Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Texas Tech fires former QB Kingsbury after 6 years as coach

Kliff Kingsbury is no longer the head coach at Texas Tech, his alma mater. (Ryan Michalesko / Associated Press)
Associated Press

LUBBOCK, Texas – Kliff Kingsbury was fired Sunday by Texas Tech after the former record-setting Red Raiders quarterback had a losing overall record in his six seasons as their head coach.

The move came a day after the Red Raiders finished their third consecutive losing season with a 35-24 loss to Baylor when they had a chance to get bowl eligible. That was their fifth straight loss after a 5-2 start this year, though it seems unlikely that a win in the finale would have saved Kingsbury’s job.

“It’s not based on one game. This type of decision is not based on one season. This decision was made based on a three-year pattern, a three-year pattern of inconsistency,” athletic director Kirby Hocutt said during a campus news conference. “We saw progress, but we also saw lapses of progress in key critical areas.”

Kingsbury finished with a 35-40 overall record, a .467 winning percentage that is better than only two of the other 14 Texas Tech coaches in the program’s history. As a player, he was a star quarterback for the Red Raiders under coach Mike Leach.

Texas Tech was 19-35 in Big 12 games under Kingsbury, including 3-6 in the conference each of the past three seasons even while consistently having one of the nation’s top offenses with quality quarterbacks. The Red Raiders have now gone nine consecutive seasons without a winning record in Big 12 play.

“We’ve had one of the most highly prolific offenses in the nation and we still sit here today with a losing record over the past six years,” Hocutt said. “We’ve got to be a well-rounded football team. We cannot be one-dimensional and have success in this league.”

The Red Raiders averaged 520 total yards and 38 points a game under Kingsbury. They gave up 487 yards and 37 points a game, even while showing periods of improvement in defensive coordinator David Gibbs’ four seasons.

After starting 7-0 in Kingsbury’s debut in 2013, the Red Raiders finished 8-5. They had a five-game losing streak before beating Arizona State in the Holiday Bowl to cap what ended up being his best season.

Hocutt said Kingsbury described Kingsbury as a good man who represented Tech in a first-class manner.

“He epitomizes class and he is truly a Red Raider,” Hocutt said.

“For what he achieved and contributed to Texas Tech, as an athlete, a student and our football coach, Kliff Kingsbury has a special place in the hearts of Red Raiders,” Texas Tech President Lawrence Schovanec said. “As a coach, he was a model of class and character, and he always put the best interests of his student-athletes first. I admire and appreciate all he has done for Texas Tech.”

Kingsbury was only 33 when he took over as head coach of his alma mater following Tommy Tuberville’s unexpected resignation after the 2012 season.

At the time, Kingsbury was coming off his only season as offensive coordinator at Texas A&M in 2012, when Aggies quarterback Johnny Manziel became the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy. Kingsbury had previously coached Case Keenum at Houston.