Duke football coach Manny Diaz tabs David Feeley, stability as keys to program culture

Manny Diaz said on Wednesday that the key to his transition has been keeping as many Blue Devils in place as possible, including one key staff name.

New Duke football coach Manny Diaz knows the Blue Devils don’t need a ton of work. After all, he’s walking into a locker room with 17 wins over the last two seasons.

During ACC Football Kickoff on Wednesday, Diaz stopped by ACC Network and talked about how he wanted to keep as many key people within the program as possible.

“The best thing we have at Duke is our people,” Diaz said. “And to keep the nucleus of the team last year together, which we were able to do for the most part.”

He also praised one specific Duke staff member: Director of Football Sports Performance David Feeley.

“The whole key has been keeping David Feeley,” Diaz continued. “If you ask all of our players, they believe that he is the key to the success the last couple years.”

Diaz already worked with Feeley in Miami. While Diaz coached the Hurricanes from 2019-21, Feeley worked as the director of strength and conditioning for football.

Overall, Diaz felt like a lot of the groundwork for a good football program already exists in Durham. Why try to fix what isn’t broken?

“You hear coaches talk all the time, ‘We have to establish a culture in year one,’ it was already established,” Diaz said. “Because your culture is what you do for each other.”

Report: Duke S&C David Feeley won’t follow Mike Elko to Texas A&M

According to a source at FootballScoop, Duke Strength & Conditioning coach David Feeley will not follow Mike Elko to Texas A&M.

After it was reported earlier last week that renowned Duke strength & conditioning coach David Feeley would follow head coach Mike Elko to Texas A&M, a source provided to FootballScoop has stated that Feeley will not make his way to College Station after all.

After Texas A&M officially hired Elko last Sunday afternoon, the former Aggies defensive coordinator is currently in the process of interviewing more than a dozen coaches for various positions ranging from offensive coordinator to O-line coach, now adding S&C coach into the mix.

While Feeley remains a hot commodity on the open market, FootballScoop writer Jon Brice also noted that Elko will likely be in contact with Duke OC Kevin Johns. At the same time, former Texas A&M linebacker coach and current Duke DC Tyler Santucci will also not follow Elko.

“Kevin Johns will be considered for the A&M offensive coordinator position, but Elko also has worked to target numerous offensive play-callers around the sport.

Tyler Santucci, widely considered one of the top up-and-coming defensive minds in college football, will not accompany Elko to College Station.”

As I wrote early Saturday, current Texas A&M interim head coach Elijah Robinson has reportedly received immense interest from new Syracuse HC Fran Brown, who worked with Robinson at Temple and Baylor a year ago. Robinson is expected to make a decision in the coming weeks.

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Report: A key Duke assistant will follow Mike Elko to Texas A&M

It has been reported that new Texas A&M head coach Mike Elko will bring along one of his top assistants from Duke during his transition.

On just the first day of new Texas A&M Football head coach Mike Elko’s introduction as the program’s 30th head coach, it was reported that one of Elko’s assistants during his three-year run at Duke would follow Elko to College Station.

According to a source provided to GigEm247 writer Carter Karels, David Feeley, who serves as the Director of Football Sports Performance at Duke, will follow Elko to Texas A&M in a lateral move as one of the top assistants in college football, filling the void at a spot that may have been lacking in the last two seasons,

Now, Feeley may not be exceptionally well known in the mainstream. Still, as a strength coach in any college football program, those who serve at the helm are in close contact with the roster daily and even hourly, even more than position coaches or even head coaches.

If you need more of a selling point or want to know what David Feeley is all about, check out the interview above from Football Scoop from just two months ago. That guy gets it.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Cameron on Twitter: @CameronOhnysty.