Murray State University Athletics

Spring Spotlight: Chief Jeff Liles
4/13/2019 4:05:00 PM | Football
When Jeff Liles was finishing his time at Itawamba Community College in Mississippi in the spring 1987, he was on the hunt for a school, a place to play football and get his degree. However, what he found after arriving in Murray, Kentucky in the fall of that same year was a home.
Now, Jeff Liles is a staple on the Murray State sidelines on game days, as well as at practices, on road trips, in the locker room at half time and after games. Over the past 10 seasons, Liles has become as much of a part of Murray State football as Racer 1. However, unlike a trip around the track from Racer 1, Liles' journey from offensive lineman to chief of police was not always as clear cut.
Liles grew up in Florence, Alabama, the product of a single-parent household who was raised by his mother and grandmother. The two had a profound effect on him both then and now and are the driving force behind his positive, hard-working attitude. "They were the two most important people in my life," said Liles. "They have passed away and gone now, but they instilled in me the will to always believe that you can do anything and to be someone who can do anything."
After playing two years of junior college ball, then Racer head coach Frank Beamer and his staff made a visit to see Liles at Itawamba and after one visit he was hooked. "I came up here on my visit and fell in love with the University. I knew going into the fall that there would be a change with Coach Beamer leaving, but I made a commitment and I knew it would be a good opportunity for me to experience a different atmosphere in general that what I was used to in Alabama."
Little did Liles know at the time that the decision he made to come to Murray would have such a far-reaching impact on his life. In Murray, he found lifelong friends on the football team, lifelong brothers in his fraternity, his wife and eventually a career. One, that several years down the line would bring him right back to where it all started, Roy Stewart Stadium.
After two years on the team and a degree later, Liles decided to remain Murray and work on his Master's until a small ad in the newspaper changed the course of his life forever.
"I was at my now wife's house and we were looking at the newspaper when I saw job opening for the City of Murray police department. I said 'well you know, I think I'll try for that position.' There were actually over 100 applicants and they were hiring one individual. The process went on and on, but I was getting further and further and then they ended up hiring me out of over 100 applicants in 1991."
From there, Liles worked his way up the ladder in the Murray Police Department, starting as a patrolman eventually moving through the ranks of senior patrolman, sergeant, captain and assistant chief. Then in 2010, after 19 years on the force, Liles was named as Murray's Chief of Police.
"When I was a patrolman, I felt comfortable where I was but there was an opportunity for me to become a sergeant. So then I asked myself, 'do I want to become a sergeant,' then it took a while for me to do that because I was comfortable where I was. I was senior patrolman and I had weekends off, really I had all the great days off. So anytime you try to do something, make the next step, you always have the fear that you will be denied that opportunity."
However, comfort wasn't something Liles was satisfied with and ultimately it was his days as a student-athlete that helped shape his career path.
"You always have to prepare yourself to be better at whatever you do. It's just like in football you always have to prepare and practice in order to be better. So I was able to take what I learned as a student-athlete, the things the coaches instilled in me, the blood, sweat and tears you put out there on that field every day. Then you come back and you put those things in your lifestyle after college and you challenge yourself every day. Life's a challenge all the time and I wanted to prepare myself. So every time a promotion opportunity came around, I said "yes, I'm going to give it my all and I'm not going to let anyone tell me I can't do it.'"
In the nine years since Liles has become Chief, the Murray Police department has seen unprecedented growth. Since 2010, MPD has added eight officers and has been forced to move buildings, in order to accommodate their ever-growing staff. Under his guidance, the Murray Police Department has become one of the most respected units in the Commonwealth, one he runs like a family and it doesn't take long to see just where his leadership philosophy was developed.
"Football is where it all started for me. I'm taking the things I learned as student-athlete, things I learned at Murray State and I put those same things I learned then into practice today in the field of law enforcement. We have a great relationship with our community, but we are always working at it whether it's 'Coffee With A Cop, the Citizens Police Academy or just having our people be involved in community activities. We are continually trying to engage our community and its citizens and let them know, that we are more than police officers, we are individuals, too. I always tell my folks to talk to people, get out of the car, shake their hands and get to know them on a first name basis."
In addition, to becoming Chief of Police in 2010, something else happened that year. Chris Hatcher came to Murray and one of his first calls was to Liles.
"I was always around, coming to games and practices, but when he got here he came to me and said that where he comes from every coach had an officer that went with team and that is something that always interested me. So he asked me if would ask the mayor if it would be ok for me to travel with them, be on the sidelines."
Law enforcement and football coaches is not a new concept, it's something that has been done for over 60 years and is said to be a practice that was started by a legendary coach of Liles' "other" favorite team, Alabama. While not many people likely took note of Bear Bryant and his state trooper escort, thanks to television and the general expansion of media coverage of football, the site of an officer escorting a coach to the 50-yard line at the end of the game to shake hands with his opponent has just as much a part of football as the coin flip.
