Washington has been a football coach since 1987, beginning as defensive backs coach at Bethune–Cookman. He later held defensive coordinator positions at multiple other historically black universities, including North Carolina Central, North Carolina A&T, Mississippi Valley State, and Grambling State. Washington turned around a struggling defensive unit at Mississippi Valley State to one of the best in the Southwestern Athletic Conference and elevated the Grambling State defense to the upper tier of NCAA Division I FCS.
Washington signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers as an undrafted free agent after the 1982 NFL draft. He played four games in 1982 as a rookie. Then in 1983, Washington played all 16 games as a reserve and had his first career interception. Washington played and started 14 games in 1984 with a career high six interceptions for 139 yards including two returned for touchdowns.[1]
After seven games with the Steelers in 1985, Washington was traded to the Cincinnati Bengals, where he played eight games and had a fumble recovery.[1]
Coaching career
Assistant coach (1987–2017)
From 1987 to 1991, Washington was defensive backs coach at Bethune–Cookman, helping Bethune–Cookman win the 1988 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) championship.[2] In 1992, Washington was assistant head coach, defensive coordinator, and special teams coordinator at Johnson C. Smith University, where he was also the head track and field coach.[2] Then from 1993 to 2000, Washington was defensive coordinator and assistant head coach at North Carolina Central.[2]
Washington's first job at North Carolina A&T was in 2001 as special teams coordinator under head coach Bill Hayes. Then from 2002 to 2006, Washington returned to his alma mater as assistant head coach, defensive coordinator, and defensive backs coach at Mississippi Valley State, turning around one of the worst defenses in the Southwestern Athletic Conference into the second best.[2]
From 2007 to 2010, Washington was defensive backs coach at Grambling State Tigers under head coach Rod Broadway. The 2007 Grambling State team had the no. 12 total defense in all of NCAA Division I FCS. Then in 2008, Grambling State was the FCS leader in turnover margin and third in scoring defense.[2] Following Broadway, Washington returned to North Carolina A&T in 2011 to become defensive coordinator and secondary coach, positions he would hold for seven years.[2]
North Carolina A&T head coach (2018–2022)
Following the retirement of Broadway, Washington was promoted to head coach at North Carolina A&T on January 9, 2018.[2]
In his first season in 2018, Washington led A&T to a 10–2 record. On September 2, North Carolina A&T defeated East Carolina 28–23, marking the third straight season A&T defeated an FBS opponent.[3] A&T's Twitter video of Washington's postgame locker room speech was widely shared; it ended with Washington remarking, "tell 'em to bring me my money."[4] North Carolina A&T received a $330,000 payment from East Carolina for the game.[5] A&T finished the season with a MEAC co-championship, 2018 Celebration Bowl title, black college football national championship, and year-end rankings in both FCS polls (no. 12 STATS, no. 11 AFCA Coaches).
Then in 2019, A&T went 9–3 for a second straight MEAC title. The team went on to win the 2019 Celebration Bowl and defended their black college national championship as a result.[2]
North Carolina A&T did not play in the 2020 season. In July 2020, the MEAC suspended all fall sports due to COVID-19.[6] Although a spring 2021 season was an option, the MEAC declined to hold a football championship, so A&T decided not to compete at all in what would have been the last season before the athletics program would move to the Big South Conference.[7]
In 2021, A&T's first season in the Big South, A&T finished 5–6.