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Fred Akers (born March 17, 1938) is a former American football player and coach. He served as head football coach at the University of Wyoming (1975–1976), the University of Texas at Austin (1977–1986), and Purdue University (1987–1990), compiling a career college football record of 108–75–3.
Akers' notable accomplishments include a Heisman Trophy for Earl Campbell in the 1977 season and national title chances in the 1978 and 1984 Cotton Bowl Classics. In both of those years, Texas went undefeated in the regular season only to lose in their bowl game. Akers received criticism from those who believed he failed to match the standard set by previous head coach Darrell Royal. However, much of that was mitigated by an impressive overall record and a winning mark against Barry Switzer of the Oklahoma Sooners, who was 3–0–1 against Texas before Akers came along. However, in Akers' last five years he struggled against Oklahoma, going 1–3–1, and against Texas A&M, losing his last three game to the Aggies by an average margin of 23 points. Akers drew ire from the Texas faithful for losing bowl games at the end of four consecutive seasons (1982–1985). In 1986, after notching Texas' first losing record in 30 years, he left to become the head football coach at Purdue University. He was not nearly as successful as he had been at Texas; his teams only won 12 games in four years.[1] Akers was rumored as a candidate for the Baylor University job in 1993 that ultimately went to Chuck Reedy.
Akers is a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. As of August 2008, Akers lives in Horseshoe Bay, Texas.[2]
[3]
Pound sign (#) denotes interim coach.
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
College football, Canadian football, Gridiron football, Super Bowl, Australian rules football
Purdue University system, Indiana, University of Chicago, Big Ten Conference, Indiana University
UTEP Miners football, New Mexico Lobos football, Arizona Wildcats football, North Carolina Tar Heels football, Hyundai
American football, Darrell Royal, Mississippi State Bulldogs football, Washington Huskies football, Texas Longhorns football
Big Ten Conference, Illinois Fighting Illini football, Northwestern Wildcats football, West Lafayette, Indiana, Ross–Ade Stadium
Purdue Boilermakers football, Northwestern Wildcats football, Seattle, Minneapolis, Ross–Ade Stadium
Big Eight Conference, 1983 Texas Longhorns football team, AP Poll, Coaches Poll, 1983 NCAA Division I-A football season
Texas, Cotton Bowl Classic, Cotton Bowl (stadium), Big Eight Conference, 1979 Cotton Bowl Classic