The State College of Mines and Metallurgy fielded its first football team in 1914, under the direction of head coach Tommy Dwyer, who led the team until 1917.[2] Head coach Harry Van Surdam took over the reins of the Miners in 1920, the same year the school changed its name to the College of Mines and Metallurgy of the University of Texas.[3] Former Texas head coach E. J. Stewart led the Miners football program from 1927 to 1928, compiling a 5–6–3 record during those two seasons.[4]Mack Saxon served as the head football coach of the Miners from 1929 to 1941, compiling a record of 66–43–9, making him the winningest head coach in program history.[5] He led the Miners to three 7–1 seasons.[5] Saxon led the Miners, an NCAA Division I-A independent for its entire 21-year history to that point, into the Border Conference in 1935.[6] Saxon's 1936 team lost 34–6 to Hardin–Simmons in the 1937 Sun Bowl, the only bowl game to which his teams were invited.[7]Jack Curtice had a successful run as the Miners head coach from 1946 to 1949, compiling a record of 24–13–3, which included back to back 8-2-1 campaigns during his final two years.[8] It was in 1949 that the College of Mines and Metallurgy of the University of Texas changed its name to Texas Western College.[3][9] Curtice left the Miners to accept the position of head coach for Utah after the 1949 season.[10]
In June 1950, Mike Brumbelow was hired as the head football coach and athletic director at Texas Western.[11] He had been operating sporting goods stores at Midland and Odessa, Texas (in partnership with Tex Carleton) at the time of his hiring at UTEP.[12] Brumbelow served as head football coach at UTEP from 1950 to 1956.[13][14][15] He had a successful tenure as coach, guiding his teams to a 46–24–3 record.[16] The team won eight or more games three times, in 1953, 1954 and 1956.[13] He led UTEP to appearances in the 1954 Sun Bowl, 1955 Sun Bowl, and 1957 Sun Bowl, two of which UTEP won.[17] Brumbelow retired as UTEP's football coach in July 1957 and as athletic director in 1959.[18][19] He retired as the school's second winningest head football coach and held that distinction until he was surpassed by Mike Price in 2012.[20] Brumbelow was inducted into El Paso Athletic Hall of Fame in 1964,[18] and the UTEP Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007.[17]Ben Collins was promoted from assistant coach to head coach following Brumbelow's retirement.[21] Under his tutelage, the Miners compiled a record of 18–29–1.[22] He also succeeded Brumbelow as athletics director.[21] Collins resigned after multiple losing seasons at the helm of Miners football.[23]Bum Phillips came to Texas Western from Amarillo High School and led the Miners for one season, a 4–5 campaign in 1962.[24] He left the Miners to return to the high school ranks with Port Neches–Groves High School in 1963.[25] Texas Western again returned to the high school ranks to find a head football coach in 1963, this time nabbing Warren Harper from Sherman High School.[26] However, after two seasons and a 3–15–2 overall record,[27] the Miners athletics administration relieved Harper of his head coaching duties.[26]
Former Tulsa head coach Bobby Dobbs came to Texas Western from the CFL's Calgary Stampeders.[28] In addition the head coaching stints in the CFL and Tulsa, Dobbs played fullback for an Army program under Earl Blaik that won consecutive national championships in 1944 and 1945.[29]
In his first season as the Miners head coach, Dobbs turned a 0–8–2 team into an 8–3 that defeated powerhouse North Texas 61–15 in the season opener and beat TCU 13–12 in the 1965 Sun Bowl.[30][31] In the season's second game, the Miners defeated New Mexico by a score of 35–14.[32] Dobb's team then defeated New Mexico State by a score of 21-6[33] and Colorado State by a score of 35–10.[33] The Miners then lost their next three to Wyoming,[33] Arizona State[33] and Arizona.[33] They broke their three-game skid by defeating Utah by a close 20–19.[34] They followed that with a 57–33 win over I-AA opponent Xavier.[35] The Miners finished off the 1965 season with a 38–21 win over I-AA West Texas A&M[35] and the 13-12 Sun Bowl win over TCU.[36]
In April 1966, Dobbs turned down an offer from his alma mater to succeed Paul Dietzel as Army head coach due to his wife, Joanne's illness that required her to stay in the warm climate in El Paso.[37][29] The Miners went 6–4 in 1966.[38] They began the season with a 30–26 loss to Arizona State on September 17.[39] After losing to North Texas the following week by a score of 12–9,[40] Dobb's team responded with four straight victories; 51–3 over New Mexico,[41] 9–3 over West Texas A&M,[42] 68–21 over I-AA opponent Texas–Arlington[43] and a 35–0 shutout over San Jose State.[44] Texas Western then lost consecutive games to BYU[45] and Wyoming.[46] Dobbs led his team to two wins to close the season; a 28–14 win over archrival New Mexico State[47] and a 27–20 victory over Utah.[48]
