To
play for championships, to graduate
his players and to have a team whose
members are well respected in society,
both on and off the playing field,
is the vision of success Southern
University head football coach Pete
Richardson has for his program.
The success of the
football program under Richardson
has been well documented. Southern
University has four, 11-win seasons
and one 12 win season -- the 2003
Championship season in Richardson's
tenure.
Southern University
has won five conference titles under
Richardson, including back-to-back-to-back
crowns in 1997, '98 and '99; and the
2003 SWAC Championship, put the Jags
and Richardson back into the football
fray, as Black College National Champions,
all while posting a 105-38 overall
mark under Richardson's guise. His
105 wins ranks him second in SU's
history, trailing only the legendary,
A.W. Mumford.
Exploding on the
scene in 1993, Richardson's impact
was immediately felt around the Southwestern
Athletic Conference (SWAC) as he led
Southern to a 11-1 season (only the
school's second, 11-plus win season),
its first conference title in 18 years
(a shared title in 1975) and the school's
first outright crown in 34 seasons
(1959).
Though there have
been setbacks in Richardson's 14-year
stay, those setbacks have done nothing
but breed more success. Last season's
4-5 mark, along with an inconsistent
6-5 mark in his second year on the
bluff, including a four-game losing
skid -- the longest record of futility
in the Richardson era.
After an off-season
that focused on the `basics of football,'
a rigorous strength and conditioning
regiment and a new defensive scheme,
the Jaguars bounced back and posted
the school's third 11-plus win season
(11-1) and was declared national champions
of black college football with a 30-25
win over Florida A&M University
in the fifth annual McDonald's Heritage
Bowl.
Richardson would
use a rigorous off-season program
to instill a winning attitude in the
members of the Jaguar football team.
His team would respond by going 11-1
overall and an undefeated 8-0 in conference
play. Southern University claimed
its second conference title under
Richardson and was regarded as black
college national champions by the
American Sports Wire after handing
South Carolina State a 34-28 defeat
in Heritage Bowl VII.
With the Jaguars
setting the standard in the SWAC,
and now challenging for championships
and national recognition, the Pete
Richardson Era is well on its way
to becoming one of the more colorful
and legendary in collegiate football
history.
Pete Richardson came
to Southern after five years at Winston-Salem
State (1988-1992). In five seasons
there, he compiled a record of 41-14-1.
After assuming the reigns of an already
successful program, Richardson's task
was to maintain the established level
of success and move the program beyond.
He did just that. Richardson captured
three CIAA conference championships
(1988, '90-91) and led the Rams to
two berths in the Division II playoffs
(1990-91). At Winston-Salem State
Richardson joined the coaching staff
at Winston-Salem State in 1979 and
initially gained quality experience
as the offensive backfield coach of
the program. The following year, he
moved to the defensive backfield and
became the defensive secondary coach.
After a two-year stint there, Richardson
was elevated to defensive coordinator
before being named the head coach
in 1988.
Richardson's honors
include being named the Black Coaches
Association's Coach of the Year in
1998, five-time SWAC Coach of the
Year (1995, '97, '98, '99 and `03),
Atlanta's 100% Wrong Club's Coach
of the Year (1995, '97, '98, '99 and
`03), Washington D.C.'s Pigskin Club's
Coach of the Year (1995, '98 and `03),
the Kodak Region IV Coach of the Year
(1995) and the Sheridan Broadcasting
Network's Coach of the Year (1997
& 2003). Richardson's also had
the distinction of being named the
1999 Nokia Sugar Bowl Louisiana Coach
of the Year.
Richardson has coached
in five bowl games, has six collegiate
conference crowns to his accord (three
CIAA and three SWAC) and holds the
honorable distinction of being the
only Southwestern Athletic Conference
coach never to have lost a game to
the legendary Eddie Robinson, formerly
of Grambling State. A first team all-state
running back at Ohio's Youngstown
South High, Richardson was recruited
out of high school as a running back
and defensive back by the coaching
staff at the University of Dayton
(OH).
At Dayton, Richardson
began his career at tailback, before
enduring an ankle injury, which forced
a move to defensive back at the end
of his freshman year. Richardson went
on to become a three-year starter
at the University of Dayton in the
defensive backfield.
Richardson realized
a childhood dream as he became a sixth-round
draft choice of the NFL's Buffalo
Bills in 1968, the roots of a four-year
stint in the National Football League,
where he established himself on the
playing field as a two-time starter
in the Bills' defensive backfield.
After suffering a
career-ending injury to his left knee,
Richardson proceeded to further his
education and acquired a master's
degree in guidance counseling in 1978
from the University of Dayton.
His lifetime involvement
in athletics eventually led him to
a coaching career, one that began
in the halls of Ohio's Dayton Dunbar
High. In only his second season on
the staff, Richardson took over the
head coaching reigns.
With the opportunity
of moving to Division I-AA as the
head coach of Southern University,
along with the national exposure the
Bayou Classic brought to SU football,
Richardson opted to accept the challenge
and signed on as the Jaguars mentor
in 1993.
Since coming to Southern,
Richardson has rallied the supporters
of the program and has energized recruiting
efforts, renewing the fortune of Jaguar
football. In his first season, Southern
University captured the NCAA division
I-AA's national attention by going
11-1 on the year and grabbing the
school's first bowl appearance and
victory, an 11-0 blanking of South
Carolina State.
Coach Richardson's
ability to motivate his players to
personal, academic and athletic success,
his public relations acumen and his
vision for the program means great
things for the University for years
to come.
A 1968 graduate of
the University of Dayton, Richardson
earned a bachelor's degree in Physical
Education and later acquired a master's
degree in Guidance Counseling in 1978.
Pete Richardson has
one adult daughter, Deborale Bouie
of Mechanicsville, Pennsylvania, and
two grandchildren, Nathan and Monet.
Richardson is married
to the former Lillian Raines of Winston-Salem,
North Carolina.
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