Assistant coaching positions James was a graduate assistant for the
Jayhawks at the
University of Kansas under his former high school coach,
Chuck Mather, and received a
master's degree in education. He coached
high school football in
Florida at
Southwest Miami High School in 1959, then was a college assistant coach for twelve seasons at
Florida State,
Michigan, and
Colorado.
Kent State James became a head coach in
1971 at
Kent State in his native Ohio, where he had a record in four years. At Kent State, he coached future
NFL player
Jack Lambert, and future college head coaches
Nick Saban of
Alabama, and
Gary Pinkel of
Missouri. During his four seasons at Kent States, the
Golden Flashes won their only
Mid-American Conference (MAC) title in
1972, and played in their first
bowl game, the
Tangerine Bowl. The
1973 team posted the best record in program history at 9–2.
Washington In December
1974, James was hired by
University of Washington (UW)
athletic director Joseph Kearney to succeed as head coach of the His original contract was for four years, starting at $28,000 per year. James won national college coach of the year honors in 1977, 1984, and 1991. He was inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame in 1997. In early November
1992, it was revealed that several Huskies players had received improper benefits. Among them, starting quarterback
Billy Joe Hobert had received a series of loans totaling $50,000 made by a friend's father-in-law. At the time, the defending national champion Huskies were undefeated (8–0),
ranked first in the AP poll, and second in the coaches' poll. While it was later determined the loan was neither an NCAA violation nor an institutional violation, this was the first in a series of reports by
The Seattle Times and
Los Angeles Times that initiated Pacific-10 Conference and NCAA investigations. These led to charges that Washington exhibited "lack of institutional control" over its handling of recruiting funds for on-campus visits and a Los Angeles
booster summer jobs program. The Huskies received sanctions from both the
NCAA and Pacific-10 Conference. Though notably James and the coaching staff were not specifically cited as having broken any rules, James resigned from his head coaching position on August 22, 1993, in protest of what were considered unfair sanctions against his team for minor, unsubstantiated, or fabricated infractions. Though university president
William Gerberding and athletic director
Barbara Hedges had presented James the final list of penalties that all Pac-10 parties had agreed best for the football program and athletics, Gerberding argued in favor of altering the penalties against the program from a two-year TV revenue ban and one-year bowl ban, to a one-year TV revenue ban and two-year In a 2019 interview with
The Athletic, it was cited by his wife that his resignation from head coaching probably saved his life. ==Personal life==