NIU Hires Dunbar 2/8/12
By: Scott Leber
Updated: February 8, 2012
DeKALB,
Ill. - Mike Dunbar, a 35-year college coaching veteran whose rsum includes
extensive experience as a head coach and offensive coordinator at every level of
football, has joined the Northern Illinois University football program as
offensive coordinator, NIU head coach Dave Doeren announced Wednesday.
"I am very excited to bring
Mike Dunbar to Northern Illinois as our offensive coordinator," Doeren said.
"Mike brings 25 years of play-calling experience, coupled with 12 years of head
coaching experience. I had to compete
against Mike four different times as a defensive coach - twice at Kansas and
twice at Wisconsin - and I always came away with a great appreciation and
respect for how good of an offensive coach he truly is.
"Mike is a guy that has
tremendous passion for the game of football. He has coached at every level from
high school to NCAA Division II, FCS, MAC and BCS programs. He's worked with guys that are playing in the
NFL today and developed some very successful offenses."
Dunbar brings familiarity
with the region and the Mid-American Conference, thanks to stints at
Northwestern University (2001-06), where he served as offensive coordinator from
2002-06, and at the University of Toledo (1992-96), where he was offensive
coordinator before adding assistant head coach duties in his final two
years. In between those two positions,
Dunbar was the head football coach at the University of Northern Iowa from
1997-2000, compiling a 29-15 record as head coach. The Panthers were ranked in
the FCS Top 25 every year of Dunbar's tenure.
From Northwestern, Dunbar
went to the University of California, where he was offensive coordinator in 2006
when Cal shared the Pac-10 title while scoring a league-leading 32.8 points per
game. He returned to the Midwest as
offensive coordinator and assistant head coach at Minnesota for the 2007 and
2008 campaigns. The Golden Gophers averaged more than 400 yards per game of
total offense in 2007. Dunbar was the
offensive coordinator at New Mexico State in 2010.
After spending the 2011
season in his native Washington, Dunbar said he jumped at the chance to return
to college coaching at Northern Illinois, a program with which he is very
familiar.
"It's a great opportunity
and an honor to join such an outstanding program and staff," Dunbar said.
"Knowing the history of the school with Coach Novak, Coach Kill and now Coach
Doeren, especially with what he's been able to accomplish in his first season, I
am really looking forward to coming in and working with the players and coaches.
"I am very familiar with
Northern Illinois, going back to my days at Toledo and then more recently at
Northwestern and Minnesota," he continued. "I've worked with guys that played
and coached at NIU, so there are a lot of common threads, which gives me an
understanding of what a great place this is."
As the head coach at
Central Washington from 1987-91, Dunbar was named Columbia Football Association
Coach of the Year and the Kodak Region I Coach of the Year three times. His
Central Washington teams earned two No. 1 national rankings and in 1991,
extended a regular-season win streak to 40 games, finishing 9-0. The Wildcats
were also ranked among the NAIA Top 20 each year during his five-year stay. His
overall record as a head coach at Central Washington and Northern Iowa is
83-24-1.
During his stint as
offensive coordinator at Toledo, the Rockets set 21 offensive school records and
went 11-0-1 with a Las Vegas Bowl victory in 1995. UT posted a 36-18-2 record
during his five seasons in Toledo.
As offensive coordinator at
Northwestern, Dunbar helped the Wildcats rank fourth in the country in total
offense (500.3 ypg) in 2005. He tutored NU quarterback Brett Basanez, who set 30
Northwestern offensive records and ranks among the Big Ten's all-time leaders in
multiple categories.
Dunbar's pupils have included current NFL players Marshawn Lynch (Seattle), Eric Decker (D



