David
Bailiff
Hometown: San Marcos, TX
Sport: Football
Years Played: 1977-1980
Hall of Honor Induction: 1996
David Bailiff was introduced on January 19 as
the 18th head football coach in the history of Rice University by Rice
Athletic Director Chris Del Conte.
Bailiff, 48, had spent the last three seasons
as the head coach at Texas State University in San Marcos, TX where
he posted a 21-15 record while leading the Bobcats to their first Southland
Conference championship and the semifinals of the NCAA Division 1AA
playoffs in 2005.
In his past two seasons at Texas State, Bailiff
produced standouts both on the field and in the classroom. He produced
both the Southland Offensive and Defensive Players of the Year in 2005
(Barrick Nealy and Fred Evans) and the league's Student Athlete of the
Year for football in 2006 (Walter Musgrove). Overall, he produced a
total of 14 All Southland Conference first team selections, and 13 players
who were named to the academic all conference squad in his last two
years.
While his own background has been as a defensive
coach, Bailiff's squads have led the league in total offense in each
of the last two seasons.
Faced with a rebuilding season after his 2005
Southland title, Bailiff's 2006 Bobcats closed with a rush, winning
four of their last six and wrapping up with a 28-21 win at Sam Houston
State. That victory knocked the Bearkats out of contention for the league
title and gave the Bobcats their first win in Huntsville since 2000.
In addition to re-energizing the Bobcats fortunes
on the field, Bailiff also engineered a program that was embraced by
the community in San Marcos.
For the past two summers, Bailiff and the Bobcats
made a point of getting out in the community to meet with area business
leaders and personally deliver schedule posters for the coming seasons.
Beyond that, team members were involved in projects throughout the community
from making appearances at San Marcos elementary schools' Citizenship
Days to lending a hand for Habitat for Humanity projects. The Bobcats
also took time way from preseason drills each season and helped students
move in to the dorms.
Thanks to these efforts, Texas State set school
record for total attendance as well as attendance average during the
2005 season and then bettered that mark in 2006.
The 2005 season was truly a magical one. The
Bobcats went 9-2 during the regular season with their lone losses coming
on the road at Division I-A Texas A&M as well as at Nicholls State,
the 2005 SLC co-champion.
In the team's first Division I-AA playoff game,
the Bobcats stormed back from a 35-16 deficit against Division I-AA
national power Georgia Southern to score 34 unanswered points and beat
the Eagles 50-35. The `Cats then defeated Cal Poly 14-7 to move on to
the national semifinals. Only a 40-37 overtime loss to Northern Iowa
stood between Texas State and an appearance in the Division I-AA National
Championship Game.
Bailiff was named the American Football Coaches
Association's Region 5 Coach of the Year and finished third in the voting
for the Eddie Robinson Award presented annually to the top coach in
Division I-AA.
In 2004, Bailiff inherited a team which was picked
to finish last in the Southland Conference. But the Bobcats posted a
5-6 record and headed into the final week of the season still with conference
championship aspirations. Texas State would end up going 3-2 in the
Southland Conference and finished third in the league, the team's highest
ranking in the SLC since 2000.
Bailiff's roots with Texas State already ran
deep when he was named the Bobcats' 14th head coach Feb. 5, 2004. He
was a team captain during his playing career at what was then Southwest
Texas State University. He would return to coach at Texas State during
two separate stints, serving as defensive coordinator and assistant
head coach in the late 1990s.
Prior to being named head coach, Bailiff spent
three seasons on the staff at TCU. He served as the Horned Frogs' defensive
coordinator in both 2002 and 2003 while working with the team's defensive
lineman.
The 2003 Horned Frogs posted an 11-2 record and
were ranked 25th in the final Associated Press writers poll and 24th
in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll.
Bailiff was part of a staff which built quite
a tradition on defense at TCU. During his three seasons in Fort Worth,
the Horned Frogs were ranked 24th, 1st and 38th in the country in total
defense and 10th, first and ninth against the run.
In 2002, TCU allowed just 240.2 yards of total
offense per game which led the country. The Horned Frogs surrendered
an average 64.8 yards on the ground. During the year, the Frogs held
Tulane to a school-record -53 yards rushing. TCU also ranked second
in the country in pass efficiency defense, allowing opponents to complete
less than 39 percent of their passes.
Six TCU defensive players earned all-conference
accolades in 2002 including Conference USA Defensive Player of the year
and Second-Team All-American LaMarcus MacDonald.
While at TCU, the Horned Frogs played in a bowl
game every season - the galleryfurniture.com bowl (2001), AXA Liberty
Bowl (2002) and the Plains Capital Fort Worth Bowl (2003).
Bailiff, who is known as one of the premiere
recruiters in the state of Texas, joined the TCU staff after serving
as assistant head coach at Texas State University.
He began his coaching career as the defensive
line coach at New Braunfels High School (1982-84). He went into private
business from 1984-88 before returning to the coaching ranks.
His first collegiate coaching position was at
Texas State, serving as a defensive graduate assistant coach in 1988
before being elevated to the Bobcats' defensive line coach in 1989.
He worked under the late John O'Hara for one year and with Dennis Franchione
for two years during his first coaching stint in San Marcos.
Bailiff left Texas State in 1992 for an assistant
coaching position at New Mexico where he handled the defensive line
and recruiting. He returned to Texas State in 1997 as defensive coordinator
and added assistant head coach responsibilities to his role in 1999.
It was in 1999 that Bailiff was selected the
NCAA Division I-AA Assistant Coach of the Year by the American Football
Coaches Association. While at TCU Bailiff was also honored as the Top
Assistant Football Coach by the All-American Football Foundation following
the Horned Frogs' 2002 season.
As a player, Bailiff was named All-Lone Star
Conference as well as All-America honorable mention while playing at
Texas State from 1977-80. He served as a team captain in 1980 and was
named honorable mention to the Lone Star Team of the Decade.
Bailiff is married to the former Angie Daniels
of Versailles, Mo. He has a daughter, Brooke (22), and the couple has
twin nine-year-old sons, Grayson and Gregory.