Donald Dykes enters his third year as
Assistant Head Coach on head coach Gwaine Mathews' staff. Prior
to coming to UAM, Dykes served on the same staff as Mathews,
serving as the defensive
secondary coach at Tennessee-Chattanooga. No stranger to coach
Mathews, Dykes has been closely associated with the new UAM head
coach since Mathews' days as a graduate assistant at Delta
State.
Along with
the many years of experience he brings, Dykes has also been a
coach on a National Championship program and has played in the
National Football League.
Dykes
coached the defensive backs at Delta State from 1993-2001. The
Statesmen won the 2000 NCAA Division II National Championship,
defeating Bloomsburg to claim the title and finish with a 14-1
overall record.
Dykes
competed in the NFL for four seasons, playing on the same
defensive unit as the legendary "New York Sack Exchange" (Mark
Gastineau, Joe Klecko, Marty Lyons, and Abdul Salaam). He was
the fourth defensive back selected overall and a third-round
draft pick of the New York Jets in 1979. He played three
seasons with the Jets for Head Coach Walt Michaels and spent the
1982 season as a member of the San Diego Chargers. He wrapped
up his professional football career after playing three years
with the USFL’s Jacksonville Bulls.
His
coaching career began in 1989 in his hometown of Hammond, La.,
where he served as assistant coach at Hammond High School, his
alma mater. From 1990-91, he worked as assistant football coach
and head track coach at Istrouma High School in Baton Rouge,
La., and coached in the same capacities at Baker High School in
Baton Rouge from 1991-93.
Dykes
moved to the college ranks in 1993, serving under head coaches
Todd Knight and Steve Campbell at Delta State University in
Cleveland, Miss.
Dykes
earned four letters in football and four in track and field at
Southeastern Louisiana University. He was a four-year starter
at cornerback for Head Coach Billy Brewer and earned
All-Conference honors as a senior.
Dykes was
a two-time National Champion and an eight-time All-America in
the long jump at Southeastern Louisiana. He won the 1975 NCAA
Indoor Track and Field national title and the 1977 NCAA Outdoor
Championship. In 1977, he was ranked 17th in the
world in the long jump. His personal best in the event was 26
feet, three inches, while his best in the triple jump was 53-5.
As a high
school athlete, he was the No. 1-ranked long jumper in the
nation his senior year. He won three state long jump titles,
two state triple jump titles and led Hammond to back-to-back
State Championships in 1972 and 1973.
Dykes
earned a bachelor’s degree in Criminology in 1986 from
Southeastern Louisiana and a master’s degree in Education in
1994 from Delta State. He is married to the former Yolanda
Vaughn of Baton Rouge, and the couple has a daughter, 28, and a
son, 24.