Colorado University Athletics
Football
Nov 22 (Sat)
TBA

- Title:
- Head Coach
- Years At CU:
- 1st Season
- Record At CU:
- 0-0
- Alma Mater:
- Wisconsin '95
- E-mail:
- melvin.tucker@colorado.edu
- Phone:
- 303-492-5330
Mel Tucker was named the 26th full-time head football coach at the University of Colorado on December 5, 2018. He came to CU from the University of Georgia, where he spent the previous three years as the defensive coordinator and secondary coach for the Bulldogs.
Tucker, 48, replaced Mike MacIntyre, who was dismissed as CUās head coach after coaching the Buffaloes for six seasons. This is his first collegiate head coaching position.
He is not the first to be hired at Colorado with no previous collegiate head coaching experience, though he does have five games in the National Football League as an interim head coach. In the modern era (post-World War II), he joins an impressive list in Dal Ward (1948), Sonny Grandelius (1959), Eddie Crowder (1963), Bill McCartney (1982), Rick Neuheisel (1995) and Jon Embree (2011) as full-time coaches who were previously assistants. McCartney, of course, went on to become CUās all-time winningest coach with a 93-55-5 record over 13 seasons, and all but Embree had winning records.
Tucker enjoyed a tremendous run at Georgia, where he was instrumental in the Bulldogs compiling a 32-9 record along with winning the schoolās first Southeastern Conference championship in 12 years when UGA defeated Auburn in the leagueās 2017 title game. One of the staffās top recruiters, 247Sports.com ranked him as the No. 14 recruiter in the nation based off the class he helped UGA sign ahead of the 2018 season.
Georgiaās defense is currently ranked in the top 25 in several key categories, most notably in total defense (13th, 311.2 yards allowed per game), passing defense (15th, 180.5 per game) and scoring defense (15th, 18.5 points per outing).
In the 2018 SEC Championship game in which Alabama rallied to win, 35-28, his Bulldog defense held the Crimson Tide scoreless in the first quarter for the first time all season, forced a UA season-high four three-and-outs (in 12 possessions) and held its Heisman Trophy candidate, quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, to a season-worst 92.3 rating. His defenses were dialed in on third down, as the Tide was 8-of-25 in the last two games against UGA, dating back to the 2018 national championship game which Alabama also rallied to win, 26-23, in overtime.
In 2017, Tucker was part of the UGA staff that led the Bulldogs to a school record-tying 13 victories, along with the schoolās first SEC championship since 2005 and first appearances in the College Football Playoff (and victory, which was over Oklahoma in the Rose Bowl/CFP semifinal game) and in the College Football Playoff Championship game. Georgiaās defense finished second in the SEC and sixth nationally in both scoring defense (16.4 ppg) and in total defense (294.9 ypg), while also finishing second in the conference in rushing defense. One of his players, Roquan Smith, won the Butkus Award as the nationās top linebacker.
In his first year at UGA, Tucker guided a Bulldog defense that ranked among the nationās top 20 units in total defense, passing defense, turnovers gained and first down defense.
Tucker was named UGA defensive coordinator and secondary coach in January 2016, just days after winning a national championship with Alabama (which defeated Clemson 45-40 in the CFP title game). He spent that 2015 season serving as assistant head coach and defensive backs coach for the Crimson Tide, the third time he was hired by Nick Saban.
Saban gave Tucker his start in the coaching profession in 1997 when he hired him as a graduate assistant at Michigan State. He spent two seasons there, working with the defensive backs directly under another highly successful collegiate head coach in Mark Dantonio, who eventually would be named the Spartansā head coach.
Tucker spent the 1999 season as defensive backs coach at Miami (Ohio) under Coach Terry Hoeppner. In 2000, Tucker returned to work with Saban at Louisiana State for one season before joining Jim Tresselās staff at Ohio State for the next four years (2001-04). While in Columbus, the Buckeyes went 14-0 in 2002 and won the BCS National Championship in a thrilling overtime win over Miami, Fla. In his last season there, Tucker was elevated to co-defensive coordinator. At Ohio State, he recruited four players who would eventually be first round NFL Draft selections and the 2006 Heisman Trophy winner, quarterback Troy Smith.
In 2005, an opportunity emerged for him to coach in the National Football League with his hometown Cleveland Browns. The teamās new head coach, Romeo Crennel, had come over from his duties as New Englandās defensive coordinator and hired Tucker to coach the secondary. After three seasons tutoring the Brownsā defensive backs, he was promoted to defensive coordinator. In that 2008 season, the Browns were second in the NFL with 23 interceptions and ranked 16th in scoring defense (21.9 points per game). For his four seasons overall with Cleveland, the Browns ranked fifth in the league with 73 interceptions, seventh in passing yards allowed and gave up the fourth-fewest completions of 25-plus yards.
Tucker moved on to the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2009, when Jack Del Rio hired him as his defensive coordinator and secondary coach; the following two years, he strictly coordinated the defense while consulting at all positions (called āwalk aroundsā). Near the end of his third year with the Jaguars, he was promoted to interim head coach for the final five games in 2011 after Del Rio was dismissed; he coached Jacksonville to a 2-3 record to end the season. Despite the team owning an overall 5-11 record, the Jags were sixth in the league in total defense that season, surrendering just 313 yards per game. He would return as the Jaguars assistant head coach and defensive coordinator for the 2012 season under Mike Mularkey.
He was hired by Chicago Bears head coach Marc Trestman in 2013, where he would spend his last two seasons in the pro ranks. In all, he worked 10 years in the NFL, including seven as a defensive coordinator.