In 1967, Texas Western College changed its name to the University of Texas at El Paso.[3]
Dobbs' football team led the nation in passing and scoring that season, losing its two games by a total of three points.[49] They finished the season with a 7–2–1 record.[50] UTEP kicked off the season with a 50-14 thrashing of I-AA foe UC Santa Barbara.[51] After a narrow 33–32 loss to Arizona State,[52] the Miners tied Arizona at 9-9.[53] Dobbs' Miners then won their next four, defeating BYU 47–17,[54] scoring a school-record 75 points in a 75–12 rout of New Mexico (during which UTEP quarterback Brooks Dawson threw for six touchdown passes on his first six pass attempts of the game),[55][56] a 46–24 win over New Mexico State[57] and a 17–0 shutout of Colorado State.[58] After losing to No. 6 Wyoming by a score of 21–19,[59] the Miners closed the regular season with a 28–8 win over Utah.[60] UTEP accepted a berth in the 1967 Sun Bowl on its home turf, defeating Ole Miss by a score of 14–7.[61]
Many of Dobbs' players went to the pro ranks including Fred Carr, Billy Stevens, Ron Jones, and Leon Harden to the Green Bay Packers to play for Vince Lombardi.[107][108][109][110][111] At one point, Dobbs ranked second to only Bear Bryant among college coaches in number of players going in the National Football League. In 1972, Bobby Dobbs said that if his 1–5 team didn't beat New Mexico, he would resign.[112] The team lost and Dobbs resigned.[112] Dobbs compiled a 41–35–2 record at UTEP in seven full seasons and a partial eighth.[113]Tommy Hudspeth was promoted form offensive coordinator to head coach for the 1973 following Dobbs' resignation.[112] In his first season, the Miners freefell to 0–11,[114] which led to Hudspeth's firing after just one full season as Miners head coach.[115]
The Miners struggles continued under head coach Gil Bartosh, who came to El Paso from his post as running backs coach at Texas A&M under Emory Bellard. The Miners compiled a record of 6–28 before Bartosh was fired by a frustrated athletics administration desperate for sustained success.[116][117]
Bill Yung came to UTEP after a mediocre stint as West Texas State's head coach.[217] He also served as offensive coordinator at Baylor from 1974 to 1976 under Grant Teaff.[218] Yung brought with him extensive recruiting ties in west Texas, an up-tempo and pass-oriented Air raid offense with offensive coordinator Hal Mumme and a renewed spirit of optimism that things would get turned around,[219][220] but unfortunately they didn't. Yung's record was 7–39 in four seasons.[221] Yung was fired after a 1–10 campaign in 1985.
Yung's last season in 1985 produced a 1–10 record.[249] UTEP lost to Air Force,[250] No. 3 SMU,[172]Colorado State,[251]New Mexico State,[252]Utah[252] and Kent State.[253] Then, the Miners pulled one of the greatest upsets in college football history.[254] No. 7 BYU came to El Paso to face the Miners and were overwhelming 35-point favorites to win the game.[255] To illustrate the disparity between the two college football programs, the Miners entered the contest with just 14 wins over the previous 11 seasons while the Cougars had won 13 games the previous season alone and 30 of their previous 31.[255] Five years after suffering one of the most lopsided defeats in NCAA history in an 83-7 crushing to BYU, the UTEP Miners defeated the Cougars by a score of 23–16. [255][254] The Miners used an unusual strategy on defense, rushing only two and dropping nine defensive players into coverage and, as a result, held BYU quarterback Robbie Bosco to career low passing numbers.[255] UTEP fans stormed the field and tore down the goalposts after the win, considered to be the biggest in school history.[255] The celebration would be short lived, as the Miners lost their remaining four games of the 1985 season; dropping contests to New Mexico,[252]Hawaii,[252]San Diego State[256] and Wyoming.[252] UTEP athletics director Bill Cords decided to dismiss Yung as head coach after the completion of the 1985 season.[257]
UMass head coach Bob Stull was chosen as Yung's replacement in 1986.[258][259] Stull turned around a struggling Minutemen football program in two years and also served as an assistant coach under Don James at Kent State and Washington for a dozen years, including as offensive coordinator for the Huskies from 1979 to 1983.[258][259]
