BC hires former Penn State head coach following Jeff Haley departure

Bill O’Brien is the new head coach at Boston College.

Over the last few weeks, BC football’s coaching staff has undergone significant changes. The Eagles have a new head coach in Bill O’Brien after Jeff Hafley joined the Green Bay Packers as the defensive coordinator.

While BC will be turning the page on the Hafley era after four years, it was an overall successful run. Now, there will be high expectations for O’Brien to take the program to the next level.

Most recently, O’Brien was hired last month to be offensive coordinator at Ohio State. Prior to that, he was the offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots.

With Hafley calling the shots, BC posted a 22-26 record, including a 7-6 mark this season. Under the former Rutgers assistant coach, the Eagles recorded a bowl win this year with a win over SMU in the Fenway Bowl. O’Brien will now be tasked with building on Hafley’s success.

 

In O’Brien, BC has brought in a coach with plenty of experience. During his career, he has spent some time in the NFL as the Patriots offensive coordinator. He was also the head coach of the Houston Texans from 2014-2020. After an 0-3 start in 2020, O’Brien was let go. The Texans posted a 52-48 record during his tenure and won two playoff games.

However, O’Brien is no stranger to college football and the Big Ten. He was the head coach at Penn State from 2012-2013. During his first season in Happy Valley, O’Brien was named Big Ten Coach of the Year after leading the Nittany Lions to eight wins. That was the most wins by a first-year head coach in school history. He finished with a 15-9 record before returning to the NFL.

Although O’Brien has a busy few months ahead, he brings valuable experience to Chestnut Hill.

Report: Former Wisconsin head coach a candidate for the Boston College opening

Would this work out?

Former Wisconsin head coach Paul Chryst is a candidate for the current opening at Boston College, according to a report from The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman.

Chryst spend 2023 as an offensive analyst at Texas under head coach Steve Sarkisian after Wisconsin fired him midway through the 2022 season. He at least somewhat aided Texas in its successful 12-2 campaign, Big 12 Championship and College Football Playoff birth.

Boston College, meanwhile, has an opening after its former head coach Jeff Hafley took the defensive coordinator job with the Green Bay Packers.

Feldman writes that he’s heard Chryst “has gotten some traction for this job,” alongside top candidate Ohio State OC Bill O’Brien and other candidates including Army head coach Jeff Monken, Air Force head coach Troy Calhoun, Boston College outside linebackers coach Paul Rhoads and former Boston College player Al Washington.

O’Brien appears to be the favorite after spending 2023 on the Patriots’ offensive staff, that before taking the Ohio State offensive coordinator job after the 2023 season.

Whether the job is his or not, a key takeaway here is Chryst’s clear desire to return to the coaching mix after a year at Texas. He recently was a candidate for the vacant offensive coordinator spot at Iowa, and now is reportedly in the mix for a head coaching position.

If we don’t see Chryst somewhere on the sideline in 2024, I’d bet he’s back leading a program in 2025.

ACC head coach Jeff Hafley heading to the NFL

Boston College is losing their head coach to the NFL.

CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. —Boston College football Coach Jeff Hafley announced today that he is stepping down as the Gregory P. Barber ’69 and Family Head Coach to become the defensive coordinator of the Green Bay Packers.

Hafley, who has led the Eagles since 2020 and finished the 2023 season with a record of 7-6 and a Wasabi Fenway Bowl victory over No. 17-ranked SMU, said the decision to leave BC was difficult, but that the opportunity to become defensive coordinator of the Packers was one that he could not pass up.

“I loved my four years at Boston College,” said Hafley.  “This is an exceptional place to coach given the caliber of student-athletes we recruit, the facilities, and the support from the University and BC fans. I will miss the players who gave so much of themselves these past four years, and my wife Gina and I will certainly miss the BC community and the many friends we have made here.”

William V. Campbell Director of Athletics Blake James thanked Hafley for his dedicated service to his players and BC football since being named head coach in December of 2019.

