Matt Drinkall

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ConferenceMAC
Record7–6
Matt Drinkall
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamCentral Michigan
ConferenceMAC
Record7–6
Biographical details
Born (1982-11-08) November 8, 1982 (age 43)
Bettendorf, Iowa, U.S.
Playing career
2001Iowa
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2003–2005Bettendorf HS (IA) (WR/DC)
2006–2007Western Illinois (TE)
2008St. Ambrose (assistant)
2009St. Ambrose (WR)
2010–2011St. Ambrose (OL)
2012–2013St. Ambrose (OC)
2014–2018Kansas Wesleyan
2019Army (OQC)
2020–2022Army (TE)
2023Army (co-OC/OL)
2024Army (OL)
2025–presentCentral Michigan
Head coaching record
Overall49–23
Bowls0–1
Tournaments2–2 (NAIA playoffs)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
1 KCAC (2018)

Matt Drinkall (born November 8, 1982) is an American college football coach who is the head football coach at Central Michigan University. He previously held various offensive coaching positions at the United States Military Academy.

Drinkall began his coaching career as a student assistant coach in 2002 for Kirk Ferentz at the University of Iowa, after suffering a career ending injury as a wide receiver for the Hawkeyes.[1][2]

He previously served as the head football coach of Kansas Wesleyan University in Salina, Kansas, starting in January 2014.[3] He had worked previously as a football coach at the high school and college levels before being hired as head coach.[4] In 2015, Drinkall was the second-youngest head college football coach in the country behind Cornell's David Archer and took the Coyotes to the 2015 playoffs.[5]

On January 14, 2019, Drinkall announced his resignation of the head coaching position at Kansas Wesleyan to join the staff of the Army Black Knights as an offensive quality control coach.[6] He had compiled a 42–17 record as head coach. Drinkall has worked primarily on the offensive side of the ball.

On December 9, 2024, Drinkall was hired by Central Michigan University as the next head coach.[7]

Drinkall grew up in Bettendorf, Iowa and attended Bettendorf High School where he played football and ran track.

He was briefly a wide receiver for the Iowa Hawkeyes before an injury ended his playing career and set his coaching career in motion as a student assistant for Iowa.[8]

Head coaching record

References

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