Report: Miami hires former Texas standout Rod Wright to coach defensive ends

This former Longhorns star will join Mario Cristobal’s staff at Miami.

Mario Cristobal continues to add to his new coaching staff at Miami, this time with former Texas defensive lineman, Rod Wright.

Wright played a major role in Texas’ back-to-back Rose Bowl victories in 2004 and 2005. He secured both All-American and All-Big 12 honors in his collegiate career.

After an injury-plagued NFL career where he played for five seasons, Wright transitioned to a coaching role. He has made stops at Sam Houston State, East Carolina and most recently UTSA. Wright served as the Roadrunners co-defensive coordinator for a historic 2021 season.

Wright is not the only coach with Texas ties on Miami’s staff, as former head coach Charlie Strong was hired to coach linebackers for the Hurricanes. Wright and Strong on the staff will give Miami some recruiting ties to the state of Texas.

Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.

Stephen Jones on Cowboys keeping McCarthy: ‘Absolutely. Very confident.’

Jerry had no comment Sunday night, but Stephen was decisive Monday: McCarthy will return in 2022, even as 2 coordinators could leave. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Sunday night, in the immediate aftermath of the Cowboys’ stunning loss to San Francisco in the wild card round of the 2021 postseason, team owner Jerry Jones was unwilling to discuss the future of head coach Mike McCarthy.

McCarthy has been on the job just two seasons, compiling an 18-15 regular-season record. But the sky-high expectations for this season’s squad, coupled with a series of underachieving and embarrassing losses, plus a pair of coordinators who are already hot prospects on the head-coach-interview circuit, have cast serious doubt on the long-term belief in the McCarthy Experiment, for many fans and football minds alike.

But Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones, speaking on Dallas radio Monday, tried to put the debate to bed when he was asked about McCarthy’s continued employment with the organization.

He gave a three-word answer.

That curt vote of confidence comes as offensive coordinator Kellen Moore and defensive coordinator Dan Quinn prepare for a busy week of interviews with other clubs.

At least one NFL insider reported over the weekend that were the Cowboys to fall to the 49ers, the Jones family would be forced to at least consider firing McCarthy and replacing him with either Moore or Quinn. Those reports only gained traction and volume with the Cowboys’ anemic and unprepared showing in the 23-17 loss.

A contingent from the Broncos will travel to Dallas to interview with both Cowboys assistants on Tuesday. Quinn is said to have three other interviews lined up for the week. Moore has been invited to speak to other teams, too.

“It’s real hard to keep people from taking a head football coaching opportunity,” Jones told The K&C Masterpiece Show. “There’s a big difference between being a coordinator and being a head coach. Certainly, we understand; they deserve it. They have their full body of work and a very successful season. Dan has had success as a head coach. That just comes with the territory, and we’ll have to roll up out sleeves with them. We’ve had great relationships with both men, and we’ll just work with them as they navigate these waters. And as we do that, we’ll be thinking about what the future holds for the Cowboys, as well. Obviously, that will be first and foremost.”

Trying to reading between the lines of what a Jones says in a live radio interview is always rife with danger. Both Jerry and Stephen have been known to blow smoke or spin a story the way they want it perceived in the public eye.

But Stephen’s answer sure makes it sound like the Cowboys are committed to McCarthy, even if that means losing both Moore and Quinn.

[listicle id=691785]

[vertical-gallery id=691692]

[listicle id=691320]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Michigan State football DL coach Ron Burton leaving program

Ron Burton and MSU have parted ways

Michigan State football head coach Mel Tucker and defensive line coach Ron Burton have agreed to part ways marking the end of his 9-year coaching career at MSU. The move, made official today, will be the third position coach change since the season concluded.

Burton came to Michigan State in 2013 under head coach Mark Dantonio to take over the defensive line coaching duties. His move to East Lansing came after he spent 9 seasons with the Air Force Academy as their defensive line coach.

