Early history (1885–1983) The Bearcat football program is one of the nation's oldest, having fielded a team as early as 1885. In 1888, Cincinnati played
Miami in the first intercollegiate football game held within the state of Ohio. That began a
rivalry which today ranks as the eighth-oldest and 11th-longest running in NCAA Division I college football.
Robert Burch served as Cincinnati's head coach from 1909 to 1911, compiling a record of 16–8–2. It was during his tenure that Cincinnati joined the
Ohio Athletic Conference, where they would remain until 1927. In March 1927,
George Babcock was hired as a professor of athletics and physical training at the
University of Cincinnati. From 1927 to 1930, he was the head football coach of the Bearcats football, compiling a 12–21–3 record.
Sid Gillman, a member of the college and National Football League hall of fame shrines, was the architect of one of the top eras of Cincinnati football history. He directed the Bearcats to three conference titles and a pair of bowl game appearances during his six seasons (1949–54) before leaving for the professional ranks. Cincinnati, with Gillman developing the passing offenses which would make him successful in the pro ranks, became known for its aerial attack in the early 1950s. It was during Blackburn's tenure, in 1957, that the Bearcats joined the
Missouri Valley Conference, where they would remain until 1969.
Chuck Studley left
UMass and became the Bearcats' 25th head football coach. Under Studley's tutelage, the Bearcats won two conference championships in 1963 and 1964, However, Studley's teams struggled in his other four seasons and Studley was replaced after the 1966 season.
Oklahoma assistant coach
Homer Rice was hired as Studley's replacement. After Rice accepted the head coaching position at Cincinnati, Oklahoma's head coach
Jim Mackenzie died of a massive heart attack. Upon Mackenzie's death, Oklahoma's athletic director and president called Homer Rice to request that he return to replace Mackenzie as head coach at Oklahoma. Rice had already hired his staff at Cincinnati and turned down the Oklahoma job to stay committed to his staff at Cincinnati. Rice compiled an 8–10–1 record in his two seasons at Cincinnati. In 1968, the Bearcats were the nation's top passing team. Quarterback
Greg Cook was the NCAA's total offense leader with receiver/kicker
Jim O'Brien the national scoring champ. A year later, Cook earned Rookie of the Year honors as a Cincinnati Bengal. Two years later, O'Brien kicked the game-winning field goal for the Baltimore Colts in
Super Bowl V. After a 4–6 campaign in his first season, Callahan's Bearcats posted back to back 7–4 records in 1970 and 1971. However, a 2–9 season in 1972 ended his tenure at Cincinnati. UC's fortunes turned around under head coach
Tony Mason, who led the Bearcats for four seasons and compiled a 25–19 record. Mason's Bearcats started slow, but enjoyed an 8–3 campaign in 1976, after which Mason was offered the head coaching position at
Arizona, which he accepted.
Ohio State assistant coach
Ralph Staub was hired as Mason's replacement, and the Bearcats stumbled mightily. Staub's Bearcats posted records of 5–4–2, 5–6, 2–9 and 2–9 for a total of 14–28–2. Staub was fired following the 1980 season. Staub was replaced by
Mike Gottfried, who had been head coach at
Murray State the previous four seasons. Gottfried was able to improve UC's fortunes, posting back-to-back 6–5 records in 1981 and 1982, however, Gottfried left UC for the head coaching position at
Kansas after just two seasons. Gottfried's record at UC is 12–10. Due to an
NCAA decision to mandate average attendance of 20,000 for Division I-A programs, Cincinnati was relegated to
NCAA Division I-AA for the 1983 season due to consistently low attendance figures.
Vanderbilt offensive coordinator
Watson Brown, brother of legendary coach
Mack Brown, replaced Gottfried but he too, left after only a short period of time. Brown's 1983 squad posted a 4–6–1 record. Brown resigned after the 1983 season to accept the position of head football coach at
Rice.
Dave Currey era (1984–1988) Long Beach State head coach
Dave Currey was hired as Brown's replacement, and the Bearcats' struggles returned. Currey failed to post a single winning season as UC's head coach and, after a 3–8 campaign in 1988, Currey resigned under pressure.
