Bill Stewart (American Football)
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William L. Stewart (June 11, 1952 – May 21, 2012), nicknamed "Stew", was an
American football American football, referred to simply as football in the United States and Canada and also known as gridiron football, is a team sport played by two teams of eleven players on a rectangular American football field, field with goalposts at e ...
coach. He was named interim head coach of the West Virginia Mountaineers after Rich Rodriguez left for
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in December 2007. After leading the Mountaineers to a 48–28 victory over the
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in the Fiesta Bowl, he was named the school's 32nd head football coach on January 3, 2008. Stewart resigned in the summer of 2011. He was previously the head coach of
Virginia Military Institute The Virginia Military Institute (VMI) is a public senior military college in Lexington, Virginia, United States. It was founded in 1839 as America's first state military college and is the oldest public senior military college in the U.S. In k ...
for three seasons.


Playing career

Stewart was a 1975 education graduate of Fairmont State College, where he was a three-year
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and team captain for the WVIAC champions in 1974.


Coaching career


Early career

Stewart's coaching career began at his alma mater of Fairmont State, where he was a student assistant coach for a season. He became an assistant coach at Sistersville High School in Sistersville, West Virginia, in 1975. In 1977, he moved to Salem College, where he was an assistant football and head track coach for two seasons. In 1979, he was an assistant coach at the
University of North Carolina The University of North Carolina is the Public university, public university system for the state of North Carolina. Overseeing the state's 16 public universities and the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, it is commonly referre ...
. He was also assistant coach at
Marshall University Marshall University is a public university, public research university in Huntington, West Virginia, United States. It was founded in 1837 and is named after John Marshall, the fourth Chief Justice of the United States, chief justice of the Uni ...
(1980), the
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(1981–1983), the
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(1984), North Carolina a second time (1985–1987),
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(1988–1989), and the
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(1990–1993).


VMI

In 1994, Stewart assumed the head coaching position at
Virginia Military Institute The Virginia Military Institute (VMI) is a public senior military college in Lexington, Virginia, United States. It was founded in 1839 as America's first state military college and is the oldest public senior military college in the U.S. In k ...
(VMI). In three years, he compiled an 8–25 record. Stewart gave current
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' head coach Mike Tomlin his first job as an assistant at VMI in 1995. Tomlin returned the favor by vouching for Stewart with the West Virginia University administration. Stewart resigned in 1996 after making a racially insensitive comment towards a player regarding his on-field behavior. After what he believed to be excessive celebration by one of his players following a play, he told him "Don't let your actions give people reason to call you a n-----." Stewart was forced to resign and later sued VMI for money he thought he was owed. Stewart described the incident as "an isolated incident" that happened while he was "trying to help the kid", and has said he never uttered another slur since.


Canadian Football League

Stewart served as the offensive line coach for the
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of the
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in 1998. His line blocked for Mike Pringle, the first 2,000-yard rusher in CFL history. In 1999, he moved on to be the offensive coordinator of the
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where he coached two all-conference receivers and a one thousand-yard rusher.


West Virginia


2000–2007

Head coach Don Nehlen hired Stewart at WVU in January, 2000 as the quarterbacks coach. Stewart was retained by Rich Rodriguez when he became the head coach after the 2000 season. Stewart remained the quarterbacks coach and special teams coach until 2007 when he moved to coach the tight ends and served as associate head coach.


2008 season

Following Rodriguez's departure to become the head coach at the
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on December 16, 2007; Stewart was named interim head coach of the Mountaineers for the 2008 Fiesta Bowl. In that game Stewart led the team to a 48–28 upset win over the #3
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. During the press conference following the awards ceremony, Fiesta Bowl
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and West Virginia quarterback Pat White said of Stewart, "He needs that job. He deserves it, the head coaching job." WVU booster and co-owner of the
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Ken Kendrick, however, was unhappy with the hiring of Stewart. Kendrick called Stewart "overmatched" and said that he was "very concerned" for the future of WVU football. On January 3, 2008, a day after the Fiesta Bowl victory, Stewart was announced as West Virginia's 32nd head coach. Stewart agreed to a five-year contract for $800,000 a year, totaling a $4 million base salary. Stewart hired former Mountaineer assistant coaches and players Steve Dunlap, David Lockwood, and Doc Holliday, along with assistant coach Chris Beatty and Dave Johnson. Stewart was also able to keep defensive coordinator Jeff Casteel and defensive line coach Bill Kirelawich. On February 6, 2008, Stewart's recruiting class signed 23 letters of intent. The class did not include running back Terence Kerns, from Hargrave Military Academy, who later signed. Hawaiian center Benji Kemoeatu signed later in March as well. Jerome Swinton, a cornerback from
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, was called “The best football player we have...he’s probably the best football player we recruited," by Stewart. The 2008 class, led by 5-star offensive guard Josh Jenkins from
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, was ranked 37th by Scout.com and 44th by Rivals.com. West Virginia opened up the 2008 season with a 48–21 victory over Villanova, in which Pat White threw for a career-high 5 touchdowns. However, the Mountaineers were then upset by East Carolina, 24–3. White was held under 100 yards passing and rushing, and running back Noel Devine was held under 100 yards rushing for the second consecutive game. The Mountaineers then traveled to
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, where they were defeated by the Colorado Buffaloes, 17–14, in overtime. The loss was highlighted by a 23-yard field goal miss in overtime by senior kicker Pat McAfee that allowed Colorado to kick a field goal to win the game. Before conference play opened, the Mountaineers defeated
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, 27–3, to even their record at 2–2. Stewart followed up the victory with a 24–17 win over
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, and then a 17–6 win over Syracuse to produce a 4–2 record. Next, the Mountaineers rebounded from being down 17–3 before halftime against the
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, to score 31 unanswered points on the way to a 34–17 victory in Morgantown. The Mountaineers then upset the #25 Connecticut Huskies 35–13 for the Mountaineers' first road victory of the season and to move them into the national polls for the first time since before the loss to Colorado (20 – AP, 23 – USA Today, 25 – BCS). However, they dropped out of the national rankings after a 26–23 overtime loss to Big East champion
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. After a 35–21 win over
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, the Mountaineers dropped the Backyard Brawl, 19–15, to #25
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. The Mountaineers finished out the regular season with a 13–7 victory over
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in a "White-Out" to honor Pat White. The team finished 9–4 in Stewart's inaugural season with a 31–30 victory over #25
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in the Meineke Car Care Bowl.