Mel Tucker will look to replace Burton with a defensive line coach that will work along side new pass rush specialist Brandon Jordan.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1]

Dan Quinn thought to be on Broncos’ wish list as Denver fires HC Vic Fangio

Cowboys’ defensive coordinator Dan Quinn has ties with Denver GM George Paton; he’ll likely be considered to take over in Denver. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Denver Broncos have wasted no time in cleaning house after their disappointing 7-10 season. Head coach Vic Fangio was fired Sunday, the morning after the Broncos’ season-ending loss to Kansas City.

As the Broncos and general manager George Paton begin their search for a new head coach, Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn is widely expected to be a name at the top of their wish list. League insiders Tom Pelissero, Jason La Canfora, and Albert Breer all have identified Quinn as a leading candidate for serious consideration in Denver.

Quinn had already received a request to meet with Jacksonville for their head coaching vacancy. At the time, the 51-year-old Quinn declined to participate during the Week 17-18 interview window, but reportedly helped Cowboys offensive coordinator Kellen Moore prepare for his two-hour virtual conversation with the Jaguars on Friday.

It in unclear if Quinn has taken himself out of consideration entirely for the Jaguars job or if he simply wants to wait until after the Cowboys’ postseason journey has ended.

Over the past year, Quinn has orchestrated a dramatic turnaround for a Cowboys defense that went from historically bad in 2020 to one of the NFL’s best and the league leader in takeaways.

As Broncos Wire pointed out back in November:

“Paton and Quinn do have a history together — they were on the same staff from 2005-2006 with the Miami Dolphins, holding director of pro personnel and defensive line coach roles, respectively.”

Later, in 2015, Quinn reportedly had “a strong interest” in joining forces with Paton, ready to be the head coach if Paton had been hired as GM with either the Jets or Bears. Paton ultimately did not pursue either position; Quinn accepted the head job in Atlanta, where he went on take the Falcons to a Super Bowl.

It looks as if the two men’s names will be linked once again as Denver launches a new head coaching search, with Paton having “full authority” to make the hire.

As for Fangio, the longtime defensive mastermind will almost assuredly generate interest for another coaching role, as either defensive coordinator or head coach for a new team. Some have already mentioned Fangio as a potential replacement for Quinn as defensive coordinator in Dallas should Quinn take an opportunity elsewhere.

[listicle id=690525]

[vertical-gallery id=690615]

[listicle id=690521]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Broncos fire offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur

After scoring 20.2 points per game in 2020 and 19.7 PPG in 2021, the Broncos have fired OC Pat Shurmur.

In addition to firing head coach Vic Fangio, the Denver Broncos have also fired offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur, KUSA-TV’s Mike Klis reported Sunday morning.

Denver hired Shurmur in 2019 after his unsuccessful tenure as the New York Giants’ head coach from 2018-2019. Shurmur had plenty of experiences as an offensive coordinator when he joined the Broncos, but it did not translate to success.

Denver’s offense scored 20.2 points per game last year, the fifth-lowest average in the NFL. The team made no progress in that department this season, averaging just 19.7 points per game.

Broncos general manager George Paton will be responsible for hiring the team’s next head coach, and that new coach will likely have a large role in picking the team’s next offensive coordinator.

Before Shurmur, Denver went through four offensive coordinators in four seasons: Rick Dennison (2016), Mike McCoy (2017), Bill Musgrave (2018) and Rich Scangarello (2019). The Broncos will now aim to get the next hire right to have some stability at the position.

[listicle id=670827]

Follow the Broncos Wire Podcast:
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts

[listicle id=670995]

Report: Michigan State football closing in on new RBs coach

MSU is closing in on its new RB coach

The Michigan State football program lost its beloved running backs coach William Peagler this past week to the University of Florida. Mel Tucker has taken little time to close in on who he wants to replace Peagler. The Spartans are expected to bring back former offensive assistant Effrem Reed to fill the void.