“We are incredibly grateful to Coach Hafley for his service to Boston College and to our student-athletes,” said James.  “He was a true ambassador of our institution, and under his leadership, the Eagles earned three bowl berths, excelled academically, and represented Boston College with class and distinction. We wish him, his wife, Gina, and their daughters, Hope and Leah, all the best in their next steps.”

James said that a national search for a new head coach will begin immediately.

“As a world-class institution with a strong tradition and a commitment to excellence, we are confident that we will find an exceptional new leader for our football program, and we will continue to do everything we can to support our student-athletes.”

– Via Boston College Athletic Communications 

Big picture look at new Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley’s style and scheme

Taking a big picture look at new Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley’s style and scheme.

New Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley will bring a different style and potentially a different scheme to Green Bay in 2024.

At Boston College, Hafley ran a 4-3 defense. The base scheme is also what New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh runs as well, and the last time Hafley was in the NFL as the defensive backs coach of the 49ers, Saleh was his defensive coordinator.

However, throughout Hafley’s career, which has also included time in Tampa Bay and Cleveland as the defensive backs coach and one year with Ohio State as the co-defensive coordinator, he has operated in a variety of defensive systems, including a 3-4.

In a recent interview with Hafley, he discussed the importance of being able to adjust. Boston College led college football in single high safety looks during the 2021 and 2022 seasons and still used it at a high rate in 2023, but Hafley began utilizing more Cover-2, and emphasizes the importance of varying coverages, including playing press man, to keep the quarterback off-balanced.

Hafley also noted that the NFL is a different game than college because of where the hash marks are. This could also tell us that how Hafley operated at Ohio State and Boston College may not all translate to the Packers and the NFL level.

“We’ve been more middle closed defense with a safety in the middle of the field than probably most people in college football,” said Hafley in an interview with Next Up. “Most people are some type of 2-high or quarters based and I get it for the quarterback run games. We’ve been trending in that direction as well. But I’ve done a lot, at least at the starting point with the middle-closed with four down linemen. Very similar to what we did in San Francisco and Ohio State, and a lot of people do it in the NFL. But I’ve started to adapt. Create different one-high shells which really play like two-high shells and get extra guys in the box.

“You’ve just got to stop the quarterback run game. When I talk to my friends in the NFL and we talk defense together, it’s almost a different game. The quarterback in the NFL they’re going to run it in big moments or in the red zone or on third down or in a championship game, right? But you can’t do that week in and week out. You’ve got to account for an extra guy. So you’ve got to change.”

So, although Hafley utilized a 4-3 defense at Ohio State and at Boston College, I wouldn’t quite say it’s a leadpipe lock that the Packers transition to this style of defense, either. At the end of the day, Hafley wants to put the defenders in the best positions to be successful based on their skill sets, and his background coaching in a variety of different defenses allowed him to do that.

“I’m big on technique and I’m big on fundamentals, but (if) a guy can play at a high level, don’t try to change him to fit exactly what you think he should be. Just get him better,” Hafley said via the Wisconsin State Journal. “I always try to take stuff from players. I’ve always been big on picking players’ brains and trying to learn from them.

“I probably have learned just as much from really good players as I’ve learned from players … I try to get in their head to see what they think and how they do things and how they see things, because they’re out there seeing it more than I am. I see it on tape, but it’s different.”

If the Packers do, in fact, make this change to running a 4-3, it should be a pretty smooth transition for the defensive front, given the skill sets already on the roster, and Brian Gutekunst preferring big-bodied edge rushers. The Packers may need to tweak their offseason priorities by adding another TJ Slaton-like presence in the middle or bolstering the edge rusher depth, but for the most part, this should be a reasonable transition for this group.

Inside linebacker, however, where three players will have to be on the field when the Packers line up in their base defense, now becomes a much bigger priority this offseason.

Currently on the roster at inside linebacker are Quay Walker, De’Vondre Campbell, Isaiah McDuffie – who would be the starters – and Christian Young. It’s also possible that the Packers could move on from Campbell this offseason in favor of freeing up $2.6 million in needed cap space–further adding to an already existing need.

