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Hal Mumme was 11-38 at New Mexico State, with just six wins against D-I FBS schools in his four seasons.
McMurry athletics photo
Coach goes from NMSU to McMurry
McMurry athletic director Ron Holmes announced Hal Mumme as the 20th coach in the program's history Wednesday morning at a news conference. Mumme, who coached Division I FBS New Mexico State to a 3-9 record before he was fired last fall, and his new staff of McMurry assistant coaches start their duties April 16.

"Hal Mumme's track record of turning struggling football programs around was a strong factor in our hiring decision," McMurry president John Russell said. "He is a Texas native with strong ties all over the state as well as throughout the nation. We feel his hiring rejuvenates the McMurry football program and brings excitement to the McMurry family and Big Country football fans."

"Coach Mumme's impressive resume stood out when we were filing through the applicants," Holmes said. "He has extensive coaching experience in nearly all levels of collegiate football."

"We're going to go to work," Mumme said. "It's going to take an entire campus community effort to get this job done. We're in a conference with a lot of good coaches. ... We'll be out recruiting tomorrow morning."

Mumme was 11-38 in four seasons at New Mexico State before he was let go. Five of those wins came against Division I FCS schools, formerly known as Division I-AA. Before NMSU, Mumme revived several programs. At NAIA Iowa Wesleyan, he inherited a squad of three players and took them to a 7-4 record his first year and 25-10 in three seasons. He moved to Division II Valdosta State and went 40-7-1, including the program's first trips to the NCAA playoffs. Moving to Kentucky, he took over a program that had not had a winning record in the past seven seasons and led them to a 17-15 mark in three years before a 2-9 mark in 2000, a year after which he resigned. Kentucky was placed on probation, losing scholarships and postseason eligibility.

After 18 months, Mumme was hired to restart Southeastern Louisiana football at the I-AA level and took the Lions to a 12-11 mark in two seasons before moving to New Mexico State. In 18 seasons as a head coach, Mumme has a record of 108-102-1 and has taken teams to the postseason seven times.

Mumme is known as an offensive innovator who rewrites offensive record books wherever he coaches. His "Air Raid" attack will be a change of pace for a McMurry football program that last year finished last in the American Southwest Conference in points scored (13.0 points per game), last in total offense (253.1 yards per game), and last in passing yards per game (111.4).

He also coached Texas high school ball in Corpus Christi, Copperas Cove and Aransas Pass, and was an assistant coach at West Texas State and Texas-El Paso.
Email this article |   Permalink |  Apr 15, 2009

MIT hires second coach in program's history
On April 15, MIT athletic director Julie Soriero announced the hiring of Chad Martinovich to serve as the second head coach in the history of the program. Martinovich makes the trip to Cambridge, Mass., from RPI, where he was the defensive coordinator the past four years.

Martinovich takes over the reins from long-time head coach Dwight Smith, who announced his retirement last Nov. 12 following a 5-5 season in which he earned NEFC Coach of the Year honors for the second time. Smith had been with the program since its return to the club ranks in 1978, and guided the Engineers into their first varsity game in 1988.

Although change at the top has been infrequent for the grid program,
Martinovich is poised to make an immediate impact with the Cardinal and
Gray. At RPI, Martinovich's defense ranked first in the Liberty League three consecutive years, while the team qualified for the NCAA playoffs in 2007.

"Chad will bring a dynamic personality and a strong work ethic to our
program. His enthusiasm and passion for building our program will be
evident from the first day and I believe the student-athletes who play for him at MIT will be motivated to succeed and build on our history."

In 2004, Martinovich joined the RPI staff as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Although Martinovich started his career on the defensive side of the ball, he served as the receivers coach at Albany in 1997, before accepting offensive coordinator positions at Swarthmore (1998-00) and Hamilton (2001-03). Martinovich has coached several All-Americans, numerous All-Conference performers, and had a player earn a spot at an NFL training camp.

"I'm excited and really looking forward to being part of the MIT family," said Martinovich. "It's a tremendous honor to follow in Coach Smith's footsteps, and I am eager to bring the alums into the fold as soon as possible. Collectively, we aim to build on the program's solid foundation, and take MIT football to new heights by delivering a great product on and off the field."
Email this article |   Permalink |  Apr 15, 2009

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