Cincinnati’s football sideline has been a revolving door for decades, and the Bearcats’ coaching line tells the story of the program’s rise, its rough patches and the names that helped shape it along the way.
Sid Gillman got the run started from 1949 to 1954. He won the Glass Bowl in Toledo in 1949 against the Rockets and later lost the Sun Bowl on Jan. 1, 1951 against West Texas State. Gillman went on to coach the Chargers and was remembered not just as a winner, but as a football innovator.
Georgie Blackburn followed from 1955 to 1960 and put together three winning seasons. Chuck Studley handled the job from 1961 to 1966, also with two winning seasons, before later joining the Cincinnati Bengals staff. Ray Callahan coached from 1969 to 1972 and had two winning seasons as well.
Tony Mason led UC from 1973 to 1978 and posted three winning seasons, including a 9-2 mark in 1978 before leaving for Arizona. Ralph Staub was in charge from 1977 to 1980 and had one winning season. Mike Gottfried then coached two seasons, going 6-5 in both 1981 and 1982 before later coaching at Kansas, Pitt and working as an ESPN analyst.
Watson Brown’s lone season at UC came in 1983, when he finished 4-6-1 and opened his career by knocking off No. 20 Penn State.
He later coached at Rice, Vanderbilt, UAB and Tennessee Tech. Dave Currey followed from 1984 to 1988, and Tim Murphy took over from 1989 to 1993 before leaving for Harvard.
Rick Minter held the post longer than anyone, coaching from 1994 to 2003. He had five winning seasons, reached five bowl games and won the 1997 Humanitarian Bowl in Boise, Idaho over Utah State.
Mark Dantonio coached from 2004 to 2006 before leaving for Michigan State. He coached UC Ring of Honor and James P. Kelly Hall of Fame quarterback Gino Guidugli and won the Fort Worth Bowl in 2004.
Brian Kelly arrived from Central Michigan and quickly lifted the program, posting three double-digit win seasons. He won the Papa Johns Bowl in Birmingham and guided UC to Orange and Sugar Bowl berths before leaving for Notre Dame. Kelly coached the Bearcats from 2007 to 2009.
Butch Jones also came from Central Michigan and coached from 2010 to 2012 before leaving for Tennessee. He had two winning seasons and won the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, while his staff coached UC to a Belk Bowl win in Charlotte in 2012 over Duke.
Tommy Tuberville coached UC from 2013 to 2016 and had three winning seasons, though all three bowl trips ended in losses.
Luke Fickell’s six-year run from 2017 to 2022 brought five winning seasons and bowl victories in the Military Bowl and Birmingham Bowl. He also led the Bearcats to the Peach Bowl against Georgia, the Cotton Bowl, a College Football Playoff semifinal against Alabama, and the Fenway Bowl against Louisville before leaving for Wisconsin.
Scott Satterfield, who previously was head coach at Appalachian State and Louisville, has been at UC since 2023. He posted a 7-6 mark in 2025 and lost in January’s AutoZone Liberty Bowl to Navy.
In Other News...
Cincinnati Suddenly Faces A Question Fans Never Wanted Asked
The Big 12s latest business move was supposed to be the eye-catcher, with the conference landing a new sponsorship deal with Monster that will send money to every school and put the companys branding on jerseys and across football and basketball surfaces. For Cincinnati, though, the leagues off-field momentum has been overshadowed by a much more uncomfortable development involving one of its former players and a question that reaches back into the recent past.
The NCAA has opened an inquiry into Brendan Sorsbys time at Cincinnati related to gambling, and that alone is enough to put the program in an uneasy spot. The issue is no longer just about one players conduct, but about how much the Bearcats may have known before the matter surfaced, a thread that now hangs over a school trying to keep its focus on the field while the larger conference keeps moving around it. [Read more 🡒]
Evan Tengesdahl Just Earned The National Respect Bearcats Fans Wanted
Evan Tengesdahl has been building toward this kind of national recognition for a while, and Pro Football Focus put it in plain view with its top 50 college players list for the 2026 season. The Cincinnati guard came in at No. 26 overall and was slotted second among all guards, a nod that fits with the preseason All-Big 12 attention he already picked up ahead of media days.
For Bearcats fans, the appeal is obvious: Tengesdahl has become the kind of interior lineman who can tilt a game without drawing much spotlight, thanks to strong marks in both run blocking and pass protection. PFF even placed him just behind Iowas Kade Pieper, who is expected to shift to center in 2026, which gives Tengesdahl another layer of national context as he heads into a season where the line should be one of Cincinnatis defining strengths. [Read more 🡒]