In 1988, the Miners had the best season in their program's history, compiling a 10–3 record (the most wins in a single season ever in UTEP history).[285] The season began with wins over I-AA foes Mankato State[131] and Weber State.[241] UTEP then lost a heartbreaker to BYU by a score of 31–27.[124] Stull's Miners then reeled off six straight wins, defeating Tulsa by a score of 27–24,[286]Utah by a score of 38–28,[287]Hawaii by a score of 42–25,[288]Colorado State by a score of 34–14,[289]New Mexico in a shutout of 37-0[290] and New Mexico State by a score of 42–9.[291] Texas-El Paso suffered a 51-6 beating at the hands of No. 10 Wyoming in their tenth game of the season.[292] UTEP finished the regular season with wins over San Diego State[293] and Air Force.[294] The Miners were invited to the Independence Bowl in Shreveport, Louisiana to face Southern Miss, a game the Miners lost to the Brett Favre-quarterbacked Golden Eagles by a score of 38–18.[295] The Independence Bowl was the Miners' first bowl appearance in 21 years.[296] 1988 was the best statistical season in Miners football history.[296] Stull accepted the head football coach position at Missouri after the 1988 season.[297] He left El Paso with a 21–15 record.[298] Stull was the first Miners head coach to leave with a winning record since Bobby Dobbs in 1972.[299] Stull returned to the University of Texas at El Paso to serve as athletics director in 1998.[300]
Following Stull's departure, UTEP initially pursued Idaho head coach Keith Gilbertson, but after consideration, Gilbertson opted not to take the UTEP job and remain with the Vandals.[301]David Lee left his post as offensive coordinator at Arkansas to take his first head coaching position.[302] Lee was a respected offensive mind who had served as an assistant coach under the likes of Steve Sloan at Vanderbilt and Ole Miss and Ken Hatfield at Arkansas.[303] Lee, however, was unable to continue the momentum generated by his predecessor, Bob Stull, compiling an 11–41–1 record in four full seasons and a partial fifth.[304]
The drop-off was evident almost immediately, as Lee led the Miners to a 2–10 mark in his first season.[305] UTEP began the season losing to Tulsa by a score of 23-14[306] and I-AA foe Lamar by a score of 21–19.[307] Texas El-Paso earned their first win of the season in their third game of the season in a 29–27 victory over New Mexico State.[308] The Miners then lost their next three to Air Force,[309] No. 8 Arkansas[310] and Utah.[311] Lee's squad then defeated New Mexico by a score of 26–7 to earn what would be their last win of the season.[312] UTEP closed the 1989 season by losing five straight; to No. 21 BYU by a score of 49–24,[313] to San Diego State by a score of 34–31,[314] to Hawaii by a score of 26–7,[315] a shutout to Colorado State by a score of 52-0[316] and in the season finale to Wyoming by a score of 41–10.[317] The Miners went 3–8 in 1990.[318] Lee's team began the season by losing 30–10 to BYU.[319] After defeating New Mexico State by a score of 27–24,[320] the Miners were shut out by No. 7 Tennessee to the tune of 56–0.[321] After losing to Colorado State by a score of 38–20,[322] Texas El-Paso defeated I-AA foe Sam Houston State by a score of 17–10.[323] Lee's squad lost to New Mexico by a score of 48–28 on October 6.[324] After beating Hawaii by a score of 12-10 the next week,[325] UTEP finished the season with four straight losses; dropping games to Utah,[326] No. 18 Wyoming,[327]Air Force[327] and San Diego State.[328]
UTEP slightly improved to a 4–7–1 record in 1991.[329] The Miners began the season by defeating New Mexico by a score of 35–19.[144] After losing to Baylor by a score of 27–7,[330] the Miners either won or tied their next three; defeating New Mexico State by a score of 22–21,[331] defeating I-AA opponent Northwestern State by a score of 14-0[332] and tied Wyoming at 28 apiece.[333] Lee's team then embarked on a four-game losing streak; dropping games to Colorado State,[322]BYU on a blocked field goal with under a minute remaining,[334]San Diego State[335] and Air Force.[336] After defeating Hawaii by a score of 41–24,[337] UTEP finished with losses to Utah[338] and Louisiana Tech.[339] In 1992, Lee led the Miners to a 1–10 record.[340] UTEP began the season with six straight losses; falling to BYU in the opener by a score of 38–28,[341]UNLV by a score of 19–17,[342]New Mexico State by a score of 30–24,[343]Air Force by a score of 28–22,[341]Colorado State by a score of 42-24 (after Lee suspended six players Miners for missing curfew the night before the game)[344] and San Diego State by a score of 49–27.