| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1947-09-21)September 21, 1947 (age 78) Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. |
| Playing career | |
| 1966–1969 | Auburn |
| Position | Quarterback |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1970–1971 | Southern Academy (AL) |
| 1972–1974 | Walker HS (AL) |
| 1975–1976 | Vestavia Hills HS (AL) |
| 1977–1990 | Auburn (assistant) |
| 1991–2014 | Troy |
| Head coaching record | |
| Overall | 178–113–1 (college) 50–24–2 (high school) |
| Bowls | 2–3 |
| Tournaments | 5–7 (NCAA D-I-AA playoffs) |
| Accomplishments and honors | |
| Championships | |
| 3Southland (1996, 1999–2000) 5Sun Belt (2006–2010) | |
| Awards | |
| 2×AFCA Regional Coach of the Year (1999-2000) 2×Southland Coach of the Year (1999–2000) 2×Sun Belt Coach of the Year (2008–2009) Sun Belt 10th Anniversary Most Outstanding Coach Johnny Vaught Lifetime Achievement Award Camellia Bowl Alabama Football Legend Award (2019) Alabama Sports Hall of Fame Wiregrass Sports Hall of Fame Troy Sports Hall of Fame | |
| College Football Hall of Fame Inducted in 2025 (profile) | |
Larry Blakeney (born September 21, 1947) is an American formerfootball player and coach. He served as the head football coach atTroy University from 1991 to 2014, compiling a record of 178–113–1 in 24 seasons. He is one of only two coaches to have taken acollege football program fromNCAA Division II to theNCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, the other beingUCF'sGene McDowell.
Blakeney was the recipient of theJohnny Vaught Lifetime Achievement Award by the All-American Football Foundation in 2000. He was inducted into the Wiregrass Sports Hall of Fame in 2008 and was inducted into theAlabama Sports Hall of Fame on May 30, 2009.[1] On December 21, 2010, he received theSun Belt Conference 10th Anniversary Most Outstanding Head Coach award.
In the spring of 2011, Troy University honored Blakeney by naming the football playing surface Larry Blakeney Field at Veterans Memorial Stadium. On August 10, 2012, Blakeney was inducted into the Troy University Sports Hall of Fame. He was part of the inaugural class along withDeMarcus Ware,Don Maestri,Chase Riddle,Bill Atkins, Sim Byrd, Denise Monroe, Vergil McKinley, Ralph Adams, Mike Turk, and Charles Oliver.[citation needed] Blakeney was inducted into theCollege Football Hall of Fame in 2025.[2]
Blakeney was the first sophomore to start atquarterback forRalph Jordan atAuburn. A three-year letterman, he started eight games in 1966, scoring five touchdowns in his first four games. Blakeney lost the starting job in 1967, however, and moved to the defensive backfield in 1968. He missed the entire season with a shoulder injury, but resumed play in 1969 as Auburn posted an 8–3 record. He lettered twice inbaseball, in 1968 and 1969. Blakeney graduated in 1970 with abachelor's degree inbusiness administration.[citation needed]
Blakeney became a head coach at three high schools after graduation: Southern Academy (1970–71), Walker High School (1972–74) andVestavia Hills High School (1975–76). He compiled a 50–24–2 record as a high school head coach.
He was hired on at hisalma mater, Auburn, in 1977 as theoffensive line assistant coach. In 1979, he was thetight end andwide receivers coach for two years and then just wide receivers from 1981 to 1990. He added on the offensive play calling duties in 1986. During the 14 seasons at Auburn, the Tigers were 110–50–3 and won fourSoutheastern Conference championships and were 6–2–1 in bowl games.
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Blakeney became the 20th head football coach at what was then known as Troy State University on December 3, 1990—the school did not becomeTroy University until 2004. TheTroy State Trojans were still anNCAA Division II program, but were approved to transition toNCAA Division I-AA the following season. Blakeney took over a program that had wonNCAA Division II Football Championships in 1984 and 1987, but was 13–17 the previous three years.
The first full year at Division I-AA, the Trojans made it to the semifinal game and finished 12–1–1, 10–0–1 in the regular season. This marked the first undefeated regular, full season Troy State football and they finished ranked first in the end of season poll bySports Network. In 1995, the team improved on that record finishing 11–0 in the regular season for the first undefeated and untied season in history. During the eight seasons the team was a member of I-AA football, they made the playoffs seven seasons and won theSouthland Conference championship three times and made the playoff semifinals twice.
Troy State transitioned to Division I-A in 2001. During that season they defeated three Division I-A schools, including their first win over aBCS conference school,Mississippi State. The transition made Blakeney one of two coaches to ever take a football team from Division II to I-A—the other isUCF'sGene McDowell.
In 2004, Troy's first year in theSun Belt Conference, Blakeney coached his team to one of the biggest victories in the school's and the Sun Belt's history after defeating then #17 rankedMissouri, 24–14, at home, in front of a national audience onESPN2. He once again coached his team to a victory over a BCS school in 2007 at home, routingOklahoma State 41–23.
Blakeney earned his firstbowl game win in 2006, beating theRice Owls, 41–17, in theNew Orleans Bowl. The team won their first Sun Belt Conference title that year. After losing the2008 New Orleans Bowl in overtime againstSouthern Miss and the2010 GMAC Bowl in double-overtime againstCentral Michigan, Blakeney earned his second bowl victory in the2010 New Orleans Bowl, defeatingOhio, 48–21.
ESPN recognized Blakeney as one of the top five non-AQ recruiting closers in 2009.[3] Blakeney retired at the end of the 2014 season after serving 24 years as head coach at Troy.[4]
Blakeney is married to the former Janice Powell and they have three daughters, Kelley, and twins Julie and Tiffany. All three daughters graduated from Troy. Tiffany is married and lives inAtlanta, Georgia with her husband Jason Rash and two daughters, Madeline Ann Rash and Danielle Avery Rash.