Bobby Keasler (born September 8, 1945) is a former American football coach. He served as the head football coach at McNeese State University from 1990 to 1998 and at the University of Louisiana at Monroe from 1999 until 2002, compiling a career college football record of 86–62–2.[1]

Bobby Keasler
Biographical details
Born (1945-09-08) September 8, 1945 (age 79)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1979–1980New Iberia HS (LA)
1981–1989Northeast Louisiana (assistant)
1990–1998McNeese State
1999–2002Louisiana–Monroe
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1996McNeese State
Head coaching record
Overall86–62–2 (college)
Tournaments8–7 (NCAA D-I-AA playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
4 Southland (1991, 1993, 1995, 1997)
Awards
Southland Coach of the Year (1990–1991, 1993, 1995, 1997)

Head coaching record

edit

College

edit
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs TSN# Coaches°
McNeese State Cowboys (Southland Conference) (1990–1998)
1990 McNeese State 5–6 4–2 2nd
1991 McNeese State 6–4–2 4–1–2 1st L NCAA Division I-AA First Round
1992 McNeese State 9–4 6–1 2nd L NCAA Division I-AA Quarterfinal
1993 McNeese State 10–3 7–0 1st L NCAA Division I-AA Quarterfinal 5
1994 McNeese State 10–3 5–1 2nd L NCAA Division I-AA Quarterfinal 5
1995 McNeese State 13–1 5–0 1st L NCAA Division I-AA Semifinal 1
1996 McNeese State 3–8 1–5 7th
1997 McNeese State 13–2 6–1 T–1st L NCAA Division I-AA Championship 6 2
1998 McNeese State 9–3 5–2 T–2nd L NCAA Division I-AA First Round 6 8
McNeese State: 78–34–2 43–13–2
Louisiana–Monroe Indians (NCAA Division I-A independent) (1999–2000)
1999 Louisiana–Monroe 5–6
2000 Louisiana–Monroe 1–10
Louisiana–Monroe Indians (Sun Belt Conference) (2001–2002)
2001 Louisiana–Monroe 2–9 2–4 T–4th
2002 Louisiana–Monroe 0–3[n 1] 0–0[n 1] [n 1]
Louisiana–Monroe: 8–28 2–4
Total: 86–62–2
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

Notes

edit
  1. ^ a b c Keasler resigned after the first three games of the 2002 season, before the start of conference play. Mike Collins replaced Keasler as interim head coach and led Louisiana–Monroe to a record of 3–6 over the final nine games of the season. The Indians finished 3–9 overall and 2–4 in Sun Belt Conference play, tying for fourth place.

References

edit