Drake University named Matt Walker its head football coach on Monday, ending a search that began after the Bulldogs finished 1-10 in 2024. Walker, 37, arrives from Illinois State where he spent three seasons as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The contract terms were not disclosed.
Walker inherits a program that has posted a combined 11-33 record over the past four seasons. Drake's single win in 2024 came against Butler in October; the Bulldogs were outscored 467-195 over eleven games. The previous head coach departed after five seasons with a 27-29 overall mark, leaving behind a roster that ranked 118th nationally in total offense among 125 FCS programs. Walker's Illinois State offense averaged 28.4 points per game in 2024, finishing in the top third of the Missouri Valley Football Conference.
The hire signals Drake's intention to stabilize rather than reimagine. Walker brings Valley familiarity—Illinois State and Drake compete in the same conference—which matters for recruiting pipelines and transfer identification. Drake draws roughly 60% of its roster from Iowa, Illinois, and Wisconsin; Walker spent the past decade coaching in that corridor. His offensive coordinator stint coincided with Illinois State's 2023 playoff appearance, the program's first since 2015. That résumé suggests competence, not revolution, which aligns with Drake's institutional appetite. The school allocates approximately 65 football scholarships under FCS rules, middle-tier spending for a conference that includes North Dakota State's dynasty machinery.
The Valley context is unforgiving. North Dakota State has claimed nine FCS national titles since 2011; South Dakota State reached three consecutive semifinal rounds through 2023. Drake has not won a playoff game since 1986. Walker's mandate is not to chase championships immediately but to return the program to bowl eligibility—defined in FCS terms as a .500 record and regional recruiting momentum. Sponsors and licensing partners care less about wins than stability; apparel deals and local broadcast contracts reset when programs churn coaches every three years. Walker's three-year Illinois State tenure, modest as it was, represents continuity Drake lacked.
Recruiting timelines tighten quickly. The 2025 signing class is effectively closed; most FCS prospects committed by December. Walker's first real cycle is 2026, which means his initial roster will be 80% inherited. That limits schematic overhaul. Expect personnel retention efforts targeting underclassmen who entered the transfer portal during the coaching search. Valley programs typically lose 15-20 players annually to the portal; Drake entered December with 12 announced departures, a manageable number if Walker moves quickly on one-on-one conversations. His first hires—offensive and defensive coordinators—will define whether this is a spread revival or a return to pro-style fundamentals. Those names should surface by mid-January, ahead of the February 5 National Signing Day.
The broader FCS landscape rewards coaches who stabilize losing programs into .500 teams, then flip to Power Four jobs. Walker's age and résumé suggest this is a prove-it stop, not a retirement chair. If Drake reaches 6-5 by 2027, his name enters the Group of Five coordinator hiring cycle. If not, the athletic department will be shopping again in 2028, and the program's longest-tenured position coach will still be the strength director.
Drake's spring practice begins March 15. Walker has 74 days to assemble a staff, retain the roster's top 15 players, and install an offense. The opener is August 28 at home against Valparaiso, a winnable game. Anything less than 4-7 in Year One resets the clock.
The takeaway
Drake bets on Valley familiarity and offensive competence to halt four-year slide; Walker's coordinator hires by mid-January set the rebuild's tone.
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