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Football
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Head Coach - Willie Fritz
Willie Fritz is in his 12th season as the Mules’ head coach and became the winningest coach in program history in 2007. Fritz’s 11-season record at Central Missouri is now 82-40 (.672).
Fritz has led the Mules to a winning record in nine of his 11 seasons, including back-to-back school-record 10 win seasons in 2001 and 2002. He is the only Mules’ football coach in school history to produce eight straight seasons of seven or more wins.

Fritz became the winningest coach in Mules football history, picking up career win number 79 on October 6th, 2007 (38-7 at Emporia State).
(Fritz shown at right receiving commemorative football from Athletic Director Jerry Hughes to recognize his 79th career win)
In 2001 he took the Mules to their first post-season berth since 1970, when they defeated the University of Minnesota-Duluth 48-17 in the Mineral Water Bowl. In 2002, Fritz’s squad made its first ever appearance in the NCAA Division II Playoffs when they travelled to the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley.
In 2003, Fritz’s charges finished 9-2, 7-2 in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association and claimed a share of their first MIAA title since 1988.
Last season, the Mules posted a 6-3 mark in the MIAA (7-4 overall) to finish in a tie for third, the highest place since 2003.
Fritz ranks first in school history in wins and is the third-winningest coach by percentage in UCM history. His 82 career wins also are eighth in MIAA history (Fritz is third among active coaches).
The Mules have produced 135 All-MIAA performers in Fritz’ tenure, including 37 first-teamers, and also have produced 23 All-Americans.
Central Missouri football also has enjoyed an 83 percent graduation rate with Fritz in command. Of the 131 players who have played their senior season in the Cardinal & Black, 109 have graduated.
In addition, three Mules have also been named Academic All-Americans, 12 have been Academic All-District, 13 have been selected Academic All-MIAA, and 103 have earned distinction on the MIAA Commissioner's Academic Honor Roll.
Fritz was selected on December 6, 1996, from a field of 98 candidates to take over the Mules’ football program. In four years (1993-96) at Blinn College in Brenham, Texas, the 48-year-old Fritz built that football program into the nation’s best in the junior college ranks, winning back-to-back undefeated national championships in 1995 and 1996. He was named national junior college coach of the year in both of those seasons.
Blinn won its last 24 games under Fritz and had an overall record of 39-5-1 in his four seasons. Before he arrived at Blinn, the program had gone 5-24-1 in the three previous seasons.
For his efforts at Blinn, Fritz has been inducted into the National Junior College Athletics Association Hall of Fame.
Prior to taking the Blinn job, his first as a head coach, Fritz spent two seasons as special teams coordinator at Sam Houston State, a I-AA program. From 1987 to 1990, he was defensive coordinator at Coffeyville (Kan.) Community College, where the Red Ravens were 34-6-1 during that period and won the 1990 junior college national title.
As a player at Pittsburg State University (1978-81), Fritz was a four-year starter as a defensive back, played on two Central States Intercollegiate Conference conference championship teams and also was a two-year starter in basketball for the Gorillas. Following his playing career, he served as a student assistant on the Gorillas’ staff in 1982, when the team won another conference championship. The following year he took a job as assistant football coach at his high school alma mater, Shawnee Mission (Kan.) Northwest.
After one season in the high school ranks, he went to Sam Houston State and served two seasons as a graduate assistant on the football staff. In 1986 he returned to high school coaching as an assistant at Willis (Texas) High School for one year before taking the job at Coffeyville in 1987.
After receiving his bachelor’s degree in physical education in 1983 from Pittsburg State, Fritz received his master’s degree in kinesiology from Sam Houston State in 1986.
He is not the first member of his family to coach at Central Missouri. His father, the late Harry Fritz, was the Mules’ head football coach in 1952 and later became executive director of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).
Fritz and his wife, Susan, have three children – Wesley (18), Elaine (16) and Brooke (11).
The best time for media representatives to contact Coach Fritz in his office during the week is from 9-11 a.m., at (660) 543-4252.
| Years | Position | Team | Record |
| 1978-81 | Player | Pittsburg State University | 32-12-0 |
| 1982 | Student Ast. | Pittsburg State University | 7-2-0 |
| 1983 | Assistant | Shawnee Mission (Kan.) NW H.S. | 7-2-0 |
| 1984-85 | Grad. Ast. | Sam Houston State University | 16-6-0 |
| 1986 | Assistant | Willis (Texas) H.S. | 6-4-0 |
| 1987-90 | Def. Coor. | Coffeyville (Kan.) C.C. | 34-6-1 |
| 1991-92 | Assistant | Sam Houston State University | 14-5-3 |
| 1993-96 | Head Coach | Blinn College (Texas) | 39-5-1 |
| 1997-Present | Head Coach | University of Central Missouri | 82-40-0 |