2009 season

Stewart and the coaching staff at WVU opened up the 2009 football season by signing the #23/#27 (Scout.com/Rivals.com) recruiting class, which included the #3 quarterback Eugene Smith, the #5 running back Tavon Austin, and the #8 receiver Logan Heastie. On the field, the Mountaineers had a perfect record at home, including a 19–16 upset of then-#8
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in the Backyard Brawl. However, the team's record away from home included three regular season losses (at Auburn, at
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, and at
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). The Mountaineers also lost in the Gator Bowl versus
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in Bobby Bowden's final game as head football coach of the Seminoles.


2010 season

Stewart coached West Virginia to a second-straight 9–3 regular season record and a share of the Big East title (although the BCS bid went to the University of Connecticut due to a tiebreaker edge). However, for the second consecutive season, the Mountaineers played poorly in their bowl game, suffering a 23–7 loss to NC State in the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando, Florida on December 28. The game marked a season low for points scored by WVU and season highs for points allowed, turnovers, and margin of defeat. After the regular season ended, it was announced that Stewart would coach the team for the 2011 season, after which he would step down and take a position in the WVU Athletic Department. He would be succeeded as head coach by Dana Holgorsen, who would spend 2011 as the team's offensive coordinator.


2011 coaching controversy

On June 10, 2011, Stewart resigned and Holgorsen took over as head coach, effective immediately. The relationship between Stewart and Holgorsen had been strained from the beginning, and came to a head in late May when Colin Dunlap, a journalist with KDKA-FM in Pittsburgh, reported that Stewart had asked him while he was a reporter with the ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'', and a reporter with '' The Charleston Gazette'' to dig up dirt about Holgorsen and smear his name in headlines for their respective papers. These calls were made in December before Holgorsen even came to West Virginia. While athletic director Oliver Luck was unable to fully substantiate the reporters' claims, he determined that Stewart had become too much of a distraction and forced Stewart's immediate resignation. WVU and Stewart subsequently negotiated a buyout of Stewart's contract. It was reported that Stewart was fired for "conduct detrimental to the university," but was allowed to publicly save face by resigning.


Personal life and death

Stewart was a native of New Martinsville, West Virginia. He married the former Karen Kacor on July 1, 1978. He had one son, Blaine. He was a
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.Finder, Chuck
WVU hires its interim coach
''Post Gazette'', January 4, 2008. Accessed June 4, 2008.
Stewart died on May 21, 2012, of an apparent heart attack. After collapsing while playing golf with former WVU athletic director Ed Pastilong at Stonewall Resort near
Roanoke, West Virginia Roanoke is an unincorporated community in southern Lewis County, West Virginia, United States. Most of the original town is located under of Stonewall Jackson Lake's water. A display at the Stonewall Resort State Park's lodge tells the story ...
, he was taken to a nearby hospital in
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, where he was pronounced dead.


Head coaching record


Notes


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Stewart, Bill 1952 births 2012 deaths Air Force Falcons football coaches Arizona State Sun Devils football coaches Fairmont State Fighting Falcons football players Marshall Thundering Herd football coaches Salem Tigers football coaches North Carolina Tar Heels football coaches Montreal Alouettes coaches Navy Midshipmen football coaches West Virginia Mountaineers football coaches William & Mary Tribe football coaches Winnipeg Blue Bombers coaches VMI Keydets football coaches People from New Martinsville, West Virginia American Protestants Sportspeople from Wetzel County, West Virginia