Matt Rhule

Coach

Birthday January 31, 1975

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace New York, New York, U.S.

Age 49 years old

Nationality United States

#37076 Most Popular

1941

Temple opened Rhule's third season with a 27–10 win over his alma mater Penn State, the Owls' first win over the Nittany Lions since 1941.

Led by eventual Chuck Bednarik Award winner Tyler Matakevich and third-year starting quarterback P. J. Walker (who would later serve as a backup for the Carolina Panthers under Rhule), Temple started a season 7–0 for the first time in school history.

1969

Baylor finished 1–11 in Rhule's first season, the program's worst record since 1969.

1975

Matthew Kenneth Rhule (born January 31, 1975) is an American college football coach and former linebacker.

He is the head football coach for the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, a position he has held since 2023.

Rhule was born in New York City on January 31, 1975, to parents Dennis and Gloria.

When he was a teenager, Rhule's family moved to State College, Pennsylvania, where he played linebacker at State College Area High School before walking on at Penn State under head coach Joe Paterno.

1979

During his four-year tenure, he led the Owls to their only two ten-win seasons since 1979.

Though Temple lost four of its final seven games, including the inaugural American Athletic Conference championship game, the program's ten wins were its most since 1979.

1994

Rhule played linebacker at Penn State from 1994 to 1997.

Rhule was born and raised in New York City before moving to State College, Pennsylvania, where he joined Penn State's football team as a walk-on under Joe Paterno.

After a four-year playing career, Rhule began his coaching career as a volunteer assistant at his alma mater.

1997

He played for the Nittany Lions for four years and became a three-time Penn State Scholar-Athlete and a 1997 Academic All-Big Ten honoree.

Rhule earned a bachelor's degree in political science from Penn State in 1997 and a master's degree in educational psychology from the University at Buffalo in 2003.

Following the end of his playing career, Rhule was hired as the linebackers coach at Albright College.

2006

After one year at Albright, Rhule served as a position coach at Buffalo, UCLA, and Western Carolina before being hired at Temple as a defensive line coach in 2006 under Al Golden.

2008

Over the following decade he served as an assistant at several schools, and in 2008 Rhule became the offensive coordinator at Temple.

Rhule became the Owls' quarterbacks coach the following year, his first offensive coaching role, and was named offensive coordinator in 2008.

2010

When Golden left for Miami in 2010, Rhule interviewed for Temple's vacant head coaching job, which was instead given to Steve Addazio.

After six years as an assistant at Temple, Rhule joined Tom Coughlin's New York Giants staff as an assistant offensive line coach, a season after the Giants won their fourth Super Bowl.

2012

When Addazio departed for Boston College following the 2012 season, several veteran Owls players voiced their support for Rhule to return.

Rhule, an area native who had referred to Temple as a "dream job," was formally hired as the school's twenty-sixth head coach on December 17, 2012.

Temple began Rhule's first season 0–6, which included a loss to Idaho that would be the Vandals' only win of the season.

His first victory as a head coach, a 33–14 defeat of Army on October 19, was followed by four more losses, and the Owls finished 2–10.

Temple improved to 6–6 the following year, ending the season with a 10–3 victory over Tulane to achieve bowl eligibility, though the Owls were not invited to a bowl game.

2013

He was also the head football coach for Temple University from 2013 to 2016, Baylor University from 2017 to 2019, and the Carolina Panthers of the National Football League (NFL).

After a brief stint as an assistant for the NFL's New York Giants, Rhule returned to Temple as the program's head coach in 2013.

2015

Rhule was reportedly a target of Missouri and Syracuse during the 2015 season; a four-year contract extension he had signed in July was re-negotiated to keep him at Temple.

2016

Rhule was hired as Baylor's head coach following Temple's victory in the 2016 American Athletic Conference Championship Game.

The Owls returned to the conference championship game in 2016, where they defeated Navy 34–10 to win the program's second conference championship.

Rhule accepted the head coaching job at Baylor prior to the 2016 Military Bowl; special teams coordinator Ed Foley served as interim head coach in Temple's upset loss to Wake Forest.

When Rhule was introduced as Baylor's head coach on December 7, 2016, the program was in a state of significant transition.

Longtime head coach Art Briles and his entire staff were fired or resigned as a result of the school's sexual assault scandal.

Briles's immediate successor was veteran Jim Grobe, who took over in an interim capacity in 2016, leading Baylor to a 7–6 record and a seventh consecutive bowl appearance.

Though generally well-received, Rhule's hire was considered something of a surprise, as athletic director Mack Rhoades had stressed the importance of Baylor's head coach having Texas connections; Rhule had never lived or coached in the state.

2018

The Bears improved to 6–6 the following year and were invited to the 2018 Texas Bowl, defeating Vanderbilt 45–38 in Rhule's first bowl win as a head coach.

2019

After finishing 8–17 across Rhule's first two seasons, the Bears improved to 11–3 in 2019.

2020

Rhule returned to the NFL in 2020 as head coach of the Carolina Panthers.

The Panthers missed the playoffs in each of Rhule's first two seasons and he was fired after a 1–4 start to 2022, departing Carolina with a combined record of 11–27.

The following month, Rhule agreed to an eight-year contract to become Nebraska's head coach.