Tim Murphy era (1989–1993) Maine head coach
Tim Murphy was hired to replace Currey in 1989. Despite one-win seasons in both of his first two seasons, Murphy was able to slowly but surely turn things around for the Bearcats, compiling an 8–3 record in 1993. Murphy elected to leave Cincinnati after the 1993 season for the head coaching position at
Harvard. Murphy left UC with a 17–37–1 record.
Rick Minter era (1994–2003) Notre Dame defensive coordinator
Rick Minter was selected as the Bearcats head coach after Murphy's departure. Minter's Bearcats enjoyed mild success, reaching four bowl games (winning one) and posting six winning seasons in Minter's ten-season tenure. It was during Minter's tenure that Cincinnati joined
Conference USA, where they would remain until 2004. Minter remained UC's head coach until after the 2003 season, when he was fired following a 5–7 season. Minter left UC with a 53–63–1 record. Dantonio became the first head coach in 23 years to lead the school to a winning season in his first season at UC. The Bearcats' 7–5 record included a 5–3 record in Conference USA, which was good enough for a second-place finish. The Bearcats finished the season on a winning note with a 32–14 win over
Marshall in the
PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl. During Dantonio's time at UC, he led the Bearcats to a bowl game victory and directed the team's transition into the
Big East Conference in 2005, where they would remain until 2012. As head coach, Dantonio had 15 players earn all-conference honors and 25 received conference academic recognition. Dantonio's Bearcats posted a 4–7 mark in 2005 which was followed by an 8–5 campaign in 2006. Dantonio left UC after the 2006 season to accept the head coaching position at
Michigan State.
Brian Kelly era (2007–2009) Central Michigan head coach
Brian Kelly was named head coach on December 3, 2006, following the departure of
Mark Dantonio. In an unusual move, Cincinnati elected not to appoint an interim coach and asked Kelly to assume his duties immediately by coaching the Bearcats in their bowl game. Central Michigan was also preparing for a bowl appearance, so while Kelly was in Cincinnati preparing the Bearcats, much of his staff remained at Central Michigan to coach the Chippewas. Following Central Michigan's 31–14 win in the
Motor City Bowl on December 26, his staff joined him and went on to coach Cincinnati to a 27–24 victory over
Western Michigan University in
that year's International Bowl on January 6. On December 5, 2007, Kelly was named
Big East Coach of the Year, after leading the Bearcats to a 9–3 record. Kelly led the Bearcats to a 31–21 victory in the
PapaJohns.com Bowl over
Southern Miss. In
2008, Kelly led Cincinnati to its first ever outright Big East title with key wins over
West Virginia and
Pittsburgh. The Bearcats had never defeated either in Big East conference play. Kelly became the first coach to win all three of the Bearcats' traveling trophies— the
Victory Bell (
Miami [OH]),
the Keg of Nails (
Louisville), and the River City Rivalry Trophy (Pitt). The Bearcats played in the
Orange Bowl versus the
ACC champion,
Virginia Tech, on January 1, 2009, but lost 20–7 to finish the season 11–3. After beginning the
2009 season unranked in all polls, the Bearcats reeled off 12 straight victories and finished the regular season undefeated. Going into the bowl season, they were ranked No. 3 in the BCS Standings and faced the
Florida Gators in the
Sugar Bowl. Kelly did not coach the team in the 51–24 loss to Florida because he accepted the head coach position at
Notre Dame. Among the honors that Cincinnati football achieved in 2009, was the highest academic rating among teams in the top 10 of the BCS standings, according to the 2009 Graduation Success Rates. Cincinnati, which was fifth in the BCS standings, checked in with a 75% NCAA graduation rate and a 71% federal government rate, the only team in the BCS top 10 to surpass 70% in both. Kelly finished his tenure at Cincinnati with a 34–6 record.
Butch Jones era (2010–2012) On December 16, 2009,
Central Michigan head coach
Butch Jones was named head coach of the Cincinnati Bearcats. The hiring was an odd coincidence, as Jones had also replaced Brian Kelly as head coach at Central Michigan. Jones led the Bearcats to records of 4–8 in 2010 and 10–3 in 2011, including a Big East championship, a
Liberty Bowl victory over
Vanderbilt, and he was named Big East Coach of the Year. Also in 2011, Cincinnati was the only program to win both its conference championship as well as the league's team academic award. leading them to the
Belk Bowl in
Charlotte to play against
Duke University, a game Cincinnati won. Twenty days prior to the bowl game, on December 7, 2012, Jones announced to the team that he would be resigning to accept the job as head football coach at
Tennessee, after declining offers from
Colorado,
Purdue, and others.
