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Ray Goff

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Sport(s)
  
Football

Overall
  
46–34–1

Career end
  
1976

1974–1976
  
Georgia

Name
  
Ray Goff

Education
  
University of Georgia


1981–1988
  
Georgia (assistant)

Role
  
American football player

Position
  
Quarterback

1989–1995
  
Georgia

Career start
  
1974

Nominations
  
Heisman Trophy

Ray Goff httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages1665402754im

Born
  
July 19, 1955 (age 68) Moultrie, Georgia (
1955-07-19
)

1979–1980
  
South Carolina (assistant)

Similar People
  
Jim Donnan, Vince Dooley, Mark Richt

Ray goff tds vs florida 76


Ray Goff (born July 10, 1955) is a former American football player and coach. He served as the head coach at the University of Georgia from 1989 to 1995, compiling a record of 46–34–1.

Contents

Ray Goff Ray Goff CoachRayGoff Twitter

Ray Goff - Junior Season Highlights & Sophomore Highlights


Playing career

Ray Goff Ray Goff Kirby Smart will excel at UGA

Goff attended the University of Georgia, where he played quarterback from 1974–1976, leading the team to 19 wins over his final two seasons under coach Vince Dooley. As a player, he was named Southeastern Conference player of the year in 1976 when the team he captained won the SEC title. He was a three-year letterman at Georgia.

Coaching career

Ray Goff RAY GOFF TDs vs Florida 76 YouTube

Goff served as an assistant coach for the South Carolina Gamecocks before returning to Georgia as an assistant in 1981. While an assistant at Georgia from 1981 to 1988, he held the positions of recruiting coordinator, tight ends coach, and running backs coach, and earned a reputation as an excellent recruiter. When Dooley, the winningest coach in Georgia history, retired after the 1988 season, Goff — then a 33-year-old running backs coach — was the surprise choice to succeed him.

Head coaching career

Ray Goff From Goff to Smart a UGA man runs the Dawgs again Jay Black on

Goff's tenure got off to a slow start, with just ten wins in his first two seasons, before reeling off nine wins in 1991 and ten in 1992; the latter campaign finished with Georgia ranked eighth by the Coaches Poll. Over the next three years, Goff's teams never again posted as many as seven wins, and he was fired in 1995. His teams only made brief appearances in the Coaches Poll in 1993, 1994 and 1995, reaching #13 in the 1993 preseason polls. Goff's 1995 team was on the receiving end of Steve Spurrier's "Half a Hundred Between the Hedges" game in which his Florida Gators team put up 52 points on the beleaguered Bulldogs. They were the first team to do so inside Sanford Stadium. Spurrier, known for his colorful comments about other coaches, subsequently referred to Goff as "Ray Goof." This would prove to be one of the final straws in Goff's tenure at Georgia. He was fired at the end of the year having acquired a 6–6 record for the season.

Coaching tree

Assistant coaches under Ray Goff who became NCAA head coaches:

  • Mike MacIntyre: San Jose State (2010–2012), Colorado (2013–present)
  • Quotes

    They've gone out on a limb, there's no doubt about it.

    We never had a more effective option runner than Ray Goff. He appeared slow because of his size, but he was really pretty fast. He was a swivel-hipped runner with great leg strength.

    References

    Ray Goff Wikipedia