/notables/2019/11/depauw-bill-lynch-announces-retirement

DePauw's Bill Lynch announces retirement

More news about: DePauw
Bill Lynch gets to exit DePauw on top, with his Tigers having won the Monon Bell on a last-minute touchdown.
Photo by Matt McClure, d3photography.com
 

Bill Lynch, DePauw's head football coach for eight seasons overall including the last seven, has announced his retirement effective Jan. 2, 2020. A search for his replacement is underway.

"The time is right for my family and me," Lynch said. "I've been fortunate to have a great run in this profession, but with grandchild No. 17 on the way there are many reasons for me to move on to the next stage with my family. Thanks to DePauw for the opportunity and especially to our director of athletics Stevie Baker-Watson. The support of the athletics and football staff has been outstanding and I really enjoyed coaching the young men who chose to attend DePauw."

"Bill is highly respected throughout college football and we will miss him tremendously," Baker-Watson said. "His mentorship and positive influence on the hundreds of men who have played here have been amazing. He and his staff have built a strong and healthy program here at DePauw and have earned the respect of the entire DePauw family."

A career spanning 40 years on the college sidelines at DePauw, Butler, Ball State, Northern Illinois and Indiana culminated in last Saturday's 17-13 Monon Bell Game win over Wabash. In his eight seasons with the Tigers, Lynch's teams compiled a 53-27 record including 40-20 in conference games.

During his first stint as a head coach with the Tigers, Lynch succeeded long-time DePauw head coach Nick Mourouzis and was the 2004 Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference Coach of the Year, marking the first time a football coach in his initial year in the SCAC earned the distinction. During that season he coached wide receiver/returner JaMarcus Shephard who was one of two Division III players invited to the 2005 Hula Bowl Maui All-Star Classic. Over the course of his eight seasons, he led DePauw to four 8-2 campaigns including three straight from 2015 through 2017.

Among the 80 all-conference honors garnered by the student-athletes he has coached while at DePauw, two were newcomers of the year, one was a co-special teams player of the year and another an offensive player of the year. He coached one American Football Coaches Association All-America selection and five have earned D3football.com all-region honors. Two of his student-athletes earned the distinction of Academic All-America® and more than 30 achieved conference academic honors.

Lynch's head coaching career spanned 25 seasons with stops at Butler (1985-89), Ball State (1995-2002), DePauw (2004, 2013-present) and Indiana (2007-10). Over those 25 seasons, his teams compiled a 145-122-3 record. 

In January 2005, Lynch was named the associate head coach and offensive coordinator at Indiana where he joined longtime friend and head coach Terry Hoeppner.

The interim head coach for two games during the 2006 season, Lynch was named the head coach in June 2007 just days before coach Hoeppner passed away after battling cancer. Lynch directed Indiana to a 7-6 record in 2007 and a berth to the Insight Bowl. He was the only head coach in Indiana history to guide his team to a bowl game in his first season and just the fourth to lead a team to a postseason game. The seven victories in his debut season were the second most for a first-year Hoosiers head coach. In his four seasons in Bloomington, Lynch added a pair of "I's"  to the Old Oaken Bucket chain, defeating Purdue in 2007 and 2010.

Lynch mentored three all-Americans, one Academic All-America® selection, seven first team all-Big Ten selections, 74 academic all-Big Ten honorees and a Big Ten Medal of Honor recipient.

Prior to coming to DePauw, the 1977 Butler graduate served as associate athletic director for development at his alma mater. In that role he was responsible for athletics annual giving through the Bulldog Club and served as a major gift officer for athletics. He also was the football administrator.

A four-year letter winner in both football and basketball and captain of each at Butler, Lynch earned Associated Press Little All-America honors at quarterback in 1974, 1975 and 1976 and was the first Butler student-athlete to twice earn the Indiana Collegiate Conference's prestigious Tony Hinkle Award presented for both outstanding scholastic and athletic achievement. Lynch was the Indiana Collegiate Conference Player of the Year and ICC Back of the Year all three seasons. He still holds the school record with 60 career touchdown passes and ranks third with 5,909 career passing yards. He also led the basketball team in assists in 1975-76.