However, while Liles believes part of his duties when he traveling is to just be a presence as member of law enforcement, whether it's at a rest stop or if the team breaks down on the side of the road, there is one role he puts above all others.
"I am also out there to build relationships with those young men, some of which, have probably never had a positive relationship with law enforcement before. But time and time again, I can just see the change in those guys from when they first get there until the end of the season. You know, they will start coming over to talk to me 'chief this, chief that', throwing high fives or give me a hug, it doesn't take long for them to really embrace you."
"I really want build a relationship with these guys and let them know that whatever happens, I am here for them and that I will help them in any way I can. Now sometimes, you have some things happen, but I try to let those guys know that I am not going to turn my back on them if they make a mistake. I don't condone what they have done, but I tell them we are going to work through that mistake together and ultimately make them a better person at the end of it."
After Hatcher departed for Samford prior to the 2015 season, new head coach Mitch Stewart wasted little time in letting Liles know that his role with the team would not change. Now, after five years of being by his side through the highs and lows, Liles now counts Stewart as one of his best friends.
"Our relationship is more than just coach and chief, I feel sometimes that we are like brothers. The one thing I tell people about Mitch is that he is a really great man. He's a great family man, he's so positive and you can see that with how he interacts with the players. The culture he has built here is tremendous and he is a true friend to me and I just can't say enough about him."
The role of mentor, is probably the one, more than any other, that defines Liles. Whether he's working with student-athlete or a coach or one of his officers, it's obvious to onlookers that he's always cognizant of two things. The role Murray State and his experiences as a student-athlete had in getting him where he is today and the importance of his role as a mentor and a leader whether that's at the station house or the football field.
"I would come home in the summer and work a summer job that wasn't much fun and I always told myself that 'I want more than this, I'm going to get my education' and that's what I try instill in our young men. "Take advantage of Murray State University. You know we all won't go on to make millions of dollars playing football. Get your education, get yourself a job, look where that got me. Make yourself a better person, better than where you started from, better than where you came from.' Coming to Murray State, being a student-athlete, listening to my coaches and professors, listening to our coaches now, listening to Mitch Stewart. I take bits and pieces of all of that and bring it to my job. You never stop learning. That is what is so important and still keeps me motivated today. Just being around those guys gets me fired up and you know I'll go to practice on a Saturday and they will say something and I will take notes, I'll say 'I can use that' even in my profession today. So for me, all of it, my experiences in Murray, it's been great all the way around."
Now, Jeff Liles is a staple on the Murray State sidelines on game days, as well as at practices, on road trips, in the locker room at half time and after games. Over the past 10 seasons, Liles has become as much of a part of Murray State football as Racer 1. However, unlike a trip around the track from Racer 1, Liles' journey from offensive lineman to chief of police was not always as clear cut.
Liles grew up in Florence, Alabama, the product of a single-parent household who was raised by his mother and grandmother. The two had a profound effect on him both then and now and are the driving force behind his positive, hard-working attitude. "They were the two most important people in my life," said Liles. "They have passed away and gone now, but they instilled in me the will to always believe that you can do anything and to be someone who can do anything."
After playing two years of junior college ball, then Racer head coach Frank Beamer and his staff made a visit to see Liles at Itawamba and after one visit he was hooked. "I came up here on my visit and fell in love with the University. I knew going into the fall that there would be a change with Coach Beamer leaving, but I made a commitment and I knew it would be a good opportunity for me to experience a different atmosphere in general that what I was used to in Alabama."
Little did Liles know at the time that the decision he made to come to Murray would have such a far-reaching impact on his life. In Murray, he found lifelong friends on the football team, lifelong brothers in his fraternity, his wife and eventually a career. One, that several years down the line would bring him right back to where it all started, Roy Stewart Stadium.
After two years on the team and a degree later, Liles decided to remain Murray and work on his Master's until a small ad in the newspaper changed the course of his life forever.
"I was at my now wife's house and we were looking at the newspaper when I saw job opening for the City of Murray police department. I said 'well you know, I think I'll try for that position.' There were actually over 100 applicants and they were hiring one individual. The process went on and on, but I was getting further and further and then they ended up hiring me out of over 100 applicants in 1991."
From there, Liles worked his way up the ladder in the Murray Police Department, starting as a patrolman eventually moving through the ranks of senior patrolman, sergeant, captain and assistant chief. Then in 2010, after 19 years on the force, Liles was named as Murray's Chief of Police.
"When I was a patrolman, I felt comfortable where I was but there was an opportunity for me to become a sergeant. So then I asked myself, 'do I want to become a sergeant,' then it took a while for me to do that because I was comfortable where I was. I was senior patrolman and I had weekends off, really I had all the great days off. So anytime you try to do something, make the next step, you always have the fear that you will be denied that opportunity."
However, comfort wasn't something Liles was satisfied with and ultimately it was his days as a student-athlete that helped shape his career path.
