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Barry Layne Switzer (born October 5, 1937) is an American former football coach. He served for 16 years as head football coach at the University of Oklahoma and four years as head coach of the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL).
Barry Switzer, at his desk in his home office, still is constantly in motion. His phone rings all day long. Dave Wilson is a college football reporter. He previously worked at The Dallas Morning ...
NORMAN — The first five years that Barry Switzer no longer was the Oklahoma football coach seemed longer than the next 20. “The older you get, the faster it goes,” Switzer said Thursday, the 25th anniversary of the day he resigned. The Switzer era ended June 19, 1989.
Barry Switzer was the head football coach at the University of Oklahoma from 1973-1989. Born in Crossett, Arkansas, on October 5, 1937, Switzer started playing football in the sixth grade in El Dorado, Arkansas.
Barry Switzer is a native Arkansan who became one of the most successful football coaches of all time. He is one of only two people to win both a collegiate national championship and the Super Bowl.
"The King," Barry Switzer, was crowned head coach at Oklahoma 50 years ago this fall. AllSooners commemorates Switzer's impact on the Sooners with this five-part series.
At Arkansas he played under two famous coaches, Jack Mitchell and Frank Broyles. Switzer spent one year in the U.S. Army, then worked as an assistant coach at Arkansas 1961-65 and Oklahoma 1966-72. He became Oklahoma head coach in 1973.
Barry Switzer is a successful football coach who graduated from the University of Arkansas and served in the U.S. Army. He led the University of Oklahoma to three national championship wins and never had a losing season during his tenure as head coach.
Barry Switzer was a football coach in the National Football League (NFL) from 1994 to 1997, finishing his career as the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys. Over his four years of coaching his teams compiled a cumulative win/loss record of 40-24-0.
“We’re gonna win.” And on Sept. 15, 1973 — 50 years ago to the day — Switzer got the first of his 157 wins as OU head coach. Switzer, who roamed the Sooner sidelines until 1988, led OU to three national championships (1974, 1975, 1985), 12 conference championships and an 84% winning percentage.