Prior to his first head coaching assignment, Curry served as an assistant at Georgia Tech in 1976 and then for three seasons in the NFL (1977–1979) as Offensive Line Coach with the
Green Bay Packers. Curry returned to Georgia Tech in 1980 as head football coach to replace
Pepper Rodgers. It has been reported that one of Curry's first head coaching decision was to dismiss the
quarterbacks coach,
Steve Spurrier, which supposedly had Spurrier holding a long grudge over it. Curry led his team to a 9–2–1 record in 1985 and a win in the
All-American Bowl. For his efforts, he was named the
ACC Coach of the Year in 1985 by the
Associated Press and the
Atlantic Coast Conference media. Curry posted a 34–43–4 record over seven years at his alma mater, including winning seasons in 1982 (6–5), 1984 (6–4–1), and 1985 (9–2–1) and won the All-American Bowl. Curry then accepted a job as head coach at the
University of Alabama. There he posted a record of 26–10, won a share of the
Southeastern Conference (SEC) title in 1989 and made bowl appearances every year of his three-year tenure. In September 1988, he refused to fly his
Alabama team to play
Texas A&M because of fears that
Hurricane Gilbert would harm his players. The hurricane never reached Texas A&M at
College Station, Texas, which saw Curry subject to ridicule and criticism from A&M coach
Jackie Sherrill that he was doing it to try and dodge the team with their quarterback being hurt with a knee injury. The game was rescheduled for December 1, when Alabama routed A&M, 30–10. Curry also suspended Alabama quarterback Jeff Dunn for breaking team rules prior to the
1988 Sun Bowl against
Army. After posting a 10–1 regular season record (the only blemish being a third loss in a row to Auburn), Curry's
1989 Crimson Tide squad shared the SEC title with
Auburn and
Tennessee—Alabama's first SEC title since 1981—and earned the berth in the
1990 Sugar Bowl, where they lost to the
Miami Hurricanes, 33–25. Curry was honored in 1989 as the
SEC Coach of the Year and received the
Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award. Curry's three-year record of 26–10 gave him the highest winning percentage among Alabama coaches to that point since the retirement of
Bear Bryant. However, Curry had an 0–3 record against Auburn. Indeed, he would never beat the Tigers in 12 tries during his career. Perhaps his best-remembered on-field act with Alabama came during the 1990 Sugar Bowl, when he castigated receiver Prince Wimbley for celebrating a first down against Miami with a dance. Curry called Wimbley to the sideline, grabbed him by the jersey, and lectured him. As
ABC game cameras showed, Wimbley turned away and Curry grabbed his face mask and brought him into eye-to-eye contact. During Curry's time in Tuscaloosa, he was subject to intense scrutiny from the fanbase, famously having an Alabama fan throw a brick through his office window following a 1988 loss to Ole Miss. In early 1990, Alabama tendered Curry a new contract which contained provisions he disliked, including no raise and removal of his power to hire and fire assistants. Curry was particularly upset by this since he had led the Tide to a share of its first SEC title and its first major-bowl appearance since the Bryant era. He responded by accepting an offer to become the head coach at the University of Kentucky. In 1993, Curry's
Wildcat squad posted a 6–5 regular season record and earned a spot in the
Peach Bowl, Kentucky's first bowl game in nine years. The Wildcats lost that game to
Clemson, 14–13. As it turned out, this would be his only non-losing record in seven seasons in
Lexington. His 1994 team only went 1–10, still the worst in modern Wildcat football history. Curry was asked to step down after the
1996 season and was succeeded by
Hal Mumme. Curry joined ESPN in 1997 as a college football game analyst. His primary assignment was the
ESPN2 College Football Saturday Night telecast, along with selected bowl games. After 10 years away from the sideline, Curry was chosen as
Georgia State University's first head football coach in 2008, and retired after three seasons. ==Head coaching record==