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Being the head coach of a college football team is a pretty sweet gig that also comes with a ton of pressure, as there are plenty of people waiting in the wings if a school decides to kick you to the curb if you don’t meet expectations. There subsequently tends to be a lot of turnover, but there are some guys who’ve managed to stay with the same team for an impressive amount of time.
These are the college football coaches who spent the most time coaching the same team
There are only a handful of people who spent the entirety of their career as the head coach of a college football team at the same school, but there are many who are inextricably linked with a program they held for decades on end.
Before we dive in, I should note I’m limiting this list to coaches of teams at the FBS level during their tenure, so while I don’t want to diminish the achievements of guys like Eddie Robinson (the man who spent 56 years coaching at Grambling State), it would be littered with pretty obscure figures if I didn’t add that stipulation.
T-11. Kirk Ferentz: 27 Seasons (And Counting) At Iowa
Joseph Cress/Iowa City Press-Citizen / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Overall Record: 204-124
We might as well get the only active coach on this list out of the way, as 2025 marks the 27th season Kirk Ferentz has been at the helm for Iowa. He spent three years at Maine at the start of the 1990s before getting a shot with the Hawkeyes at the end of the decade, and they’ve only missed a bowl four times since he took over.
Ferentz is currently the longest-tenured FBS coach; if you’re curious, Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy and Utah’s Kyle Whittingham are tied for second with runs stretching back to 2005.
T-11. Jess Neely: 27 Seasons at Rice
Robert Johnson / The Tennessean
Overall Record: 144-124-10
Rice has become a major afterthought in the current college football landscape, but there was a time when the Owls were a respected program that earned its fair share of invitations to some major bowl games.
No one had a more successful tenure than Jess Neely, who led Rice to three Southwest Conference championships, two wins in the Cotton Bowl, and another in the Sugar Bowl between 1940 and 1966. That capped off a career he began at what is now known as Rhodes College before spending nine years at Clemson prior to heading to Texas.
T-11. Bill Snyder: 27 Seasons At Kansas State
Dilip Vishwanat-Imagn Images
Overall Record: 215-117-1
Bill Snyder is the first person on this list who spent the entirety of his career as a head coach at a single school.
He linked up with Kansas State ahead of the 1989 season at a time when the program was viewed as one of the biggest—if not the biggest—laughingstocks in college football due to decades of mediocrity and outright awfulness. There were some growing pains, but he eventually ushered in a new era while making the team a legitimate contender.
Snyder initially retired in 2005 after 17 seasons before being replaced by Ron Prince. However, his successor failed to impress, and his predecessor came back for one last ride that ended up lasting for a decade before hanging up his headset for good in 2018.
10. Woody Hayes: 28 Seasons At Ohio State
Malcolm Emmons-Imagn Images
Overall Record: 205-61-10
Ohio State has boasted a number of legendary head coaches throughout its history, and Woody Hayes is certainly one of them.
Hayes coached at two smaller schools in Ohio (Denison and Miami) before THE Ohio State University tapped him to lead the Buckeyes in 1951. He only needed four seasons to lead them to the first of the five national championships the team won while he was there and, almost as importantly, had a winning record (16-11-1) against Michigan during his time in Columbus.
T-6. Frank Beamer: 29 Seasons At Virginia Tech
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Overall Record: 238-121-2
Frank Beamer got his start as a college football coach at Murray State and spent six seasons there before heading to Virginia Tech in 1987.
He’s defined by what he achieved in Blacksburg, and while it took him a while to find his footing, the Hokies went 9-3 in 1993 and never posted a losing record while riding the 23-year bowl streak the team boasted when he retired after the 2015 season.
T-6. LaVell Edwards: 29 Seasons At BYU
Getty Image / Tom Hauck/Allsport
Overall Record: 257-101-3
The next two coaches on this list had lengthy stints with football teams that call Utah home and never called another school home.
