Early career Upon graduation, Lovett began his career in coaching at
Saint Joseph Regional High School in 1976. After two seasons as a prep school coach, he took his first collegiate coaching position as an assistant at
Union College in 1978, where he was paid only $500 per year. In 1983, Lovett spent a season in the Ivy League at
Brown University before moving back to New York to work under
Joe Walton as the defensive quality control coach for the
New York Jets of the
National Football League in 1984.
Maine and Cincinnati (Tim Murphy) The following season, Lovett was hired by
Buddy Teevens as the defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach for the
University of Maine Black Bears. In 1987,
Tim Murphy took over as head coach and the team went on to win the conference championship and qualified for the Division I-AA playoffs. When Murphy was hired as the new head coach of
Cincinnati in 1989, Lovett joined him as the defensive coordinator for the
Cincinnati Bearcats. He stayed at the school until 1993, when he was hired as the secondary coach for the
UNLV Rebels. In 1994, head coach
Jack Cosgrove brought Lovett back to Maine to again serve as the school's defensive coordinator. Cosgrove had work alongside Lovett when he was offensive coordinator of the Black Bears before being named the head coach.
Ole Miss and Auburn (Tuberville) In 1995, he joined new head coach
Tommy Tuberville's staff at
Ole Miss to coach the secondary. Four seasons later when Tuberville took the head coaching position at
Auburn, Lovett followed him to the school, where he was named the defensive coordinator. Tuberville fired Lovett following the
2001 season.
Clemson Lovett was hired by
Tommy Bowden to serve as the defensive coordinator at
Clemson from 2002–04, where he helped develop one of the
ACC's top defenses. In 2004, Clemson was 11th in the nation in pass defense efficiency (103.4) and 26th in total defense (327.3 yds/g). In 2003, his defense allowed just 19.2 points per game as Clemson finished the year with nine wins and a top 25 national ranking.
Bowling Green Lovett served as the defensive coordinator at
Bowling Green from 2005–06. In addition to coordinating the defense at Bowling Green, Lovett coached linebackers in 2005 and defensive backs in 2006. In his first year with the
Falcons, Lovett's defense ranked 20th in the country in turnover margin.
North Carolina Lovett spent the 2007 and 2008 seasons as the special teams coordinator and a defensive assistant at
North Carolina, where the kickoff coverage unit ranked among the nation's top 15 and the
Tar Heels blocked six kicks in 2008. He coached the NCAA all-time leader in combined kick return yards in
Brandon Tate, who also established the ACC career mark for kickoff return yards.
Miami On February 12, 2009, Lovett was hired by coach
Randy Shannon as the new defensive coordinator for the
Miami Hurricanes. He served at the position for two seasons until being let go with the rest of the coaching staff following the firing of Randy Shannon at the end of the 2010 season.
Texas Tech Lovett was hired by his former employer at Auburn, Tommy Tuberville, to serve as the
Defensive backs coach for the
Texas Tech Red Raiders.
Cincinnati Following head coach
Tommy Tuberville's departure to
Cincinnati, Lovett remained a member of the Texas Tech staff through the
2012 Meineke Car Care Bowl of Texas. Following the game, it was announced on January 4, 2013 that Lovett would be following Tuberville to Cincinnati to accept the defensive backs coach position.
Philadelphia Eagles On February 8, 2013, Lovett was named the defensive backs coach for the
Philadelphia Eagles. On January 19, 2015, it was announced that Lovett would move to a job in the Eagles pro personnel department.
California Lovett was named the cornerbacks coach for the
California Golden Bears football team on July 27, 2015. He was released in January 2017 following Sonny Dykes' dismissal as head coach. ==References==