Jonathan Charles Smith (born January 18, 1979) is an American college football coach, currently the head coach at Michigan State University.[1] He was previously the head coach for six seasons at his alma mater, Oregon State University.[2] As a player, he was a four-year starter at quarterback for the Beavers under head coaches Mike Riley and Dennis Erickson.

Quick Facts Current position, Title ...
Jonathan Smith
Thumb
Smith in 2017
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamMichigan State
ConferenceBig Ten
Record4–4
Biographical details
Born (1979-01-18) January 18, 1979 (age 45)
Pasadena, California, U.S.
Playing career
1998–2001Oregon State
Position(s)Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2002–2003Oregon State (GA)
2004–2009Idaho (QB)
2010–2011Montana (OC/QB)
2012–2013Boise State (QB)
2014–2017Washington (OC/QB)
2018–2023Oregon State
2024–presentMichigan State
Head coaching record
Overall38–39
Bowls1–1
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
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Early years

Born in Pasadena, California, Smith graduated from Glendora High School in east Los Angeles County in 1997. He went north to play college football at Oregon State, and was originally a walk-on under head coach Mike Riley.

Smith was a four-year starter for the Beavers at quarterback, taking over midway through his redshirt freshman season in 1998 and maintaining the job through his senior season in 2001. As a junior in 2000 under Dennis Erickson, he led the Beavers to their greatest season in school history. The Beavers finished 11–1, a school record for wins, and won a share of their first conference title in 36 years, and finished the season ranked fourth in the country. His wide receivers on the team included future NFL players Chad Johnson and T. J. Houshmandzadeh. Smith was the MVP of the Fiesta Bowl.[3][4][5][6]

College statistics

More information Passing, Rushing ...
PassingRushing
YearTeamGPCmpAttPctYdsTDIntYdsTD
1998Oregon State68118144.81,42765-560
1999Oregon State1220742548.73,053157-963
2000Oregon State1217033850.32,773207-1650
2001Oregon State1118031756.82,4271410-1411
College Totals[7]416381,26150.69,6805529-4584
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Coaching career

Assistant coach

Smith was a graduate assistant at his alma mater in 2002 and 2003 under Erickson and Riley. He was the quarterbacks coach for six seasons (20042009) at the University of Idaho under three head coaches: Nick Holt, Erickson, and Robb Akey, then the offensive coordinator for two seasons at the University of Montana. Smith was the quarterbacks coach for two seasons at Boise State University under Chris Petersen, then went with him to the University of Washington and stayed for four seasons.

Oregon State

Smith was named Oregon State's head coach on November 29, 2017.[1] He took the reins of his alma mater in a tumultuous period after Gary Andersen quit on October 9, six games in to his third season.[8] Oregon State was 12–36 (.250) in the four seasons before Smith's arrival.

Smith broke through in his fourth season in 2021, posting his first winning record at 7–6 and receiving an invite to the LA Bowl.[9] The Beavers improved in 2022, posting the third ten-win season in program history after soundly defeating Florida 30–3 in the Las Vegas Bowl.[10]

Smith's initial five-year deal in 2017 paid him $1.9 million annually and automatically extended by one year after every six-win season.[11] On January 7, 2020, Smith received a three-year extension through the 2025 season.[12] After his first winning season in 2021, Smith's contract was rewritten, keeping him signed through the 2027 season and calling for him to make $3.25 million beginning in the 2022 season.[13] After a historic season for the program in 2022, including a win over rival Oregon, Smith's received a new deal with another significant pay increase; the new six-year deal raised his salary to $4.85 million beginning in 2023.[14] Smith's new deal reportedly placed him at fifth in the Pac-12 in compensation, including ahead of his in-state counterpart Dan Lanning.[15]

Michigan State

Smith was officially named Michigan State's head coach on November 25, 2023.[1] The position had been vacant since late September, after Mel Tucker's employment was terminated.[16]

Head coaching record

College

More information Year, Team ...
Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Oregon State Beavers (Pac-12 Conference) (2018–2023)
2018 Oregon State 2–101–86th (North)
2019 Oregon State 5–74–5T–2nd (North)
2020 Oregon State 2–52–54th (North)
2021 Oregon State 7–65–43rd (North)L LA
2022 Oregon State 10–36–3T–5thW Las Vegas1717
2023 Oregon State 8–45–4T–4thSun[lower-alpha 1]
Oregon State: 34–3523–29
Michigan State Spartans (Big Ten Conference) (2024–present)
2024 Michigan State 4–42–3
Michigan State: 4–42–3
Total:38–39
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  1. Smith left for Michigan State before Oregon State's bowl game

References

Further reading

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