Bobby Petrino Age, Height, Weight
Bobby Petrino Age, Height, Weight: Born on March 10, 1961, Bobby Petrino, also known as Robert Patrick Petrino is an American football coach.
As of this writng (Wednesday, 30 November 2023), Petrino is the offensive coordinator for the Texas A&M Aggies. He’s the former head coach for the Missouri State Bears.
Bobby Petrino Age
Bobby Petrino celebrated his 62nd birthday in March this year (2023). He was born on Friday, March 10, 1961, in Lewistown, Montana, United States
Bobby Petrino Height & Weight
Bobby Petrino stands at a height of 1.76 m and weighs around 75 kg. He attended hometown Carroll College and graduated with a physical education and a math minor in 1983
Currently, Petrino is the offensive coordinator for the Texas A&M Aggies. He’s the former head coach for the Missouri State Bears.
Previously, he was the head coach of the Louisville Cardinals football team from 2014 until he was sacked during the 2018 season. He previously held the post from 2003 to 2006.
Petrino also coached the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League (NFL) for the first 13 games of the 2007 season
He was the head football coach at the University of Arkansas (2008 but was dismissed in 2012 for covering up an extramarital affair with an athletic department staffer.
On December 10, 2012, Petrino was hired by Western Kentucky as their new head coach, replacing Willie Taggart, who had departed for South Florida.
Petrino spent the 2013 season as head football coach of the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers and the 2020–2022 season as the head coach of the Missouri State Bears.
In 2022, Petrino’s final season at Missouri State Bears, the team regressed to post a 5-6 record, which included a 5-game losing streak.
Missouri State played Petrino’s former team, Arkansas, in Fayetteville and came close to pulling off the upset, but No. 10 ranked Arkansas won 38–27
Petrino has directed his college teams to nine bowl games, including the first Bowl Championship Series (BCS) for the Louisville Cardinals and the Arkansas Razorbacks in their programs’ histories.
College teams he has coached have also achieved four 10-win seasons along with six AP top-25 finishes.