[345] UTEP defeated Utah by a score of 20–13 to earn what would be its only win of the season on October 24.[346] Lee's squad then lost its last four to close the season; falling to Hawaii,[347]Tulsa,[348]New Mexico[349] and Fresno State.[350] UTEP finished 1–11 in 1993.[351] The Miners kicked off the season by losing to No. 13 Arizona by a score of 24–6.[352] The next week, Texas-El Paso won what would be its only game of the season, defeating UNLV by a score of 41–24.[353] The Miners then lost to New Mexico State,[354]Hawaii in a shutout 52–0,[355] No. 16 North Carolina by a score of 45–39,[356]Wyoming by a score of 33-26[355] and Utah by a score of 45–29.[357] After the Utah game, athletics director John Thompson fired David Lee as head coach and named defensive coordinator Charlie Bailey interim head coach.[358] The results didn't improve, however, as UTEP finished the season under Bailey with five more losses; falling to Air Force by a score of 31–10,[355]Fresno State by a score of 30–10,[355]Colorado State in a shutout 52–0,[359]New Mexico by a score of 35-29[360] and BYU by a score of 47–16.[361]
Despite going 0–5 as UTEP's interim head coach, John Thompson removed the interim tag and named Charlie Bailey the permanent head coach of Miners football in early 1994.[362] Bailey had a background as an aggressive defensive play-caller and had compiled a 12–20–1 record as head coach at Memphis from 1986 to 1988 before NCAA infractions that occurred under his watch came to light, resulting in his dismissal.[363] Bailey failed to find success with UTEP, failing to compile one winning record in six seasons with an overall mark of 19–53–2.[364]
Bailey led the Miners to a 4–7 record in 1997.[399] UTEP began the season in Baton Rouge, Louisiana for a showdown against No. 10 LSU, a contest the Miners lost to the Tigers by a score of 55–3.[400] The team followed the LSU loss with losses to New Mexico[401] and Utah.[346] They picked up their first win of the season on September 27 with a 24–16 victory over New Mexico State, snapping their ten-game losing streak.[402] Bailey's team would alternate between wins and losses for the remainder of the season; losing to Clemson by a score of 39–7,[403] beating Tulsa by a score of 33–18,[404] falling to San Jose State by a score of 10–7,[405] upsetting BYU by a score of 14-3 for their first win over the Cougars since the notorious 1985 shocker,[406] losing to SMU by a score of 28–14,[407] upsetting TCU by a score of 24-17[408] and suffering a defeat at the hands of Rice by a score of 31–13.[409] In 1998, UTEP went 3–8.[410] They began the season 0–4 with losses to Texas Tech,[411] No. 24 Oregon,[412]New Mexico State[354] and Colorado State.[413] The Miners defeated New Mexico[414] and San Jose State[415] to improve to 2–4 at the halfway point of the season. Bailey's squad suffered a 32–6 defeat to Fresno State on October 24.[416] After defeating Hawaii by a score of 30–13,[417] they closed the season with losses to Utah,[418]BYU[419] and San Diego State.[420]
Texas El-Paso finished 5–7 in 1999, their best record during the Bailey era.[421] The Miners defeated New Mexico by a score of 13–10 in the season opener.[422] They would then suffer consecutive losses at the hands of Oregon[423][424] and No. 16 Kansas State.[425] Bailey led his team to a 54–23 win over New Mexico State on September 25.[426] The Miners lost the next week in a 33-3 blowout to Hawaii.[427] On October 9, the Miners defeated SMU by a score of 42–28.[428][429] They then lost to Arizona by a score of 34-21[430][431] and Fresno State in a nail biter in overtime by a score of 24–23.[432] The Miners defeated San Jose State by a score of 42–26 on October 30.[433] UTEP lost to Tulsa 43-19[434] and edged Rice 30–29 over the next two weeks.[435] UTEP finished the season with a 52-24 blowout loss to TCU as Horned Frogs running back LaDainian Tomlinson rushed for an NCAA-record 406 yards and six touchdowns against the Miner defense.[436][437] After the completion of the 1999 season, Charlie Bailey announced his resignation as UTEP head coach, citing exhaustion and a desire to spend more time with his family.[438]
Athletics director Bob Stull decided to promote Gary Nord from offensive coordinator to head coach after Bailey's resignation.[439] A native of Louisville, Kentucky, Nord played tight end for the Cardinals from 1975 to 1978 and served as offensive coordinator for the Cardinals from 1989 to 1994 under coach Howard Schnellenberger,[440] helping the Cardinals upset No. 25 Alabama in the 1991 Fiesta Bowl by a score of 34–7.[441] Nord followed Schnellenberger to Oklahoma, where he served as offensive coordinator for the 1995 season.[440] After spending the 1996 season as the wide receivers coach at Pittsburgh under Johnny Majors, Nord joined Charlie Bailey's UTEP staff as offensive coordinator in 1997.[440]
