Bob Chesney

American football coach (born 1977) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Edward Chesney (born August 10, 1977) is an American college football coach who is the head coach at the University of California, Los Angeles. A graduate of Dickinson College, Chesney has also served as the head coach at Salve Regina University, Assumption University, the College of the Holy Cross, and James Madison University. At Assumption, he led the Greyhounds to consecutive NCAA Division II Football Championship playoff appearances in the final three years of his tenure. At Holy Cross, he led the Crusaders to five straight Patriot League titles.

TeamUCLA
ConferenceBig Ten
Record0–0
Quick facts Current position, Title ...
Bob Chesney
Robert Chesney head shot
Chesney coaching the Holy Cross Crusaders in 2023
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamUCLA
ConferenceBig Ten
Record0–0
Biographical details
Born (1977-08-10) August 10, 1977 (age 48)
Kulpmont, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Playing career
1996–1999Dickinson
PositionDefensive back
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2000–2001Norwich (GA)
2002Delaware Valley (DC)
2003–2004King's (PA) (ST)
2005–2006Johns Hopkins (ST/DB)
2007–2008Johns Hopkins (DC/ST/DB)
2009Johns Hopkins (AHC/DC/DB)
2010–2012Salve Regina
2013–2017Assumption
2018–2023Holy Cross
2024–2025James Madison
2026–presentUCLA
Head coaching record
Overall132–52
Bowls2–0
Tournaments3–3 (NCAA D-II playoffs)
2–3 (NCAA D-I playoffs)
0–1 (CFP)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 NE-10 (2015, 2017)
5 Patriot League (2019–2023)
Sun Belt (2025)
Sun Belt East Division (2025)
Awards
2× second Team All-Centennial (1997–1998)
NE-10 Coach of the Year (2015, 2017)
Patriot League Coach of the Year (2019, 2021, 2022)
American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) FCS Region 1 Coach of the Year (2022)
* Sun Belt Coach of the Year (2025)
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Early life and family

Chesney is originally from Kulpmont, Pennsylvania, born to Robert Chesney Sr., and Claudia Chesney (née Yonkovig). He has an older brother, Vincent Chesney, and a younger brother, Nicholas Chesney. Chesney is a 1996 graduate of Our Lady of Lourdes Regional High School and a 2000 graduate of Dickinson College. Married in 2007 to Andrea, he has two daughters and a son.

Coaching career

Salve Regina

Chesney was hired as the fourth head coach in Salve Regina University football program history following his five-year stint as associate head coach at Johns Hopkins University.[1] Chesney rebuilt a Salve Regina program which had a streak of eight-consecutive losing seasons before his tenure, upon which he posted three winning campaigns in a row.[2]

Assumption

Following his success with that program, Chesney was hired as the tenth head coach in Assumption College (now Assumption University) football program history.[3] Prior to his arrival the Assumption program had posted two winning seasons in the 17 previous years.[4] Chesney led the Greyhounds to five-straight winning records and NCAA Tournament appearances in each of his last three years.[5] Chesney coached 94 all-conference selections and 12 All-Americans.[6]

Holy Cross

On December 14, 2017, Chesney was named the 28th head football coach at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.[7][8] Chesney’s tenure as head coach was transformational. Over six seasons he compiled a 44–21 overall record, including a dominant 28–4 mark in conference play. Under Chesney, Holy Cross claimed an unprecedented five straight Patriot League championships; the first team in league history to do so. His 2022 squad went 11–0 in the regular season (the program’s first undefeated regular season since 1991), finished 12–1 overall, and advanced to the FCS quarterfinals — the deepest playoff run for Holy Cross in nearly four decades. Across his Holy Cross years, Chesney earned Patriot League Coach of the Year honors three times (2019, 2021, 2022) and was named the AFCA FCS Region 1 Coach of the Year following the 2022 campaign.[9]

James Madison

On December 7, 2023, Chesney was named the head football coach at James Madison University.[10] In his first season Chesney led the Dukes to a 9–4 overall record[11] and captured the program’s first bowl victory ever, a 27–17 win in the Boca Raton Bowl over Western Kentucky.[12] In 2025, the Dukes had an 11–1 record and secured the Sun Belt East Division Championship.[13] On December 5, James Madison defeated Troy in the Sun Belt Conference Championship game 31–14.[14] Two days later, James Madison was selected for the College Football Playoff as the #12 seed.[15]

UCLA

On December 6, 2025, Chesney was announced as the head football coach at UCLA.[16] UCLA granted permission for Chesney to continue coaching James Madison University through its playoff run.[17]

Head coaching record

Chesney speaks with a Holy Cross player in 2023
More information Year, Team ...
Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Salve Regina Seahawks (New England Football Conference) (2010–2012)
2010 Salve Regina 6–45–33rd (Boyd)
2011 Salve Regina 8–36–23rd (Boyd)W ECAC Northwest
2012 Salve Regina 9–27–11st (Boyd)24
Salve Regina: 23–918–6
Assumption Greyhounds (Northeast-10 Conference) (2013–2017)
2013 Assumption 6–56–34th
2014 Assumption 7–46–3T–3rd
2015 Assumption 11–28–11stL NCAA Division II Second Round17
2016 Assumption 9–38–12ndL NCAA Division II First Round25
2017 Assumption 11–28–11stL NCAA Division II Quarterfinal9
Assumption: 44–1636–9
Holy Cross Crusaders (Patriot League) (2018–2023)
2018 Holy Cross 5–64–2T–2nd
2019 Holy Cross 7–65–11stL NCAA Division I First Round
2020–21 Holy Cross 3–12–01stL NCAA Division I First Round25
2021 Holy Cross 10–36–01stL NCAA Division I Second Round2219
2022 Holy Cross 12–16–01stL NCAA Division I Quarterfinal66
2023 Holy Cross 7–45–1T–1st25
Holy Cross: 44–2128–4
James Madison Dukes (Sun Belt Conference) (2024–2025)
2024 James Madison 9–44–4T–3rd (East)W Boca Raton
2025 James Madison 12–28–01st (East)L CFP First Round2019
James Madison: 21–612–4
UCLA Bruins (Big Ten Conference) (2026–present)
2026 UCLA 0–00–0
UCLA: 0–00–0
Total:132–52
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth
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References

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