Reed has spent the last two seasons as an offensive analyst and assistant running backs coach with Michigan State but took a job with Georgia Southern as their running backs coach earlier this month.

Reed will be returning to East Lansing, already knowing the vision the coaching staff has, and what is expected of him as an assistant coach.

Reed played his college football as a running back at Louisiana under Jay Johnson, who was the offensive coordinator of Louisiana at the time, from 2012 to 2015. In his coaching career, Reed has spent two seasons as a graduate assistant at Louisiana and two seasons as an offensive analyst at Michigan State.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1]

Report: Texas WR coach Andre Coleman will not be retained for the 2022 season

Steve Sarkisian is making a change to his offensive staff.

Steve Sarkisian will be shaking up his staff a bit after his first season at Texas.

After hiring Tashard Choice as the running backs coach to replace new Temple head coach Stan Drayton, Sark has decided to move on from wide receivers coach Andre Coleman. The news was first reported by TFB on Sunday evening.

Coleman has served as the wide receiver coach for two seasons as one of the few holdovers from Tom Herman’s staff.

Texas saw wide receiver Xavier Worthy breakout as a freshman All-American this season but failed to get much production outside of him.

Coleman also really struggled on the recruiting trail. Texas signed four-star wideout Brenen Thompson but missed out on priority target Evan Stewart and multiple others. There is no doubt that Sark wants to see recruiting improvement at the position.

The next wide receivers coach will not have to worry about a lack of talent. Xavier Worthy, Jordan Whittington, Marcus Washington and Brenen Thompson make up a solid core to work with.

Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.

Winners and losers from the college football coaching carousel

Which teams hit home runs and which teams got hurt the most in the coaching carousel so far?

The 2021 coaching carousel has been one of the more wild ones in college football history.

We have seen a little bit of everything this offseason. Successful coaches at premier jobs bolted to other major programs, Miami publicly looked to hire Mario Cristobal while the position was still filled and TCU hired Sonny Dykes from rival SMU from right down the road.

This year’s coaching carousel has already almost doubled the number of coaching changes we saw in 2020. There have been 28 coaching changes made with more likely to come after the bowl season.

All these coaches on the move have made a big impact on the transfer portal and recruiting. More and more players have entered the transfer portal to explore their options for the upcoming seasons.

Much of the future of college football will be defined by the decisions made during this offseason. Take a look at some of the winners and losers of this years coaching cycle:

Michigan State football CBs coach heading to Georgia Tech

MSU has lost a defensive assistant to Georgia Tech

Michigan State is losing its cornerbacks coach Travares Tillman to Georgia Tech. Tillman has spent one season in the role at Michigan State.

Tillman spent the 2020 season as a senior defensive assistant before being promoted to the cornerbacks coaching position in 2021. He will now be the new defensive backs coach at his alma mater Georgia Tech.

Tillman had spent his whole coaching career working under Mel Tucker to this point, making stops at Georgia and Colorado before coming to MSU.

Tillman joins offensive assistant Effrem Reed in departing the coaching staff this offseason.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1]

College football head coaching tracker

Rank these jobs from best to worst and give us a reason why…

It’s already been a busy off-season of coaching changes in college football and we’re still two weeks from the regular season actually drawing to a close.  With Justin Fuente’s announced firing from Virginia Tech there have now already been 12 head college football coaches fired since the season began.

Some are staying on to finish the year while others technically resigned, but the the fact remains there will be at least 12 different head coaches in college football’s FBS when the 2022 season begins late next summer.

Here at Fighting Irish Wire we’re certainly not expecting Brian Kelly to be exiting anytime soon, even if Kirk Herbstreit has him on a plane to Southern California, but we certainly would be curious about a Kelly assistant getting a chance at a head coaching job.

Below is our tracker of all FBS coaching changes that will be updated through the fall and into the early parts of 2022.