The Nord era got off to a surprisingly strong start. Despite low preseason expectations, the Miners went 8–4 in 2000.[442] UTEP began the season in Norman, Oklahoma against No. 19 Oklahoma, losing to the Sooners by a score of 55–14.[443] Nord's squad posted its first win of the season the following week, defeating SMU by a score of 37–20.[444] After losing to Texas A&M in the season's third game,[445] UTEP won their next seven; defeating Hawaii,[446]New Mexico State,[447]Tulsa,[448]San Jose State,[350]Fresno State,[449]Nevada[450] and Rice.[451] The Miners' longest winning streak since 1988 was snapped on November 18 with a 47-14 shellacking to TCU.[452] UTEP made its first appearance in a bowl game since 1988 on December 28, losing to Boise State by a score of 38–23 in the 2000 Humanitarian Bowl.[453]
UTEP regressed to 2–9 in 2001.[454] They kicked off the season with a 26–6 loss to New Mexico.[455] Nord's team handled I-AA opponent Texas Southern by a score of 52–6 in the second game of the season.[456] After losing to Boise State in a rematch of the previous season's bowl game,[457] Texas El-Paso defeated Tulsa by a score of 26-10 for what would be the Miners' last win of the season.[458] The Miners then traveled to Birmingham, Alabama for a showdown against Alabama, a game they lost by a score of 56–7.[459] That was followed by another blowout loss, a 66-7 debacle at the hands of Hawaii on October 13.[460] Next came losses to San Jose State[461] and SMU.[462] On November 10, the Miners lost to Louisiana Tech by a score of 53–30.[463] They closed the season with losses to Rice[464] and Nevada.[465]
Nord's Miners finished 2–10 in 2002.[466] They defeated I-AA foe Sacramento State by a score of 42–12 in the opening game of the season.[467] In the season's second game, the Miners lost to Kentucky by a score of 77–17.[468] That was followed by a 68–0 shutout at the hands of No. 2 Oklahoma.[469] UTEP then lost to Hawaii by a score of 31–6.[470] San Jose State defeated UTEP by a score of 58–24 on September 28.[471] After losing to archrival New Mexico State by a score of 49–14,[472] UTEP broke through with a 38–35 win over Rice.[473]Tulsa shut out Texas El-Paso by a score of 20–0 on October 26[474] and Boise State won big by a score of 58-3 the next week.[475] The last three losses of the season were a bit closer; 23–17 to Nevada,[476] 42–35 to SMU[477] and 38–24 to Louisiana Tech.[478]
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On December 21, 2003, UTEP announced the hiring of former Washington State head coach Mike Price as its new head football coach.[496] The move was bold and controversial; after Price had left WSU, where he had led the Cougars to unprecedented football success in his 14 years as head coach,[497] he was fired as Alabama's head coach before coaching a single game. He had confessed to visiting a strip club while on vacation in Pensacola, Florida for a golf tournament, being intoxicated for much of the evening, and having about $1,000 charged to his hotel room by an unknown woman staying in the room.[498] This development came on the heels of an earlier reprimand for visiting campus-area bars and drinking into the early hours in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.[499] Price came to UTEP with a reputation as a great quarterbacks coach, having coached Drew Bledsoe and Ryan Leaf at Washington State.[500] At his UTEP introductory press conference, Price said, "I feel reborn. I think this is the right situation for me. My dad told me a long time ago if you go somewhere where you're wanted and needed, your chances for success are a lot better. I want to be here. It's a match made in heaven."[501][502] Price's starting salary at UTEP in 2004 was $225,000 plus incentives.[503]
In his first season in 2004, Price led the Miners to a surprising 8–4 record.[505][506] The Price era began with a lopsided 41–9 loss to Arizona State,[507] but the team rebounded as Price recorded his first win as UTEP's head coach in a 32–0 shutout over Weber State the following week.[508] After losing to No. 23 Boise State by a score of 47–31,[509] the Miners embarked upon a seven-game winning streak, their second such streak in the last five years. It started on October 2, with a 45–0 shutout victory over New Mexico State.[510] The next week, Price's squad defeated Fresno State by a score of 24–21.[511] A 51–20 victory over Hawaii came on October 16, with sophomore quarterback Jordan Palmer throwing for a career-high 317 yards and five touchdowns.