The first is LaVell Edwards, who started coaching at BYU in 1972 and left an indelible mark on a program that transformed into a perennially competitive football team thanks to his guidance. The Cougars had won a single conference championship in 50 years before Edwards racked up 20 of them and led the school to its first and only national championship in 1984.
T-6 E. Lowell “Dick” Romney: 29 Years At Utah State
Utah State Athletic Department
Overall Record: 128-91-16
The Romney family is essentially royalty in the state of Utah, and Mitt Romney, the former senator and presdential candidate, is named after the brother of E. Lowell Romney, the longtime Utah State coach who was the first cousin of Mitt’s dad, George Romney, the former governor of Utah (I know there’s a lot to unpack there).
Anyway, this Romney (who went by “Dick”) was a multisport athlete at the University of Utah before becoming the head coach at what was known as “Utah Agricultural” when he took over in 1919. It was the only college football team he coached before he stepped down in 1948, but he also coached the basketball team at the school from 1919 to 1941.
T-6. Robert Zuppke: 29 Years At Illinois
Jeremy Reper-Imagn Images
Overall Record: 131-81-12
I can’t find a picture of Robert Zuppke that I’m allowed to include in this article, which stems from the fact that he first started coaching at Illinois in 1913.
However, he made quite a mark on a Fighting Illini team that won four national championships before he retired in 1941 after balancing his coaching career with gigs as a sports columnist, comic strip writer, and painter who rubbed shoulders with Ernest Hemingway in art circles in Chicago.
5. Frank Howard: 30 Years At Clemson
JIM WILSON/Staff, The Greenville News via Imagn Content Services, LLC
Overall Record: 165-118-12
We’ve got another coach who spent his entire career with the same school in the form of Frank Howard, who took the reins at Clemson in 1940 and led the Tigers to eight conference titles before calling it quits after his final season in 1969.
He’s immortalized in Death Valley thanks to Howard’s Rock, which he used as a doorstop in his office before it was mounted on the pedestal that sits at the top of The Hill at Memorial Stadium where players touch it for luck before each home game.
4. Dan McGugin: 30 Years At Vanderbilt
Public Domain
Overall Record: 197-55-19
As you can probably tell by the quality of that photo, this one is another throwback, as Dan McGugin took over as the head coach at Vanderbilt all the way back in 1904.
The Commodores thrived under McGugin during a career where he initially served as the skipper for 14 years while balancing that career with his job as a lawyer. He took a two-year hiatus by turning his attention to mining to contribute to the effort during World War I, and he returned in 1919 to serve for another 16 years before retiring upon the conclusion of the 1934 season.
3. Harry Hughes: 31 Years At Colorado State
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Overall Record: 126-96-18
The school that is now known as Colorado State was still Colorado Agricultural when Harry Hughes was named the head coach in 1911, and it rebranded as Colorado A&M toward the end of a run that came to an end in 1946.
The team that was the “Aggies” before adopting the Rams moniker won eight conference titles under his watch, and the school’s stadium was named after him before it was demolished after a new one was constructed.
2. Bobby Bowden: 34 Years At Florida State
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Overall Record: 304-97-4
Bobby Bowden started off at Howard and spent six years at West Virginia before he was named the head coach at Florida State heading into the 1976 campaign.
The Seminoles showed flashes of brilliance during his first decade at the helm but took a huge leap forward at the end of the 1980s to kick off an era of dominance that included a slew of conference titles and two national championships before Bowden resigned at the end of his 34th season in 2008.
1. Joe Paterno: 46 Seasons at Penn State
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Overall Record: 409-136-3
No college football coach has racked up more wins at the FBS level than Joe Paterno, and every single one of them was earned at Penn State, the one and only school he coached at during a career that began in 1966 and saw the Nittany Lions win a national championship in 1982 and 1986.
As most people are likely aware, it came to a sudden end midway through his 46th season in 2011 when he was fired in the wake of Jerry Sandusky’s arrest, and the man who passed away just a couple of months later left behind a fairly complicated legacy.