Kay Dalton

Kay Dalton
Sport(s) Football
Biographical details
Born (1932-05-04) May 4, 1932
Moab, Utah
Playing career
1950–1953 Colorado State
Position(s) End
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1958–1960 Trinidad State JC
1961–1965 Western State
1966 Montreal Alouettes (DC)
1967–1969 Montreal Alouettes
1971 BC Lions (WR/OL)
1972–1973 Colorado (OC)
1974–1976 Denver Broncos (WR)
1977 Buffalo Bills (WR)
1978–1979 Kansas City Chiefs (WR)
1980–1982 Kansas City Chiefs (QB/WR)
1983–1984 Houston Oilers (OC)
1985 Buffalo Bills (QB)
1986 Denver Broncos (SA)
1987–1988 Colorado State (OC)
1989–1999 Northern Colorado (OC)
2000–2005 Northern Colorado
Head coaching record
Overall 7–31–4 (CFL)
71–43 (college)
Bowls 0–1
Tournaments 2–1 (NCAA D-II playoffs)

Statistics

Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 North Central (2002)

Orris Kay Dalton (born May 4, 1932) is a former American and Canadian football coach.

Biography

Dalton began coaching in 1958 as Trinidad State Junior College's head coach. In 1961, he became head coach of Western State College. He had a 33–12 record at WSC, and in 1964 led the Mountaineers to the Mineral Bowl. In his five seasons as coach, he led WSC to four Rocky Mountain Conference championships.

Dalton moved to the professional ranks in 1966 as the defensive coordinator of the Montreal Alouettes. In 1967, he was promoted to head coach after Darrell Mudra resigned to coach at the University of Arizona. Dalton was fired after the 1969 season and was replaced by the team's former quarterback, Sam Etcheverry. He had a 7–31–4 record over three seasons. In 1971, he stayed in the CFL, becoming the offensive line and wide receiver coach of the BC Lions.

In 1972, Dalton returned to college football as offensive coordinator of the Colorado Buffaloes.

He returned to the pros in 1974 as the wide receivers coach for the Denver Broncos. In 1977, he joined Lou Saban's coaching staff, serving as the receivers coach of the Buffalo Bills. After not being retained by Chuck Knox, Dalton held the same position with the Kansas City Chiefs under Marv Levy, another former Alouettes coach. After Levy was fired, he moved to the Houston Oilers coaching staff as offensive coordinator under Ed Biles, Chuck Studley, and Hugh Campbell. In 1985, he rejoined Buffalo Bills as quarterbacks coach before returning to the Broncos the following season as special offensive assistant coach.

In 1987, he returned to his alma mater Colorado State University as the team's offensive coordinator. In 1989, he became the offensive coordinator at the University of Northern Colorado, a position he would hold for 11 years before his promotion to head coach. The Bears won Division II national championships in 1996 and 1997. Quarterback Corte McGuffey won the Harlon Hill Trophy as the NCAA Division II college football player of the year in 1999.

In 2000, Dalton was promoted to head coach when Joe Glenn accepted the same position at the University of Montana. He would guide the team through the early portion of the school's transition from Division II to Division I (I-AA in football). He was relieved of his duties December 2, 2005, by athletic director Jay Hinrichs. Dalton had a 38–31 record in six seasons as the Bears' head coach.[1]

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.