[512] Next came a 44-27 road win over Louisiana Tech,[513] a 38-20 road win over San Jose State,[514] a 35–28 win over Rice[515] and a 57-27 blowout victory over SMU.[516]Tulsa snapped UTEP's winning streak with a 37–35 win over the Miners in the regular season finale on November 27.[517] The Miners were offered and accepted a berth in the 2004 Houston Bowl, where the Miners lost to Colorado by a score of 33–28.[518] The season was an astounding turnaround for the Miners, who had won only two games in each of their previous three seasons. At one time during the 2004 season, UTEP earned its first-ever ranking in the AP Poll, rising as high as 23rd.[519] Price was a finalist for two national coaching honors, the Eddie Robinson Award and the Paul "Bear" Bryant Award for Coach of the Year at the conclusion of the 2004 season.[520]
UTEP again finished 8–4 in 2005, their first season in Conference USA.[521] The Miners began the season with a 34–17 win over New Mexico State, who were in their first game under head coach Hal Mumme, the former UTEP offensive coordinator from 1982 to 1985.[522] UTEP followed that with wins over Houston[523] and New Mexico.[524] On October 1, The Miners lost to Memphis by a score of 27–20.[525] The Miners then won their next five over Tulane,[526]Marshall,[527]Rice,[528]Tulsa[333] and I-AA opponent Texas Southern.[529] UTEP, ranked No. 24 nationally, lost to UAB by a score of 35–23 on November 19.[530] They closed the regular season with a 40–27 loss to SMU.[531] UTEP lost to Toledo by a score of 45–13 in the 2005 GMAC Bowl on December 21.[532] Quarterback Jordan Palmer threw for a career-high 29 touchdowns with 19 interceptions while completing 59.4% of his passes for 3,503 yards during the 2005 season.[533] On November 17, 2005, UTEP extended Price's contract by one year.[534]
In 2006, UTEP went 5–7.[535] The team began the season with a 34–27 victory over San Diego State in the season opener.[536] UTEP dropped their next two to No. 24 Texas Tech in overtime[537] and New Mexico.[211] The Miners then won their next three over New Mexico State,[538]SMU[539] and Tulane.[540] Price and his team next suffered three straight losses to Houston,[541]Tulsa[542] and Rice.[543] The Miners defeated UAB on November 10 by a score of 36–17.[544] They finished the season with losses to Marshall[545] and Memphis.[546]Jordan Palmer finished his senior season with 26 touchdown passes, 14 interceptions and he completed 65.7% of his passes.[533] During his time at UTEP, Palmer set school records in completions (851), attempts (1,427), passing yards (11,084), touchdown passes (88) and 300-yard passing games (16).[547] He was selected in the sixth round with the 205th overall pick in the 2007 NFL draft by the Washington Redskins.[548]
The team compiled a 4–8 record in 2007.[549] Redshirt freshman Trevor Vittatoe took over the starting quarterback position from recent graduate Jordan Palmer.[550] UTEP began the season by defeating New Mexico in a defensive struggle by a score of 10–6.[551] Price's team lost their next two to Texas Tech[552] and New Mexico State.[553] Texas El-Paso won their next three; defeating I-AA opponent Texas Southern by a score of 52–12,[554]SMU by a score of 48–45 in overtime[555] and Tulsa in a thriller by a nailbiting score of 48–47.[556] UTEP stumbled over the course of the second half of the season; losing their last six to East Carolina by a score of 45–42 in overtime,[557]Houston by a score of 34–31,[558]Rice by a score of 56-48 after blowing a 48–28 lead,[559]Tulane by a score of 34–19,[560]Southern Miss by a score of 56-30[561] and UCF by a score of 36–20.[562]
Price led the Miners to a 5–7 record in 2008.[563] They stumbled out of the gate, losing their first three to Buffalo,[564] No. 10 Texas[565] and New Mexico State.[566] Price's team responded by winning their next three; defeating UCF in a blowout,[567] and both Southern Miss (in double overtime)[568] and Tulane by closer scores.[569] UTEP lost to Tulsa by a score of 77–35 on October 18, the most points allowed by the Miners in a game since giving up the same number to Kentucky in 2002.[570] On November 1, UTEP lost to Rice by a score of 49–44.[571] UTEP played out-of-conference on November 8, defeating Louisiana–Lafayette by a score of 37–24.[572] After defeating SMU by a score of 36–10,[573] the Miners closed the year with losses to Houston[574] and East Carolina.[575]
