)
1979–1983Marshall(LB)
1984–1994Air Force(LB)
1995–2000Ohio
2001–2013Wake Forest
2016Baylor
2019San Antonio Commanders(DC)
Head coaching record
Overall117–121–1 (college)
Bowls4–2
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1ACC(2006)
Awards
AP College Football Coach of the Year(2006)
Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award(2006)
Sporting News College Football COY(2006)
MAC Coach of the Year(1996)
ACC Coach of the Year(2006)

Jim Britt Grobe(born February 17, 1952) is anAmerican footballcoach and former player who was most recently thedefensive coordinatorof theSan Antonio Commandersof theAlliance of American Football.His previous position to that was as head football coach atBaylor University.[1]From 2001 to 2013, Grobe served as the head football coach atWake Forest University.In 2006, he was namedACC Coach of the Yearby a unanimous vote andAP Coach of the Yearfor coachingWake Forestto an 11–2 regular season and theAtlantic Coast Conference(ACC) title.

Playing career

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Grobe earned his undergraduate degree (B.S.) in education from theUniversity of Virginiain 1975 and earned a master's degree in guidance and counseling from Virginia in 1978. As a player at Virginia in 1973 and 1974, Grobe playedmiddle guard(1973) andlinebacker(1974). He was a two-year starter for theVirginia Cavaliersand was named Academic All-ACC.

Before enrolling at Virginia, Grobe spent two seasons withFerrum College,then known as Ferrum Junior College, where he played linebacker on the undefeated Coastal Conference championship team. Grobe earned the Catlin Citizenship Award and the Big Green Award. In the fall of 2002, Grobe was inducted into the Ferrum College Hall of Fame.

Coaching career

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Ohio

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Grobe obtained his first head coaching job in 1994 withOhio University.He inherited a struggling program that went 0–11 theprior season.[2]He guided theBobcatsto a 33–33–1 record over six seasons and wonMACcoach of the year in 1996.[3]

Wake Forest

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2006 season

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In 2006, Grobe ledWake Forestto a school record 11 wins with a perfect 6–0 road record. His Wake Forest team also won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship by virtue of defeatingGeorgia Tech,9–6, in theconference title game.The Demon Deacons earned their first trip to aBCSbowl gameand playedLouisvillein theOrange Bowl.Grobe was named theACC Coach of the Year,receiving 80 out of 80 votes from the league's media and making him the sixth Wake Forest coach to win the award. Grobe was also awarded theBobby Dodd Coach of the Year Awardand theAP Coach of the Yearin 2006.

On February 27, 2007, Grobe signed a 10-year contract extension through 2016.[4]

Resignation

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Grobe resigned from Wake Forest on December 2, 2013.[5]

Baylor

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On May 30, 2016, Grobe was hired as Baylor's head coach for the 2016 season, coming out of semi-retirement. He made it known when he was brought on that he would not be a full time coach for the University, which had suspended and later terminatedArt Brilesdue to theBaylor University sexual assault scandal.The Bears won their first six games before losing five in a row to close out the regular season.[6]However, the Bears were invited to their seventh consecutive bowl game, theMotel 6 Cactus Bowlin Arizona. Baylor entered the game as heavy underdogs to the 10–2Boise State Broncos,but the Bears rolled to an easy 31–12 victory. After the game, Grobe retired again.

San Antonio Commanders

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In 2018, Grobe was named the defensive coordinator of theSan Antonio Commandersof theAlliance of American Football.[7]On April 2, 2019, the league's football operations suspended[8]

Family

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Grobe and his wife Holly have two sons, Matt and Ben, and four grandchildren. Matt has been head men's golf coach atMarshall Universitysince 2012.[9]Ben has formerly served as Assistant Director of Football Operations at theUniversity of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Head coaching record

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Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Ohio Bobcats(Mid-American Conference)(1995–2000)
1995 Ohio 2–8–1 1–6–1 9th
1996 Ohio 6–6 5–3 4th
1997 Ohio 8–3 6–2 T–2nd(East)
1998 Ohio 5–6 5–3 T–3rd(East)
1999 Ohio 5–6 5–3 T–3rd(East)
2000 Ohio 7–4 5–3 T–3rd(East)
Ohio: 33–33–1 27–20–1
Wake Forest Demon Deacons(Atlantic Coast Conference)(2001–2013)
2001 Wake Forest 6–5 3–5 7th
2002 Wake Forest 7–6 3–5 7th WSeattle
2003 Wake Forest 5–7 3–5 7th
2004 Wake Forest 4–7 1–7 T–10th
2005 Wake Forest 4–7 3–5 T–4th(Atlantic)
2006 Wake Forest 11–3 6–2 1st(Atlantic) LOrange 17 18
2007 Wake Forest 9–4 5–3 T–2nd(Atlantic) WMeineke Car Care
2008 Wake Forest 8–5 4–4 T–3rd(Atlantic) WEagleBank
2009 Wake Forest 5–7 3–5 4th(Atlantic)
2010 Wake Forest 3–9 1–7 6th(Atlantic)
2011 Wake Forest 6–7 5–3 T–2nd(Atlantic) LMusic City
2012 Wake Forest 5–7 3–5 4th(Atlantic)
2013 Wake Forest 4–8 2–6 6th(Atlantic)
Wake Forest: 77–82 42–62
Baylor Bears(Big 12 Conference)(2016)
2016 Baylor 7–6 3–6 T–6th WCactus
Baylor: 7–6 3–6
Total: 117–121–1
National championshipConference titleConference division title or championship game berth

References

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  1. ^"Jim Grobe Named Baylor's Acting Head Football Coach".Archived fromthe originalon January 8, 2017.RetrievedJanuary 8,2017.
  2. ^"1994 Ohio Bobcats Schedule and Results".SR/College Football.Sports Reference LLC.RetrievedOctober 3,2016.
  3. ^"Wake Forest Tabs Jim Grobe As Head Football Coach".Wake Forest athletics. December 11, 2000.RetrievedJuly 10,2023.
  4. ^"Grobe inks new 10-year contract with Wake Forest".ESPN.Associated Press.February 27, 2007.RetrievedSeptember 25,2010.
  5. ^"Wake Forest's Jim Grobe resigns".ESPN.December 2, 2013.RetrievedDecember 2,2013.
  6. ^"Baylor's Grobe: No regrets over 1-season stint".ESPN.Associated Press. November 28, 2016.RetrievedNovember 17,2023.
  7. ^Luca, Greg (October 29, 2018)."San Antonio Commanders making preparations for upcoming season".ExpressNews.RetrievedNovember 1,2018.
  8. ^Kercheval, Ben (April 2, 2019)."AAF operations suspended, league's future in doubt after eight games of first season".cbssports.RetrievedApril 2,2019.
  9. ^"Matt Grobe".Marshall Thundering Herd.RetrievedJanuary 26,2022.