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Lou West
Head Coach
Third Season
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Beginning his second season
as head coach of the Indiana State Sycamores is
Lou West.
In 2005, the Sycamore defense
was led by senior Kyle Mitchell, who was an
All-Gateway Football Conference First Team
member. Mitchell,
an 11-game
starter at defensive end, broke the Indiana
State career sacks record with 25.5. Mitchell
recorded 57 total tackles over the year,
including 35 solo stops while pacing the team
with 13.5 tackles for loss. Linebacker Doc
Gooden was an All-Gateway Second Team selection,
giving Kelly two all-conference nods in just his
first year at the helm of the defense. Gooden
paced the Sycamores with 81 total tackles,
including 36 solo stops. He recorded one sack
during the season while being credited with 5.5
tackles for loss. Gooden blocked a kick and had
double-digit tackles in four Gateway Football
Conference contests.
Last season, the Sycamore
offense was simply spectacular. ISU
broke the school record for passing yards in a
season with 2,906. Quarterback Blayne Baggett
set the ISU record for pass completions, pass
attempts and yards passing in a season.
Baggett’s 396 yards passing at Missouri State
were a single-game record, and his 33 pass
completions at Murray State also set a school
standard.
Sycamore wide receiver Sam
Logan etched his name in the records book by
catching a school-record 77 passes during the
season. Versus Murray State, Logan set a Gateway
standard with 17 receptions en route to being
named first team all-conference. Tight end Jamie
Petrowski enjoyed a stellar final season with
the program as he caught 57 passes for 517 yards
en route to being named first team
all-conference as well as Third Team
All-American by The Sports Network as
well as the Associated Press. Offensive
center Mike Thorpe was a second team
all-conference member while Baggett and tailback
Andre Forte were honorable mention All-Gateway
selections.
Also starring for the Sycamores in West's
inaugural season was kicker Kyle Hooper, who earned his
second consecutive All-Gateway Honorable Mention
selection. He saw action in all 11 contests,
connecting on 10-of-14 field goal attempts.
Hooper put together a string of 14 consecutive
made field goals -- stretching a streak that
began last season. He booted a career-best
47-yard field goal against Southern Illinois,
and made his first six field goal attempts of
the season. Hooper was a Preseason All-American
selection by CollegeSportsReport.com.
From 2001 until 2004, West
worked as the defensive coordinator at the
University of Toledo. While on staff with the
Rockets, Toledo posted a 36-14 record, the
eighth-best mark in all of Division I over the
past four years. Toledo knocked off Miami (Ohio)
35-27 for the Mid-American Conference
championship in 2004.
"I’ve always dreamed of
having the opportunity to become a head coach,"
said West. "I am very excited about the
opportunity to join an outstanding institution
such as Indiana State."
Over the past four years the
Rockets have won two MAC championships, and
three MAC-West titles. Toledo has earned three
bowl game invitations over the past four years.
The Rockets have defeated five Top 25 teams and
have recorded eleven comeback wins when trailing
by double digits with West on the coaching
staff.
During the 2004 season, the
Rockets finished fourth in the league in rush
defense (113.4) and had two defenders earn
All-MAC honors. In 2003, the Rockets finished
fifth in scoring defense (23.8) and fifth in
rush defense (150.1), while two Rockets garnered
All-MAC plaudits.
In 2001, the Rockets’ defense
was second in the MAC in rushing yards allowed
(105.6), second in total defense (321.8), and
third in scoring defense (25.5). Toledo claimed
the MAC and Motor City Bowl Championships in his
first season on staff. During the 2002 season,
the Rockets produced a pair of All-MAC
linebackers in Tom Ward and David Gardner, as
they made their second-consecutive bowl
appearance.
"Lou West will do a great job
at Indiana State," noted Toledo head coach Tom
Amstutz. "He has been on a steady track working
at a number of successful programs during his
coaching career. The young men Coach West has
worked with are better people and better
football players after having been under his
guidance."
Prior to joining the Rockets
staff, West worked as the safeties coach at the
University of Notre Dame for two seasons
(1999-2000). In West’s first year, A-Jani
Sanders led the team in tackles for loss and was
named to the All-Independent squad. Sanders,
along with fellow safety Deke Cooper signed free
agent contracts with NFL teams. Cooper is in his
third full season with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
During West’s second season (2000) in South
Bend, Ind., the Fighting Irish went 9-3 and made
an appearance in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. Tony
Driver, a free safety for the Irish, was drafted
in the sixth round of the 2001 NFL Draft by the
Buffalo Bills after earning All-Independent
squad honors.
From 1995-98, West served as
the defensive backs coach at Virginia Tech. In
1998, the Hokies ranked second nationally in
interceptions (23), fourth in scoring defense
(12.9), seventh in total defense (284.9), and
11th in pass efficiency defense (103.4 rating).
Virginia Tech also led the Big East in scoring
defense, total defense, rushing defense and
passing defense during the 1998 campaign. The
Hokies picked off three passes en route to a
38-7 win over Alabama in the Music City Bowl
that season.
"I think without a doubt that
Lou West will do a great job at Indiana State,"
said Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer. "Lou
has a very good football mind and a great way
with the players. I wish him the very best of
luck."
During his four years at
Virginia Tech, the Hokies appeared in four
consecutive bowl games and posted a combined
win-loss mark of 36-12 (.750). In 1995 (Sugar)
and 1996 (Orange) the Hokies participated in New
Year’s Day Bowl games under the Bowl Alliance.
VT ranked in the Top 25 in three of his four
years on staff. Under his tutelage, five Hokies
garnered First Team All-Big East honors, while
one player earned second team accolades. Two
players (Torrian Gray and Antonio Banks) were
selected in the first four rounds of the 1997
National Football League Draft by the Minnesota
Vikings, while Pierson Prioleau was a
fourth-round selection of the San Francisco
49ers in 1999.
West spent one season as the
secondary coach at Kent State (1994) after six
seasons (1988-93) as defensive backs, outside
linebackers, and tight ends coach at Cincinnati.
He began his career as a graduate assistant with
Arizona in 1977 before working as the defensive
backs coach at Arizona Western JC from 1979-80.
West took over as defensive backs coach at
Middle Tennessee State for two seasons (1981-82)
before spending the 1983 season with the
University of Minnesota. From 1984-85, he worked
at Western Michigan University as defensive
backs coach.
A product of Niles, Ohio,
West graduated from McKinley High School before
attending the University of Cincinnati
(1973-76), where he played defensive back. West
earned three letters and recorded four
interceptions and six fumble recoveries during
his career. Following his senior campaign, he
played in the Blue-Gray Classic and the
North-South Shrine Bowl. West earned his
bachelor’s degree from Cincinnati and his
master’s degree from Arizona in 1980.
West and his wife Gail, are the parents of
four children – Andre, Adrian and Alexandria
West as well as Orenthal Magazine.
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