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Buffalo Welcomes New Defensive Coordinator Lou Tepper

Senior Sports Editor

Published: Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Updated: Tuesday, February 7, 2012 20:02

Tepper

Meg Kinsley /// The Spectrum

New defensive coordinator Lou Tepper stands next to the 2008 Mid-American Conference championship trophy – a trophy he hopes to lead his defense to in his tenure at Buffalo.


 

Former defensive coordinator William Inge may have left the university for the larger market of the NFL, but he made sure to have a hand in who would be the man to replace him. That's where Lou Tepper comes in.

Inge and Tepper have had a long relationship. Tepper attempted to recruit Inge to come play for him at Illinois, and although Tepper was unsuccessful, the two had remained in touch ever since and always made a point to meet at conventions within the coaching industry.

Their paths crossed once again this winter, meeting to discuss "X's and O's" for a few hours before Inge stood up, grabbed his phone and told Tepper to sit still. As a diabetic, Tepper was concerned about his blood sugar, but decided to wait it out. It turned out to be a pretty good decision for him.

The man on the other end of the Inge's phone was head coach Jeff Quinn. Quinn was still searching for a man to replace Inge, and Inge insisted that he had just found his replacement in Tepper.

Weeks later after successfully making it through Quinn's interviewing process, Tepper is now the man at the helm of the Bulls' defense, anxiously trying to get a feel for the team, and prepare for next season, after just arriving in the city of good neighbors on Monday.

"We've got 17 things on our agenda, and right now we're on number two," Tepper said.

Tepper comes to Buffalo attempting to finish off that agenda with his wife of 44 years, and his high school sweetheart Karen, who he jokes has been in football longer than he has, as the daughter of his high school football coach.

"She was 15 at the time," Tepper said. "I don't know how or why he let her date me. But we were under the microscope and it was a bit uncomfortable."

Over the course of Tepper's coaching career, Karen has been the only constant as Lou has held a number of different positions across the country.

"I've coached in a couple of conferences that don't exist anymore," Tepper said. "I was in New Hampshire when they were in the Yankee Conference."

New Hampshire is where his career started on the defensive side of the football, from 1968 to 1971. Tepper then moved to William and Mary ('72 to '77) before stepping up to the Division I ranks at Virginia Tech ('78 to '82), back when they were an independent school without conference affiliation.

"That's until we recruited [NFL Hall of Fame defensive end] Bruce Smith," Tepper said. "Once we recruited Smith and he won the Outland trophy, that put Tech on the map. No one in the ACC wanted to play us."

Following his time in Blacksburg, Virginia, Tepper headed west to be the defensive coordinator at Colorado ('83 to '87), taking over the Buffaloes when they ranked dead last in total defense two years in a row.

"They were the doormat of the old Big Eight," Tepper said. "The year before I got there they gave up 80 points to Nebraska and 80 points to Oklahoma. My thought was, ‘Hey, I can't do worse than this; I've got to be an improvement.' We went from 120th my first year down to 101st, we made great progress, then 81st, then 17th, then down to 11th. Five years later Bill [McCartney] won the National Championship [at Colorado]. So that was a great experience for me."

Following his time at Colorado, Tepper went to Illinois to be the defensive coordinator in 1988, a position that he held until accepting the head coaching position in 1991. In over five seasons as the Illini's head coach he posted the best winning percentage of any Illinois coach in the past 20 years leading the team to a 25-31-2 record, until he was let go in 1997.

After the '97 season Tepper had an opportunity to head to the NFL with the St. Louis Rams and coach under close friend Dick Vermeil. Tepper decided to turn the opportunity down however, due to wanting to remain closer to his family.

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