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==Coaching history==
==Coaching history==
===High school and college assistant coaching===
===High school and college assistant coaching===
Kincaid and his family relocated to [[St. Petersburg, Florida]] after he completed his college degree. He had planned to go into business there, but his offer to help coach a local [[high school football]] team soon earned him a full-time job instead. The couple moved to [[Virginia]], where he coached a rural high school team in the [[Appalachian Mountains]].
Kincaid and his family relocated to [[St. Petersburg, Florida]] after he completed his college degree. He had planned to go into business there, but his offer to help coach a local [[high school football]] team soon earned him a full-time job instead. The couple moved to [[Virginia]], where he coached a rural high school team in the [[Appalachian Mountains]].<ref>[http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1817&dat=19710811&id=vgIdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=KpwEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4969,1907169 Tuscaloosa News] "Head Grid Post to Al Kincaid" August 11, 1971</ref>


Over the years, Kincaid moved on to coaching positions at the [[University of Alabama]] (under [[Paul "Bear" Bryant]]), and at [[East Carolina University]].
Over the years, Kincaid moved on to coaching positions at the [[University of Alabama]] (under [[Paul "Bear" Bryant]]), and at [[East Carolina University]].

Revision as of 03:05, 24 April 2010

Al Kincaid

Al Kincaid is an American football player and coach, who served as the head coach at the both University of Wyoming and Arkansas State University.

Playing history

Kincaid is a native of Alabama and was the star quarterback at Virginia Tech,[1] where he met the homecoming queen who became his wife.

Coaching history

High school and college assistant coaching

Kincaid and his family relocated to St. Petersburg, Florida after he completed his college degree. He had planned to go into business there, but his offer to help coach a local high school football team soon earned him a full-time job instead. The couple moved to Virginia, where he coached a rural high school team in the Appalachian Mountains.[2]

Over the years, Kincaid moved on to coaching positions at the University of Alabama (under Paul "Bear" Bryant), and at East Carolina University.

Wyoming

He became offensive coordinator at Wyoming under Pat Dye, and succeeded him as head coach after the 1980 season. Kincaid signed a three-year contract at $45,000 per year, agreeing to have 20% of the salary withheld in interest-bearing escrow and forfeited if he broke his contract. In 1983 he was courted by Memphis State University after head coach Rex Dockery died in a plane crash, but he withdrew his name from consideration, deciding to remain at Wyoming.

In his five years leading Wyoming, he compiled a record of 29-29[3] Following a 3-8 season in 1985, he was fired, and he was succeeded by Dennis Erickson.

Arkansas State

Kincaid went on to be the 22nd head coach at Arkansas State University for the 1990 and 1991 seasons. He accumulated a record of 4 wins, 17 losses, and 1 tie.[4]

Personal life

Kincaid worked as a sports consultant in Decatur, Alabama, and then returned to Tuscaloosa and coaching, again serving as an assistant at the University of Alabama. From there, Kincaid went on to become head coach at Arkansas State.

In 1992, his 23-year marriage ended in divorce (his ex-wife Nanci Kincaid remarried Arizona head coach Dick Tomey in 1997). However, the couple remained close, and as a writer in North Carolina, she still was assisting him in player recruiting in 1998, when he was an assistant head football coach and offensive coordinator at Temple University.

References

  1. ^ The Tuscaloosa News "Al Kincaid: Things Have Changed" September 18, 1969
  2. ^ Tuscaloosa News "Head Grid Post to Al Kincaid" August 11, 1971
  3. ^ College Football Data Warehouse Wyoming head coaching records
  4. ^ College Football Data Warehouse Arkansas State University head coaching records