A 1995 graduate of the University of Wisconsin with his bachelor's degree in Agricultural Business Management, he was a member of the first recruiting class for Coach Barry Alvarez. He lettered three times at both cornerback and safety from 1990-94 and was on the Badgersā 1993 Big Ten champion team that defeated UCLA in the Rose Bowl, 21-16. As a sophomore, he made a game-saving hit in the end zone with time running out that preserved a 19-16 win at Minnesota; as a senior, he played the Buffaloes in Boulder, though UW left town with a 55-17 loss to a CU team that would finish No. 3 in the nation. He had 47 tackles and four pass deflections in his career (he missedĀ his entire junior season after breaking a leg in fall camp).
Tucker was a member of Alvarezā first recruiting class at Wisconsin, and remains close to this day with several teammates who have gone on to make their marks in college athletics, including Troy Vincent (the NFL executive vice president for football operations), Chris Ballard (Indianapolis Colts general manager), Darrell Bevell (longtime NFL offensive coordinator with Minnesota and Seattle), Joe Rudolph (Wisconsinās associate head coach and offensive coordinator) and Duer Sharp (former commissioner of the Southwestern Athletic Conference).
He was born Melvin Tucker II on Jan. 4, 1972 in Cleveland, Ohio, and graduated from Cleveland Heights High School, where he was an all-state performer in football and an all-conference basketball player (the Cleveland Plain Dealer twice named him to its all-scholastic team). He is married to the former JoEllyn Haynesworth, who earned her undergraduate degree at the University of Illinois and her law degree from Rutgers University. The couple has two sons born on the same day (Feb. 18) two years apart, Joseph (16) and Christian (14).
AT-A-GLANCEāHe has coached in 142Ā Division I-A (FBS) games as a full-time coach, his teams owning a record of 106-36Ā which include 10 bowl games (2000 Peach, 2002 Outback, 2003 Fiesta/BCS National Championship, 2004 Fiesta, 2004 Alamo, 2015 Cotton/CFP Semifinal, 2016 CFP title game, 2016 Liberty, 2018 Rose/CFP Semifinal, 2018 CFP/National Championship). He coached 160 games in the National Football League (64 with Cleveland, 64 with Jacksonville, 32 with Chicago).
NFL FIRST ROUNDERSāTucker has coached five NFL first round draft picks along with recruiting four others:Ā
Coached:Ā CB Chris GambleĀ (Ohio State; No. 28 overall pick by Carolina, 2004 Draft);Ā CB Donte WhitnerĀ (Ohio State; No. 6, Buffalo, 2006);Ā CB Marlon HumphreyĀ (Alabama; No. 16, Baltimore, 2017);Ā S Minkah FitzpatrickĀ (Alabama; No. 11, Miami, 2018);Ā LB Roquan SmithĀ (Georgia; No. 8, Chicago, 2018)
Recruited:Ā WR Ted Ginn, Jr.Ā (Ohio State; No. 9, Miami, 2007);Ā WR Anthony GonzalezĀ (Ohio State; No. 32, Indianapolis, 2007);Ā CB Vernon GholstonĀ (Ohio State; No. 6, N.Y. Jets, 2008);Ā CB/S Malcolm JenkinsĀ (Ohio State; No. 14, New Orleans, 2009).
Ā
COACHING EXPERIENCE
| 1997-98 | Ā Michigan State | Ā Graduate Assistant (defense) |
| 1999 | Ā Miami, Ohio | Ā Defensive Backs |
| 2000 | Ā Louisiana State | Ā Defensive Backs |
| 2001-03 | Ā Ohio State | Ā Defensive Backs |
| 2004 | Ā Ohio State | Ā Co-Defensive Coordinator/ Defensive Backs |
| 2005-07 | Ā Cleveland (NFL) | Ā Defensive Backs |
| 2008 | Ā Cleveland (NFL) | Ā Defensive Coordinator |
| 2009 | Ā Jacksonville (NFL)Ā | Ā Defensive Coordinator/Secondary |
| 2010-11 | Ā Jacksonville (NFL) | Ā Defensive Coordinator |
| 2011 | Ā Jacksonville (NFL) | Ā Interim Head Coach |
| 2012 | Ā Jacksonville (NFL) | Ā Assistant Head Coach/Defensive CoordinatorĀ |
| 2013-14 | Ā Chicago (NFL) | Ā Defensive Coordinator |
| 2015 | Ā Alabama | Ā Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Backs |
| 2016-18Ā | Ā Georgia | Ā Defensive Coordinator/Secondary |
CU CONNECTIONS
| Lawrence VickersĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā | Ā Cleveland BrownsĀ Ā (2006-08) | Ā Former Buff Vickers ('05) was drafted by the Browns and spent three years on theĀ Ā team when Tucker wasĀ on the coaching staff. |
| Brian Iwuh | Ā JacksonvilleĀ Ā Jaguars (2009) | Ā Former Buff Iwuh ('05) spent one season on the Jaguars roster. |
| Terrence Wheatley | Ā JacksonvilleĀ Ā Jaguars (2010) | Ā Former Buff Wheatley ('07) spent one season on the Jaguars roster. |
| Toney Clemons | Ā JacksonvilleĀ Ā Jaguars (2012) | Ā Former Buff Clemons ('11) spent part of one season on the Jaguars roster. |
| Eric Kiesau | Ā Alabama (2015) | Ā Kiesau was on the CU staff for Dan Hawkins (2006-10) and was an analyst on theĀ Ā Alabama staff with Tucker. |
| John Wooten | Ā CU (1955-58) | Ā Father (Mel Tucker) is long-time good friend of Wooten and the family. |
| Wilmer Cooks | Ā CU (1964-67) | Ā Father (Mel Tucker) is long-time good friend of Cooks and the family. |




