Former Hoover High School coach Rush Propst has been suspended for one season for head butting a player during last year’s playoffs. Propst currently coaches Colquitt County (Ga.) Packers.

Propst is known from the MTV series Two-A-Days, which chronicled the 2005 and 2006 seasons of his Hoover team.

Here’s video of the incident:

Propst coached at Hoover High from 1999-2007 and has been at Colquitt County High School since 2008.

Propst resigned in October of 2007 and admitted to a relationship outside his marriage and a child as a result of that relationship, but no other wrongdoing, according to AL.com, as there was an investigation into grade-changing and preferential treatment of athletes. Here’s the excerpt:

An investigation into grade-changing and preferential treatment of athletes at Hoover High found that an assistant football coach felt pressured by Propst to change a player’s grade, which Propst has denied doing.

The attorneys who conducted the probe this summer also cited a need for greater controls of finances related to football camps and broadcasts. Their report touched on Propst’s personal life as well.

“I am remorseful for what I have done. I have failed you as a community. I have failed you as a board, and especially I have failed you (Superintendent) Andy (Craig),” Propst said. “I made mistakes. I could have done things differently, but I don’t admit wrongdoing inside the walls of Hoover High School.”

The Hoover Board of Education unanimously voted to accept Propst’s resignation at the time.

He coached for nine years at Hoover, winning 110 games and five state championships.

Propst has appealed the suspension, according to The Moultrie Observer.