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Georgia's Richt evolves into head coaching role - NCAA Football Sports News
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Georgia Bulldogs
Location: Athens, Ga. | Founded: 1785 | Enrollment: 33,660 | Colors: Red and Black | Stadium: Sanford
Capacity: 92,746 | Coach: Mark Richt

Record: (7-5, 4-4 SEC)
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Georgia's Richt evolves into head coaching role

Presented by Epson

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - Mark Richt had completed the 40-hour course to sell life insurance. He was working as a phone solicitor setting up appointments for agents and preparing to take his exam.

"I never got to take my test because the company that was sponsoring me had some issues going on," Richt said.

Issues?

"One day I showed up to work and my boss was being handcuffed and put in a car. They kind of locked down the place," he said. "I figured that was the end of my life insurance career."

For a guy who has seemed like such a natural throughout a precocious career coaching football, Richt took awhile to figure out his calling. Even today, despite Richt leading Georgia to a 71-19 record in seven seasons, some college football fans probably couldn't tell him apart from their life insurance agent. Not known for sideline rants or colorful yarns, the 48-year-old Richt's profile hasn't kept up with the Bulldogs' win totals.

But that's changing, now that Georgia sits atop The Associated Press preseason poll for the first time. The spotlight will illuminate every detail of how well Richt has evolved from odd jobs to the role of big-time college football coach.

After his career as a backup quarterback at the University of Miami ended in 1982, Richt tried to valet cars and to sell memberships at a sports club. He got fired as a bartender because he spent too much time watching football, which should've been a sign. He then switched to cleaning the bar after closing time.

Richt also failed to make a couple of NFL teams. His stint with the Dolphins concluded when quarterbacks coach Dave Shula, the son of coach Don Shula, told him, "I've got good news and bad news. The good news is you scored higher on the test than everybody. The bad news is my dad wants to meet you and bring your playbook."

A trainer suggested he might want to try coaching.

"I always enjoyed the strategy," Richt said. "I always enjoyed learning why we did the things we did offensively. I always asked why. Sometimes the coaches maybe misunderstood me. I wasn't really questioning them as much as I was just wanting to learn."

Richt was about to head to LSU as a graduate assistant in 1985 when Florida State coach Bobby Bowden came through with a better offer: he'd coach the quarterbacks as a grad assistant.

"Brilliant" is how Bowden described Richt to strength and conditioning coach Dave Van Halanger.

Before the age of 30, Richt was the offensive coordinator at East Carolina. He remembers "being scared to death and praying a lot."

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