Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Head coach |
Team | Tennessee Tech |
Conference | OVC |
Record | 7–5 |
Biographical details | |
Born | August 1, 1964 |
Playing career | |
1983–1986 | Maine |
Position(s) | Quarterback |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1988–1989 | Boston College (GA) |
1990 | Maine (RB) |
1991 | Maine (assistant DL) |
1992 | Maine (DL) |
1993 | Maine (WR/TE) |
1994–1999 | Maine (QB) |
2000–2006 | Maine (AHC/OC/QB) |
2009–2019 | Old Dominion |
2024–present | Tennessee Tech |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 84–61 |
Bowls | 1–0 |
Tournaments | 2–2 (NCAA D-I playoffs) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
1 C-USA East Division (2016)
1 Big South–OVC (2024) | |
Awards | |
American Football Monthly Coach of the Year (2012) Division I Independent Coach of the Year (2013) | |
Robert S. Wilder (born August 1, 1964) is an American football coach who serves as the head coach for Tennessee Tech University. Before that, served as the head coach of the Old Dominion Monarchs football team. He was only the second coach all-time in the program's history and the first since football's rebirth at the school in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) in 2009.
Old Dominion played football for eleven seasons when the university was a two-year institution known as the Norfolk Division of the College of William and Mary. Between 1930 and 1940, the team compiled a record of 42-36-4. The program was then discontinued due to a rule banning freshman players and a US$10,000 debt.[1]
Hired in 2007, Wilder spent the first two years recruiting and starting up the program. In 2009, in his first competitive season as head coach, the Monarchs finished 9–2. That was the best winning record ever for a first-year program in college football's modern era.[2] The Monarchs were outscored by a total of only eight points in their two losses.
Wilder's inaugural team finished the year ranked in the top ten in five FCS statistical categories, including second in sacks allowed, third in scoring offense, turnover margin and net punting. The 2009 Monarchs were ninth in rushing offense.[2]
ODU was fifth in FCS attendance in 2009, selling out all of their home games in the 19,782-seat Foreman Field.[3]
In his first three years, Wilder led Old Dominion to a 26–7 record. In 2011, in the Monarchs first season in the Colonial Athletic Association, they earned a berth in the 2011 FCS playoffs, hosting crosstown rival Norfolk State. Also in 2011, after playing 27 games in its "modern era", ODU received its first Top 25 ranking on October 3, coming in at No. 21 in The Sports Network poll. The Monarchs were ranked among the Top Ten after competing in 33 games. [4]
In December 2023 Wilder was announced as the 13th head football coach of Tennessee Tech University.[5]