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Tom Craft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tom Craft
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamRiverside City
ConferenceNational Southern
Record144–22
Biographical details
Born (1953-11-12) November 12, 1953 (age 71)
Iowa City, Iowa, U.S.
Playing career
1972–1973Monterey Peninsula
1975–1976San Diego State
Position(s)Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1977–1982Palomar (QB/WR)
1983–1993Palomar
1994–1996San Diego State (OC/QB)
1997–2001Palomar
2002–2005San Diego State
2007–2009Mt. San Antonio (assoc. HC/OC/QB)
2010–presentRiverside City
Head coaching record
Overall19–29 (college)
260–78–1 (junior college)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 junior college (1991, 1993)
2 CCCAA / 3C2A (2019, 2023)
5 Mission Conference South Division (1989–1993)
4 Mission Conference Central Division (1998–2001)
2 Central East (2010–2011)
7 National Central (2013–2017, 2021–2022)
4 National Southern (2018–2019, 2023–2024)

Thomas Jay Craft (born November 12, 1953) is an American college football coach.

Career

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He is the head football coach at Riverside City College in Riverside, California, a position he has held since 2010. Craft served as the head football coach at San Diego State University from 2002 to 2005 and for two stints at Palomar College in San Marcos, California, from 1983 to 1993 and 1997 to 2001. Craft has also been the associate head coach and offensive coordinator at Mount San Antonio College in Walnut, California.

Under his tenure, San Diego State developed a reputation of playing the tough teams well but lacked consistency and never had a winning season. In 2004, San Diego State lost to Michigan 24–21, and in 2005, where it pushed Ohio State at home, and lost 24–21 to TCU. San Diego State fired Craft at the end of the 2005 season.[1]

Craft is a graduate of Pacific Grove High School, in Pacific Grove, California, and thereafter played quarterback at San Diego State.

After serving as an assistant coach at Palomar from 1977 to 1982 and with the school openly questioning its commitment to football, he took over head coaching duties in 1983. After a pair of 4–6 seasons, the Comets' fortunes began to improve. By the time Craft left the San Marcos school for the Aztec coordinator's job, Palomar was coming off a three-year stretch of 31–2, had an offense ranked among the nation's top five for five consecutive years and was sporting two national championships. Craft compiled an overall record of 115–56 and three national junior college football championships at Palomar.

At Palomar, Craft taught and coached seven All-American quarterbacks, which include: Duffy Daughtery, Scott Barrick, Brett Salisbury, Andy Loveland, Tom Luginbill, Greg Cicero, and Andy Goodenough.

Head coaching record

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College

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Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
San Diego State Aztecs (Mountain West Conference) (2002–2005)
2002 San Diego State 4–9 4–3 4th
2003 San Diego State 6–6 3–4 5th
2004 San Diego State 4–7 2–5 7th
2005 San Diego State 5–7 4–4 6th
San Diego State: 19–29 13–16
Total: 19–29

Junior college football

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Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Palomar Comets (Mission Conference) (1983–1993)
1983 Palomar 4–6 1–5 6th
1984 Palomar 4–6 2–6 T–7th
1985 Palomar 6–4 4–4 T–3rd
1986 Palomar 5–5 4–5 7th
1987 Palomar 4–4–1 3–5–1 6th
1988 Palomar 4–6 3–6 / 3–1 2nd (South)
1989 Palomar 7–4 6–3 1st (South) W Hall of Fame Bowl
1990 Palomar 7–4 4–0 1st (South) W Hall of Fame Bowl
1991 Palomar 10–1 8–0 1st (South) W Merced Elks Bowl
1992 Palomar 10–1 8–1 / 3–0 1st (South) W Orange Country Classic
1993 Palomar 11–0 9–0 / 3–0 1st (South) W San Francisco Community College Bowl
Palomar Comets (Mission Conference) (1997–2001)
1997 Palomar 6–5 5–5 / 3–3 T–3rd (Central)
1998 Palomar 10–1 9–1 / 5–0 1st (Central) W First Down Bowl
1999 Palomar 8–3 8–2 / 4–1 T–1st (Central) L Shrine Potato Bowl
2000 Palomar 7–4 7–3 / 4–1 T–1st (Central) L Southern California Bowl
2001 Palomar 10–2 7–1 / 5–0 1st (Central) W Southern California Bowl, L CCCAA Championship
Palomar: 113–56–1 88–47–1
Riverside City Tigers (Central East Conference) (2010–2011)
2010 Riverside City 10–1 5–0 1st W Central Division Championship
2011 Riverside City 11–0 5–0 1st
Riverside City Tigers (National Central Conference / League) (2012–2017)
2012 Riverside City 9–2 5–1 2nd W Golden State
2013 Riverside City 10–2 6–0 1st L SCFA Championship
2014 Riverside City 10–2 6–0 1st L SCFA Championship / CCCAA Semifinal
2015 Riverside City 8–3 5–1 T–1st L CCCAA Southern California Playoffs
2016 Riverside City 10–2 4–1 T–1st L SCFA Championship
2017 Riverside City 10–2 4–1 T–1st L SCFA Championship
Riverside City Tigers (National Southern League) (2018–2021)
2018 Riverside City 10–2 5–0 1st L CCCAA/SCFA Championship
2019 Riverside City 13–0 5–0 1st W CCCAA Championship
2020–21 No team—COVID-19
Riverside City Tigers (National Central League) (2021–2022)
2021 Riverside City 10–3 5–0 1st L CCCAA Championship
2022 Riverside City 12–1 5–0 1st L CCCAA Championship
Riverside City Tigers (National Southern League) (2023–present)
2023 Riverside City 12–1 6–1 2nd W 3C2A Championship
2024 Riverside City 9–1 7–0 1st
Riverside City: 144–22 73–5
Total: 260–78–1
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References

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  1. ^ McGrane, Mick (December 6, 2005). "SDSU fires Craft: Athletic director says program needs more energy, confidence". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved November 13, 2012.
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