UTEP went 4–8 in 2009.[576] They lost by a score of 23–17 to Buffalo in the season opener.[577] The Miners lost to No. 24 Kansas by a score of 34–7 in their second game.[578] After defeating New Mexico State,[579] Price's team lost to No. 2 Texas by a score of 64–7.[580] On October 3, Price's Miners upset No. 12 Houston by a score of 58-41 behind running back Donald Buckram's 262 rushing yards.[581] UTEP fell to Memphis by a score of 35-20 the following week.[582] After defeating Tulsa,[583] Texas-El Paso lost its next four to UAB,[584]Tulane,[585]SMU[586] and Rice.[587] UTEP finished the season with a 52–21 victory over Marshall behind Trevor Vittatoe's 517 passing yards and five touchdowns.[588] Running back Donald Buckram led Conference USA in rushing during the 2009 season, with 1,594 yards and 18 touchdowns.[589]
In 2010, the Miners finished 6–7.[590] In the season's first game, the Miners defeated I-AA foe Arkansas–Pine Bluff by a score of 31–10.[591] After losing to Houston,[592] the Miners defeated New Mexico State,[593]Memphis,[594]New Mexico[595] and Rice.[596] The team lost their next three to UAB,[597]Tulane[598] and Marshall.[599] After defeating SMU by a score of 28–14,[600] the Miners lost their last three to No. 14 Arkansas,[601]Tulsa[602] and in the 2010 New Mexico Bowl to BYU by a score of 52–24.[603] With the New Mexico Bowl appearance, Price became the second Miner head coach to take UTEP to three bowl games, after Mike Brumbelow, who led the Miners to the Sun Bowl in 1954, 1955 and 1957.[604]Trevor Vittatoe, a senior in 2010, broke Jordan Palmer's school records for career passing yards (12,439) and touchdown passes (97) during his time at UTEP.[605] Vittatoe also set school records in total offense (12,291 yards) and touchdowns responsible for (98).[605] Running back Donald Buckram also graduated after the 2010 season and left as the UTEP leader for rushing yards in a single season.[606]
In 2012, UTEP finished 3–9.[620] They began the season with a 24–7 loss to No. 4 Oklahoma.[621] After losing by a score of 28–10 to Ole Miss the following week,[622] Price's Miners earned their first win of the season with a 41–28 victory over rival New Mexico State on September 15.[623] Texas El-Paso then lost to Wisconsin by a score of 37–26,[624]East Carolina by a score of 28–18,[625]SMU in a shutout 17-0[626] and Tulsa by a score of 33–11.[627] UTEP snapped its four-game losing streak with a 24–20 win over Tulane on October 20.[628] Losses to Houston[629] and UCF[630] followed before UTEP beat a winless Southern Miss team in a thriller by a score of 34–33.[631] The Miners finished the season with a 33–24 loss to Rice in the final game of the season.[632] On November 19, 2012, Price announced that he would be retiring, effective at the end of the season.[633] Price left UTEP with a 48–61 record in nine years,[634] making him the second winningest head coach in UTEP football history behind only Mack Saxon.[635] His time coaching the Miners was not over, though, as he later returned as interim head coach in 2017.[636]
Despite having no experience either as a head coach or as a coordinator, Pittsburgh Steelers offensive line coach Sean Kugler was hired to replace Price in December 2012.[637] Kugler played offensive lineman for the Miners from 1984 to 1988 and was on the Miners' ten-win team his senior season under Bob Stull.[638] He served as an assistant coach for UTEP from 1993 to 2000 under David Lee, Charlie Bailey and Gary Nord before serving assistant coach stints for the NFL's Detroit Lions, Boise State under Chris Petersen and the NFL's Buffalo Bills before joining the NFL's Steelers staff under Mike Tomlin.[639]
In 2014, the Miners improved to a 7–6 record.[653] They kicked off the season with a 31–24 win over New Mexico.[654] Kugler's team lost in its second game of the season by a score of 30–26 to Texas Tech.[655] Kugler's team improved to 2–1 after a 42–24 victory over New Mexico State on September 13.[656] The Miners then lost to No. 25 Kansas State by a score of 58-28 the next week.[657] Another blowout loss came the following week, as the Miners lost to Louisiana Tech by a lopsided 55–3.[658] UTEP responded to the defeats with three straight wins, defeating Old Dominion 42–35,[659] shutting out UTSA 34-0[660] and beating Southern Miss by a score of 35–14.[661] The Miners dropped their fourth game of the season on November 8 with a 35–27 loss to Western Kentucky.[662] Texas El-Paso defeated North Texas by a score of 35-17 the following week.[663] UTEP closed the regular season with a 31–13 loss to Rice[664] and a 24–21 victory over Middle Tennessee.[665] The Miners received a berth in the 2014 New Mexico Bowl, their first bowl appearance since 2010.[666] They lost the contest to Utah State by a score of 21–6.[667]