After graduation, Lynch spent seven seasons as a Bulldogs assistant coach, including stints as the quarterbacks and wide receivers coach, recruiting coordinator and offensive coordinator. He moved on to Northern Illinois as quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator in 1984, and was the quarterbacks coach of the United States Football League's Orlando Renegades in 1984.

Lynch then returned to Butler in 1985 when he was named the Bulldogs' head coach. While at the then-NCAA Division II program, his teams compiled a 36-12-3 record including Heartland Collegiate Conference championships in 1985, 1987, 1988 and 1989.

He was named the conference's coach of the year in 1985, 1987 and 1988 and the American Football Coaches Association Region 3 Coach of the Year in 1985 and 1988. Lynch directed the Bulldogs to the Division II postseason in 1988 and into the top 20 rankings four times.

Lynch then moved on to Ball State where he served as assistant head coach, offensive coordinator and quarterback coach for the Cardinals from 1990-92. He served as quarterback coach for Indiana in 1993 and 1994 and returned to Ball State in 1995 as head coach, beginning an eight-year stint that included a Mid-American Conference championship in 1996 and an appearance in the Las Vegas Bowl. He also directed the Cardinals to the MAC West Division co-championship in 2001. His teams were recognized by the AFCA for outstanding graduation rates in 2000, 2001 and 2002.

Lynch was inducted into the Butler Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000 and joined Mourouzis in the class of 2004 for induction into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame.

