Kurt Charles Keeler (born July 26, 1959) is an American football coach and former player. He is the head football coach at Sam Houston State University, a position he had held since 2014. Previously, Keeler was the head coach at his alma mater, the University of Delaware, from 2002 to 2012, and at Rowan University from 1993 to 2001.
Keeler is the all-time winningest coach in NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision playoff history and, after winning the national championship with Delaware in 2003 and Sam Houston in 2020, the only coach in FCS history to win a national championship at two different institutions. In 2019, an ESPN Blue Ribbon Panel selected Keeler as one of the 150 greatest coaches in college football history.[1]
After Raymond retired in 2002, Keeler was named the fourth Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football coach in 62 years. He immediately brought a new offensive philosophy to the team, replacing its famed and historic Winged-T formation with a no-huddle, spread offense. Under Keeler, Delaware won its first national championship since 1979 and its first-ever Division I-AA title (in 2003) with a 15–1 record and a 149–23 total score in the four-game playoff series.
Like his predecessor, Keeler became a popular figure in Delaware. He was named "Delawarean of the Year" in 2004 by Delaware Today magazine and was listed as one of the top college football recruiters in the nation by American Football Monthly magazine. The Wilmington News Journal reported that Keeler was forced to hire an agent after the 2003 championship to help manage speaking engagements, guest appearances and private functions. His trademark sunglasses (which he also wore during night games) and wireless headgear were emulated on bobbleheads sold at games and local Newark, Delaware businesses.
Keeler often challenged criticism that I-AA/FCS programs are of lesser caliber than I-A. "We're the LSU; we're the Georgia, the Florida of Division I-AA," Keeler said in a 2004 interview with American Football Monthly. "We have every resource. There's some people who have better resources than we do, but in general, the college campus we have is in one of the greatest college towns in America, and the academics ... we led the nation last year in out-of-state applications, more than Michigan or Texas. But that's what this school has become. Everybody wants to come to school here."[4]
On June 19, 2008, Keeler signed a 10-year contract extension, which would have seen him coach the Blue Hens through the 2017 season. However, Keeler was fired following a disappointing 2012 season, in which his team went 5–6.[5]
In 2024, Delaware announced that it will be inducting Keeler into the Delaware Athletic Hall of Fame, alongside UD 2002–2003 quarterback Andy Hall.[6]
Sam Houston
On January 23, 2014, Keeler was named the 15th head coach in Sam Houston State program history.[7] In 2014, Sam Houston State went 11–5, as Keeler helped the Bearkats return to the FCS playoffs. Keeler's team won three playoff games, including a win over his old CAA rival Villanova, before losing in the semifinals. The Bearkats went 8–3 in 2015 and once again advanced to the playoff semifinals.
In 2016, Keeler led Sam Houston State to its first undefeated regular season since 2011. Led by Walter Payton Award winner Jeremiah Briscoe, Sam Houston State won the Southland Conference and made an FCS playoffs run before being blown out by James Madison in the quarterfinals. Keeler was named Coach of the Year.
In 2017, Keeler led Sam Houston State to the playoffs for the fourth straight year, once again advancing to the semifinals. This was his third appearance in the semifinals with Sam Houston, although he was once again stopped before the title game, losing to North Dakota State.
As of 2022, Keeler has three Southland Conference championships, a WAC championship, 14 FCS playoff wins and a national title through eight seasons at Sam Houston. As a Bearkat, Keeler has become both the all time FCS playoffs wins leader and the only coach to win an FCS title with two different schools.