In 2015, Kugler's Miners finished 5–7.[668] The season began with a 48–13 loss to No. 18 Arkansas on September 5.[669] Kugler's team lost their second game of the season to Texas Tech by a score of 69–20.[670] The Miners recorded their first two wins of the season over the next two weeks, defeating New Mexico State by a score of 50–47 in overtime[671] and FCS opponent Incarnate Word by a score of 27–17.[672] Kugler's Miners then lost their next two to UTSA by a score of 25-6[673] and FIU by a score of 52–12.[674] After defeating Florida Atlantic 27–17,[675] the Miners lost to Southern Miss 34–13 on Halloween[676] and defeated Rice 24–21 on November 6.[677] Losses to Old Dominion[678] and Louisiana Tech followed[679] before UTEP defeated North Texas by a score of 20–17 in the season's final game.[680]
The Miners stumbled to a winless 0–12 record in 2017.[694] They started the season on September 2 with a 56–7 loss to No. 7 Oklahoma.[695] In the season's second game, Kugler's team lost to Rice by a margin of 31–14.[696] On September 15, the Miners lost a 63-16 blowout to Arizona.[697] After a 41–14 defeat at the hands of rival New Mexico State,[698] the Miners dropped a 35-21 contest to Army.[699] On October 1, 2017, one day after the loss to Army, it was announced that Kugler had resigned as the head coach, effective immediately.[700] Outgoing athletics director Bob Stull turned to Mike Price to serve as the team's interim head coach for the remainder of the season.[701] On October 7, the Miners lost a heartbreaking 15–14 game to Western Kentucky.[702] That was followed by a 24–0 shutout at the hands of Southern Miss.[703] On October 28, Texas El-Paso lost to rival UTSA by a score of 31–14.[704] After a 30–3 loss to Middle Tennessee,[705] the Miners fell to North Texas by a margin of 45–10.[706] In the season's final two games, the Miners lost to Louisiana Tech by a margin of 42-21[707] and UAB by a score of 28–7.[708]
On December 6, 2017, Kansas State offensive coordinator Dana Dimel was named UTEP's 26th head football coach.[709] A longtime assistant coach at Kansas State under head coach Bill Snyder, Dimel had previous experience turning around struggling college football programs as head coach, greatly improving both Wyoming from 1997 to 1999 and Houston from 2000 to 2002.[710] UTEP signed Dimel to a five-year contract worth a base salary of $750,000 annually.[711]
UTEP has won two conference championships, one outright and one shared.
In 1956 the UTEP Miners finished the year with a 9–2 overall record and a 5–0 in conference to win the Border Conference and its first conference champions title. The season included wins over Arizona, Arizona State, and Texas Tech. The Miners were defeated by North Texas that year. Forty-four years later in 2000, the Miners shared the Western Athletic Conference Champions title with TCU. UTEP finished 8–4 overall record and a 7–1 in conference. The season included wins over Fresno State, Rice, and SMU. The Miners were defeated by TCU, its only loss in conference play.
The Battle of I-10 Rivalry is named for the New Mexico State-UTEP rivalry.[713] The 107–year–old series has had many exciting finishes in its storied history. UTEP holds the series lead at 58–38–2,[194] largely due to dominance in the series from the 1920s to the 1960s. The rivalry is either played in El Paso or Las Cruces, New Mexico.
^"Arizona State v. UTEP". The Ogden Standard-Examiner. Ogden, Utah. October 25, 1970. p. 54. Archived from the original on September 2, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
^"East Tennessee State v. UTEP". Kingsport Times-News. Kingsport, Tennessee. September 20, 1975. p. 7. Archived from the original on September 29, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived(PDF) from the original on September 29, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived(PDF) from the original on September 29, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived(PDF) from the original on August 5, 2017. Retrieved August 5, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^"Lobos entertain UTEP". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Santa Fe, New Mexico. October 19, 1979. p. 153. Archived from the original on August 5, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
^"Utes crush UTEP 35–0". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Santa Fe, New Mexico. November 11, 1979. p. 25. Archived from the original on August 5, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived(PDF) from the original on August 5, 2017. Retrieved August 5, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived(PDF) from the original on August 6, 2017. Retrieved August 5, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)