After retiring as an NFL player, Bunting moved into the coaching ranks. He served as a defensive assistant for three NFL teams:
Kansas City Chiefs,
St. Louis Rams, and the
New Orleans Saints. As the Rams' co-defensive coordinator (along with
Peter Giunta), he played a key role in leading that team to their victory in
Super Bowl XXXIV. From 1988 to 1992, he served as head coach at
Rowan University (known as Glassboro State during his first three seasons), compiling a 38-14-2 record. In December 2000, UNC athletic director
Dick Baddour decided to hire him as the school's head football coach, replacing the fired
Carl Torbush. In his first season, Bunting led the Tar Heels to an 8–5 record and a victory over
Auburn in the
2001 Peach Bowl. However, his teams since were highly inconsistent. Bunting compiled an overall record of 27 wins and 45 losses over six seasons, and notched only two winning records in ACC play. Bunting did manage UNC's first victories over a team ranked in the top 10 of a major media poll in school history. In his first game as head coach, the Tar Heels beat nine-time defending ACC champion
Florida State 41–9; the Seminoles were ranked sixth in the AP Poll at the time. After the 2003 season, a season in which the Tar Heels did not appear in a bowl game, Bunting was a coach in the final Blue-Gray All-Star Classic. In 2004, the Tar Heels defeated
Miami 31–28 on a last-second field goal by
Connor Barth; the Hurricanes were ranked fourth at the time in the AP poll. On the other end of the spectrum, his 2005 team was routed 69–14 by
Louisville, one of the worst losses in modern Tar Heel history. During his final season (2006), his team had a record of 3–9, while averaging over 23 fewer points per game than their opponents. Baddour fired Bunting on October 22, 2006, but allowed Bunting to finish out the season. His last home victory on November 18, 2006, against
North Carolina State University, broke a seven-game losing streak, and he was able to close out his career one week later with a 45–44 win over the
Duke Blue Devils. Since his split with North Carolina, Bunting has been working as a commentator and announcer for college football. ==Personal life==