Sep. 3: All times Eastern
5:00 PM
Merchant Marine at Montclair State
6:00 PM
Millikin at Olivet
StatView Live stats
6:00 PM
Wilkes at King's
7:00 PM
Bluffton at Ohio Wesleyan
7:00 PM
Wilmington at Wooster
7:00 PM
Westminster (Pa.) at Marietta
7:00 PM
Buffalo State at Brockport
7:00 PM
Gettysburg at Juniata
7:00 PM
Southern Virginia at UW-River Falls
7:30 PM
Chicago at Trine
8:00 PM
Belhaven at Millsaps
8:00 PM
Rockford at Beloit
Sep. 4: All times Eastern
6:00 PM
Randolph-Macon at Dickinson
6:00 PM
Mary Hardin-Baylor at Rowan
6:00 PM
Gallaudet at Albright
6:00 PM
Shenandoah at Methodist
6:30 PM
Alvernia at Keystone
7:00 PM
St. Lawrence at Norwich
7:00 PM
Lebanon Valley at Franklin and Marshall
7:00 PM
Case Western Reserve at Rochester
7:00 PM
Alfred at Hobart
7:00 PM
Bridgewater at Stevenson
7:00 PM
MIT at Nichols
7:00 PM
Hartwick at Misericordia
7:00 PM
Western New England at Springfield
7:00 PM
Delaware Valley at Ursinus
7:00 PM
Salve Regina at Mass-Dartmouth
7:30 PM
Catholic at McDaniel
Live stats
8:00 PM
Lakeland at Carthage
10:00 PM
Howard Payne at Pacific
Sep. 5: All times Eastern
TBA
Maine Maritime at Massachusetts Maritime
Live stats
TBA
Allegheny at Anderson
12:00 PM
New England College at Plymouth State
12:00 PM
Fitchburg State at Dean
Live stats
12:00 PM
University of New England at Coast Guard
12:00 PM
Muhlenberg at Moravian
Live stats
12:00 PM
Curry at Bridgewater State
12:00 PM
Maryville (Tenn.) at Heidelberg
12:00 PM
Eastern at Endicott
Video Live stats
12:00 PM
Hampden-Sydney at Wabash
Video Live stats
12:00 PM
Washington and Jefferson at Utica
12:00 PM
Ithaca at Johns Hopkins
12:00 PM
Illinois Wesleyan at Albion
12:00 PM
Cortland at Grove City
12:00 PM
WPI at RPI
12:00 PM
Calvin at Otterbein
1:00 PM
Lycoming at TCNJ
1:00 PM
Capital at Waynesburg
1:00 PM
Hilbert at St. Vincent
1:00 PM
Wittenberg at Washington and Lee
1:00 PM
Ohio Northern at Adrian
1:00 PM
Hope at Denison
1:00 PM
Western Connecticut at William Paterson
1:00 PM
Susquehanna at Union
1:00 PM
Morrisville State at Kean
1:00 PM
Kenyon at Kalamazoo
1:00 PM
Westminster (Mo.) at Manchester
1:00 PM
Framingham State at Husson
1:00 PM
Worcester State at SUNY-Maritime
Live stats
1:00 PM
Westfield State at Vermont State Castleton
1:00 PM
Chapman at Hardin-Simmons
1:00 PM
Alma at UW-Eau Claire
1:00 PM
Bethel at North Central (Ill.)
2:00 PM
Centre at Hanover
2:00 PM
Roanoke at Virginia-Lynchburg
2:00 PM
FDU-Florham at St. John Fisher
2:00 PM
John Carroll at Carnegie Mellon
Live stats
2:00 PM
Hiram at Oberlin
2:00 PM
Linfield at UW-Oshkosh
2:00 PM
Augsburg at UW-Stevens Point
2:00 PM
Carleton at UW-Whitewater
2:00 PM
Mount Mercy at Grinnell
2:00 PM
Concordia-Moorhead at Nebraska Wesleyan
Video Live stats
2:00 PM
Lawrence at Luther
2:00 PM
Mount Union at Wheaton (Ill.)
2:00 PM
Carroll at St. Norbert
2:00 PM
Macalester at Martin Luther
2:00 PM
Cornell at Coe
2:00 PM
Knox at Eureka
2:00 PM
Greenville at Lake Forest
2:00 PM
UW-La Crosse at St. John's
2:00 PM
Illinois College at Elmhurst
2:00 PM
Aurora at UW-Platteville
2:00 PM
Benedictine at Buena Vista
2:00 PM
Concordia-Chicago at Minnesota-Morris
2:00 PM
Hamline at Crown
2:00 PM
Central at Gustavus Adolphus
2:00 PM
Bethany at Sewanee
2:00 PM
Concordia (Wis.) at Ripon
2:00 PM
Wisconsin Lutheran at St. Scholastica
3:00 PM
Widener at Geneva
3:00 PM
Willamette at Pomona-Pitzer
Video Live stats
4:00 PM
Thiel at Alfred State
4:00 PM
Northwestern (Minn.) at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps
4:00 PM
Cal Lutheran at Pacific Lutheran
4:00 PM
Lewis and Clark at Puget Sound
5:00 PM
East Texas Baptist at Lyon
6:00 PM
N.C. Wesleyan at Averett
6:00 PM
North Park at Franklin
6:00 PM
Guilford at Greensboro
6:00 PM
St. Olaf at Loras
7:00 PM
DePauw at Rose-Hulman
7:00 PM
Muskingum at Mount St. Joseph
7:00 PM
Apprentice at Christopher Newport
7:00 PM
Berry at Huntingdon
7:00 PM
Austin at Schreiner
7:00 PM
Simpson at Augustana
7:00 PM
McMurry at Southwestern
7:00 PM
UW-Stout at Dubuque
7:30 PM
Point at LaGrange
8:00 PM
Texas Lutheran at Trinity (Texas)
8:00 PM
Washington U. at Rhodes
8:00 PM
Wartburg at Monmouth
8:00 PM
Azusa Pacific at La Verne
8:00 PM
Simpson (Calif.) at Whittier
10:05 PM
Redlands at George Fox
Maintenance in progress.