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Fran Curci

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Fran Curci

Fran Curci (born June 11, 1938) is an American former football player and coach. He served as head coach at the University of Tampa from 1968 to 1970, the University of Miami from 1971 to 1972 and the University of Kentucky from 1973 to 1981, compiling a career college football coaching record of 81–70–2.

Curci played quarterback at Miami from 1957 to 1959. For his career, he completed 187 of 356 passes for 1,937 yards, 13 touchdowns, and 26 interceptions. He also rushed for 830 yards and 6 touchdowns. He was a 1959 second-team All-American (Associated Press).

Curci was selected by the St. Paul-Minneapolis franchise in the 1960 American Football League draft. When Minneapolis pulled out of the league, his rights were transferred to Oakland. He was later traded to the Dallas Texans in exchange for Dalton Truax, which reunited him with former Miami assistant Hank Stram. He did not play for the Texans due to an injury.

An officer in the United States Army Reserve, Curci led the Fort Eustis team to a 25–24 victory over the Quantico Marines in the 1961 Missile Bowl.

Curci began his coaching career in 1961 as an assistant at his alma mater.

Curci led the University of Tampa Spartans to a 25–6 record in three seasons (1968–1970). After his team defeated the Miami Hurricanes at the Orange Bowl in 1970, and Tampa finished that season 10–1, he was hired by the University of Miami.

Curci's record at Miami was 9–13. He was head coach at the University of Miami during the infamous Florida Flop in 1971 when the Florida Gators defense allowed Miami to score a touchdown late in the fourth quarter by dropping to the ground mid-play. The defense wanted quarterback John Reaves to get the ball back and set an NCAA career passing record. Florida won the game 45–16. Curci was particularly upset at the Gators' actions since the game was well out of reach by then. He refused to shake hands with Florida coach Doug Dickey after the game, and was quoted as saying, "I lost all respect for [Dickey] as a coach and as a man. What he did shows no class... I think he made a fool of himself."

During his tenure at the University of Kentucky, Curci compiled a record of 47–51–2. The 1976 Kentucky Wildcats finished 9–3 and 5–1 in conference play—their first winning season in 13 years—and defeated North Carolina in the Peach Bowl 21–0, finishing ranked #18 in the final Associated Press poll. After that season, the Wildcats were slapped with two years' probation for numerous recruiting and amateurism violations. The Wildcats were also banned from bowl games and live television in 1977, and limited to only 25 scholarships in 1977 and 1978.

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