"You always have to prepare yourself to be better at whatever you do. It's just like in football you always have to prepare and practice in order to be better. So I was able to take what I learned as a student-athlete, the things the coaches instilled in me, the blood, sweat and tears you put out there on that field every day. Then you come back and you put those things in your lifestyle after college and you challenge yourself every day. Life's a challenge all the time and I wanted to prepare myself. So every time a promotion opportunity came around, I said "yes, I'm going to give it my all and I'm not going to let anyone tell me I can't do it.'"
In the nine years since Liles has become Chief, the Murray Police department has seen unprecedented growth. Since 2010, MPD has added eight officers and has been forced to move buildings, in order to accommodate their ever-growing staff. Under his guidance, the Murray Police Department has become one of the most respected units in the Commonwealth, one he runs like a family and it doesn't take long to see just where his leadership philosophy was developed.
"Football is where it all started for me. I'm taking the things I learned as student-athlete, things I learned at Murray State and I put those same things I learned then into practice today in the field of law enforcement. We have a great relationship with our community, but we are always working at it whether it's 'Coffee With A Cop, the Citizens Police Academy or just having our people be involved in community activities. We are continually trying to engage our community and its citizens and let them know, that we are more than police officers, we are individuals, too. I always tell my folks to talk to people, get out of the car, shake their hands and get to know them on a first name basis."
In addition, to becoming Chief of Police in 2010, something else happened that year. Chris Hatcher came to Murray and one of his first calls was to Liles.
"I was always around, coming to games and practices, but when he got here he came to me and said that where he comes from every coach had an officer that went with team and that is something that always interested me. So he asked me if would ask the mayor if it would be ok for me to travel with them, be on the sidelines."
Law enforcement and football coaches is not a new concept, it's something that has been done for over 60 years and is said to be a practice that was started by a legendary coach of Liles' "other" favorite team, Alabama. While not many people likely took note of Bear Bryant and his state trooper escort, thanks to television and the general expansion of media coverage of football, the site of an officer escorting a coach to the 50-yard line at the end of the game to shake hands with his opponent has just as much a part of football as the coin flip.
However, while Liles believes part of his duties when he traveling is to just be a presence as member of law enforcement, whether it's at a rest stop or if the team breaks down on the side of the road, there is one role he puts above all others.
"I am also out there to build relationships with those young men, some of which, have probably never had a positive relationship with law enforcement before. But time and time again, I can just see the change in those guys from when they first get there until the end of the season. You know, they will start coming over to talk to me 'chief this, chief that', throwing high fives or give me a hug, it doesn't take long for them to really embrace you."
"I really want build a relationship with these guys and let them know that whatever happens, I am here for them and that I will help them in any way I can. Now sometimes, you have some things happen, but I try to let those guys know that I am not going to turn my back on them if they make a mistake. I don't condone what they have done, but I tell them we are going to work through that mistake together and ultimately make them a better person at the end of it."
After Hatcher departed for Samford prior to the 2015 season, new head coach Mitch Stewart wasted little time in letting Liles know that his role with the team would not change. Now, after five years of being by his side through the highs and lows, Liles now counts Stewart as one of his best friends.
"Our relationship is more than just coach and chief, I feel sometimes that we are like brothers. The one thing I tell people about Mitch is that he is a really great man. He's a great family man, he's so positive and you can see that with how he interacts with the players. The culture he has built here is tremendous and he is a true friend to me and I just can't say enough about him."
The role of mentor, is probably the one, more than any other, that defines Liles. Whether he's working with student-athlete or a coach or one of his officers, it's obvious to onlookers that he's always cognizant of two things. The role Murray State and his experiences as a student-athlete had in getting him where he is today and the importance of his role as a mentor and a leader whether that's at the station house or the football field.
"I would come home in the summer and work a summer job that wasn't much fun and I always told myself that 'I want more than this, I'm going to get my education' and that's what I try instill in our young men. "Take advantage of Murray State University. You know we all won't go on to make millions of dollars playing football. Get your education, get yourself a job, look where that got me. Make yourself a better person, better than where you started from, better than where you came from.' Coming to Murray State, being a student-athlete, listening to my coaches and professors, listening to our coaches now, listening to Mitch Stewart. I take bits and pieces of all of that and bring it to my job. You never stop learning. That is what is so important and still keeps me motivated today. Just being around those guys gets me fired up and you know I'll go to practice on a Saturday and they will say something and I will take notes, I'll say 'I can use that' even in my profession today. So for me, all of it, my experiences in Murray, it's been great all the way around."
Keslyn Secrist & Haven Ford | Racer Basketball | 12/20/25 Post Game Press Conference
Saturday, December 20
Head Coach Rechelle Turner | Racer Basketball | 12/20/25 Post Game Press Conference
Saturday, December 20
Head Coach Ryan Miller | Racer Basketball | 12/18/25 Post Game Press Conference
Friday, December 19
Mason Miller & Fred King | Racer Basketball | 12/18/25 Post Game Press Conference
Friday, December 19