Tommy Tuberville era (2013–2016) On December 8, 2012,
Texas Tech head coach
Tommy Tuberville, formerly head coach at
Ole Miss and
Auburn accepted the head coaching position at Cincinnati with a $2.2 million contract. Cincinnati's athletic director, Whit Babcock, had previously worked with Tuberville at Auburn; the two have been friends for several years. On December 9 an article in the
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal pointed out that Cincinnati is only 30 miles from
Guilford, Indiana, home of Tuberville's wife, Suzanne. In 2013, his first season with Cincinnati, Tuberville led the Bearcats into the
American Athletic Conference with an overall record of 9–4 and a 6–2 conference record. His 2014 team was also 9–4 overall, but this time earned an American Athletic Conference co-championship by virtue of their 7–1 league mark. Both years also saw bowl losses, in 2013 to
North Carolina and 2014 to
Virginia Tech. After a 7–5 season in 2015 the Bearcats were defeated by San Diego State 42–7 in the Hawai'i Bowl On December 4, 2016, after a 4–8 season, Tuberville resigned as head coach of Cincinnati. Tuberville left Cincinnati with an overall record of 29–22 and 18–14 in AAC conference play.
Luke Fickell era (2017–2022) On December 10, 2016
Ohio State defensive coordinator/associate head coach
Luke Fickell was named UC's head coach, replacing Tuberville. Fickell had also served as Ohio State's head coach during the 2011 season after a scandal forced out previous coach
Jim Tressel. During the 2017 season the Bearcats compiled a record of 4–8. The 2018 season saw a much improved team, with the Bearcats finishing with an 11–2 (6–2 AAC) record, and winning the
Military Bowl against
Virginia Tech. The 11-win season was only the third such season in the history of the program. Fickell was given the
AAC Coach of the Year honor for the season. Under Fickell's direction in 2019, the Bearcats won the AAC East Division and played in the
AAC Championship. The Bearcats won the
Birmingham Bowl, their 2nd straight bowl win and finished the 2019 campaign with its 2nd consecutive 11 win season. Fickell built on the success of the 2019 season, with the 2020 campaign producing his best yet result despite a season mired with
COVID-19 cancellations and postponements. The Bearcats returned to the
AAC Championship game, this time defeating
Tulsa to end the regular season with an undefeated record. Fickell returned the Bearcats to a
NY6 bowl, losing a close game to
Georgia in the
Peach Bowl. In 2021, the Bearcats went undefeated in the regular season, including a notable road victory against
Notre Dame and former coach Brian Kelly. After defeating
Houston in the
AAC Championship, Cincinnati became the first
so-called "Group of Five" team to qualify to the
College Football Playoff (debuting in the "final four" of that list on November 26). They lost to
Alabama in the
Cotton Bowl. In 2022, Cincinnati would finish in the regular season 9–3 and 6–2 in AAC play, but were not able to qualify for the
AAC Championship. On November 27, 2022, Fickell was hired by
Wisconsin to replace
Paul Chryst as head coach, and cornerbacks coach and special–teams coordinator
Kerry Coombs would be promoted to interim head coach. Fickell would leave Cincinnati as the coach with the most career wins in program history.
Scott Satterfield era (2022–present) On December 5, 2022, Satterfield was named the head coach of the Cincinnati Bearcats. Coincidentally, Satterfield's former team, the rival
Louisville Cardinals, were set to play
Cincinnati only a few days later in the
2022 Fenway Bowl. On September 9, 2023, Satterfield and the Bearcats defeated the
Pittsburgh Panthers 27–21, in the first ever college football game aired on
The CW. With five straight conference wins and a 7–1 start to the
2025 season, the Satterfield-led Bearcats were ranked in the
AP and Coaches' Poll for the first time since the
2022 season. Cincinnati would go on to lose all of their remaining regular season games, finishing with a 7–5 record. They would receive an invitation to the
Liberty Bowl, their first invite under Satterfield, and would lose to Navy
13–35. ==Conference affiliations==