Lee Hull Sport(s) Football Current position Title Offensive coordinator , wide receivers coachTeam Wagner Conference NEC Biographical details Born (1965-12-31 ) December 31, 1965 (age 60) Vineland, New Jersey Playing career Position(s) Wide receiver Head coaching record Overall 12–12 (college) Accomplishments and honors Awards MEAC Coach of the Year (2014)
Lee Hull (born December 31, 1965) is an American gridiron football coach and former player. He is the offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach at Wagner College , a position he had held since 2019. Hull served as the head football coach at Morgan State University from 2014 to 2015. He played college football the College of the Holy Cross and professionally in the Canadian Football League (CFL) with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers ad the Toronto Argonauts .
Early life [ ]
Hull grew up in Vineland, New Jersey and graduated from Vineland High School in 1984.[ 1]
Head coaching record [ ]
College [ ]
Year
Team
Overall
Conference
Standing
Bowl/playoffs
Morgan State Bears (Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference ) (2014–2015)
2014
Morgan State
7–6
6–2
T–1st
L NCAA Division I First Round
2015
Morgan State
5–6
4–4
T–6th
Morgan State:
12–12
10–6
Total:
12–12
National championship Conference title Conference division title
† Indicates BCS bowl, Bowl Alliance or Bowl Coalition game.
References [ ]
↑ Friedman, Josh. "Vineland grad named Indianapolis Colts' receivers coach" , The Daily Journal (New Jersey) , February 9, 2016. Accessed October 25, 2018. "Toward the end of their conversation, Chudzinski asked Hull, a 1984 Vineland High School graduate, if he'd have any interest in Indy's vacant wide receivers coaching job."
External links [ ]
v · d · e Morgan State Bears head football coaches
Unknown (1899–1904)
No team (1905–1913)
Unknown (1913)
No team (1914)
Unknown (1916–1917)
Alvin Edwards (1918–1919)
John Camper (1920–1923)
Jim F. Law (1924–1925)
Charles Drew (1926–1927)
William S. Taylor (1928)
Edward P. Hurt (1929–1959)
Earl Banks (1960–1973)
Nat Taylor (1974–1975)
Henry Lattimore (1976–1977)
Clarence Thomas (1978–1980)
Tom Morris (1981–1982)
James Phillips (1983–1984)
Jesse Thomas (1985–1987)
Ed Wyche (1988–1990)
Ricky Diggs (1991–1995)
Stump Mitchell (1996–1998)
Stanley Mitchell (1999–2001)
Donald Hill-Eley (2002– )