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Hugh Campbell


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No. 21, 72, 31
Wide receiver
(1941-05-21) May 21, 1941San Jose, California, U.S.
6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
185 lb (84 kg)
Los Gatos (Los Gatos, California)
Washington State (1959-1962)
1963: 4th round, 50th overall pick
1963: 22nd round, 169th overall pick
Saskatchewan Roughriders (1963–1969)
Whitworth College (1970-1976) Head coach
Edmonton Eskimos (1977–1982) Head coach
Los Angeles Express (1983) Head coach
Houston Oilers (1984–1985) Head coach
Edmonton Eskimos (1986–1997) General manager
Edmonton Eskimos (1998–2006) President / chief executive officer
As player
Grey Cup champion (1966)
Dave Dryburgh Memorial Trophy (1966)
2× CFL All-Star (1965, 1966)
4× CFL Western All-Star (1964-1966, 1969)
Voit Trophy (1961)
Second-team All-American (1962)
Third-team All-American (1961)
3× First-team All-PCC (1960, 1961, 1962)
As coach
5× Grey Cup champion (1978–1982)
Annis Stukus Trophy (1979)
As administrator
4× Grey Cup champion (1987, 1993, 2003, 2005)
NAIA: 34–30–0 (.531) USFL: 8–10–0 (.444) NFL: 8–22–0 (.267) CFL: 70–21–5 (.755)
Coaching profile at Pro Football Reference
Canadian Football Hall of Fame

Hugh Thomas Campbell (born May 21, 1941) is an American former professional football player, coach, and executive. He served as a head coach in three different football leagues: the Canadian Football League (CFL), United States Football League (USFL) and National Football League (NFL). He won the Grey Cup five times as a head coach, tied for the most in CFL history and he is the only one to have won five for one team. Campbell retired as the CEO of the Edmonton Eskimos of the CFL in 2006. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 2000.

Campbell played wide receiver at Washington State University from 1959 to 1962. During that time he appeared in the Hula Bowl, the College All-Star game, the Coaches All-America game, and the East-West Shrine Bowl. Campbell received most outstanding player honours in the Coaches and the Shrine Bowl games. He was also awarded the 1961 W. J. Voit Memorial Trophy as the outstanding football player on the Pacific Coast. During his Cougar career he was teamed with fellow CFL Hall of Famer George Reed.

Campbell joined the Saskatchewan Roughriders in 1963 and "Gluey Hughy", as he became known, was a key element of their Grey Cup winning team in 1966. Campbell quit the Roughriders in 1968 to take a position as assistant coach at Washington State but returned for a final year with the Roughriders in 1969. In his six CFL seasons, Campbell caught 321 passes for an average gain of 16.9 yards per reception and scored 60 touchdowns, including 17 touchdown receptions in 1966. Campbell received western conference all-star honours as a flanker in 1964, 1965, 1966 and 1969. He was a CFL all-star in 1965 and 1966.

Campbell retired as an active player after the 1969 season to take up a head coaching job with Whitworth College in Spokane, Washington. During his seven-year tenure, Campbell revived the moribund Pirates football program and was named conference coach of the year three times.

In 1977, Campbell was named head coach of the Edmonton Eskimos, where he took the Eskimos to the Grey Cup game in Montreal that first year but lost 41–6 in a major blowout on an icy field against the Montreal Alouettes. It was the last Grey Cup championship game coach Campbell would lose, as the Eskimos won the next five Grey Cup games, from 1978 through 1982, an all-time CFL consecutive championships record.

Following the 1982 season, Campbell left the CFL to become head coach of the USFL's Los Angeles Express.

After one season, the Houston Oilers, who were bidding for the services of Warren Moon, hired him to become their head coach and help improve their chances of signing the coveted free agent (the Oilers ultimately signed Moon). He was head coach of the Oilers for the 1984 and 1985 seasons, being fired by the Oilers with two games left to go in the 1985 season.

In 1986, he returned to the Eskimos as the team's general manager.

After 20 years as the head of the Eskimos organization, Campbell announced his retirement effective at the end of 2006.

Campbell and his wife Louise have four children, daughters Molly, Jill and Robin and son, Rick, who is the former head coach of the BC Lions.

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
Whitworth Pirates (Evergreen Conference) (1970–1976)
1970Whitworth2–72–3T–5th
Whitworth Pirates (Northwest Conference) (1971–1976)
1971Whitworth2–7NANA
1972Whitworth7–2NANA
1973Whitworth4–54–23rd
1974Whitworth6–34–3T–2nd
1975Whitworth7–36–1T–1st
1976Whitworth6–34–35th
Whitworth:34–3020–12
Total:34–30
National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth
TeamYearRegular seasonPostseason
1060.6251st in West Division11Lost to Montreal Alouettes in 65th Grey Cup
1042.6881st in West Division2066th Grey Cup champions
1222.8131st in West Division2067th Grey Cup champions
1330.8131st in West Division2068th Grey Cup champions
1411.9061st in West Division2069th Grey Cup champions
1150.6881st in West Division2070th Grey Cup champions
70215.7556 West DivisionChampionships1115 Grey Cups
8100.4442nd in Pacific Division--did not qualify
8100.4440 DivisionChampionships000 USFL Champs
3130.1884th in AFC Centraldid not qualify
590.3574th in AFC CentralN/A (fired)
8220.2670 DivisionChampionships000 Super Bowls
86535.6156 DivisionChampionships1115 Grey Cups
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