McDuffie played under Hafley during his final two seasons at Boston College before being drafted by Green Bay. The middle linebacker in this 4-3 defense is the commander of the unit and is tasked with helping in the run and dropping into coverage. The strong-side linebacker can have more run-defending and blitzing responsibilities, while the weak-side linebacker often has more coverage responsibilities.

The linebackers under Hafley have done an impressive job of being able to cause some chaos around the line of scrimmage while still being able to get depth and limit opportunities over the middle.

Addressing the safety position was already a top priority for Gutekunst this offseason, but that too becomes a bigger need, specifically finding a rangy free safety if Hafley does plan to utilize cover-1 more often, as well as a safety comfortable playing in the box if more single-high looks will be used.

As of now, the Packers’ safety room is made up of Benny Sapp, Anthony Johnson, and Zayne Anderson.

Regardless of what system Hafley goes with, there will be an emphasis on tackling. Prior to Hafley’s one season at Ohio State, the Buckeyes ranked 72nd in yards per play allowed on defense the season before. After one season with Hafley in charge of the defense, they ranked first. A key contributor to that turnaround was the work they did on their tackling, an area where the Packers have been extremely inconsistent.

“We don’t just talk about running to the ball,” Hafley said via The Athletic. “To me, the most important thing about tackling is the approach. I got up in front of the whole team, and Ryan had me talking about tackling in front of the whole team.

“I think people spend way too much time just talking about the finish and driving your legs and wrapping up. But people put themselves in such bad positions, where they’re not even close to being in a position to make the play. Everything we do, we just talked about tracking and the angle and the approach and getting yourself in the best position to actually get yourself having a fighting chance to make the tackle. Whether we’re doing a live period or not, we talk about that on every single play.”

In today’s NFL, whether a defense runs a 3-4 or a 4-3 doesn’t have the same impact as it once did. Most defenses spend a majority of their time in nickel anyways with the offense trying to spread things out. But nonetheless, the Packers need the right personnel for when they do run their base defense, and switching to a 4-3 puts an even brighter light on the linebacker position and perhaps changes how Gutekunst attacks that position this offseason.

More important than the scheme is having the right person leading the way. Ultimately, we have to wait and see how things unfold with Hafley at the helm of the Packers defense, but his past suggests that two big boxes will be checked: his willingness to adjust and his ability to make the gameplan digestible for his players–two things that had been missing previously in Green Bay.

“His preparation is some of the best I’ve seen,” said cornerback Richard Sherman who was coached by Hafley in San Francisco. “I’ve had some great defensive back coaches, some great defensive coaches, great defensive minds, and he’s right up there with his preparation and how he breaks down film and how easy and simple he makes the gameplan sound. How easy he makes it for guys to understand. He paints a very vivid picture of what you’re going to see and it’s all about executing on it.”

Boston College head coach Jeff Hafley is leaving for the NFL

In a strange turn of events, BC head coach Jeff Hafley is NFL-bound.

In a bit of a surprise, Boston College head coach Jeff Hafley is leaving college football to join the Green Bay Packers as their defensive coordinator. Hafley last coached in the NFL from 2016 to 2018 with the San Francisco 49ers as the defensive backs coach.

The newest Packers assistant has also made stops with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Cleveland Browns, before returning to the collegiate game with the Ohio State Buckeyes in 2019.

Hafley becomes the latest member of the coaching carousel, in an offseason that has been full of twists and turns. According to the report by Pete Thamel of ESPN, Hafley wanted to focus on coaching football and not everything else that comes with being a coach at the FBS level.

“He wants to go coach football again in a league that is all about football,” a source told ESPN. “College coaching has become fundraising, NIL and recruiting your own team and transfers. There’s no time to coach football anymore.

“A lot of things that he went back to college for have disappeared.”

With Hafley now leaving to rejoin the NFL, the Boston College Eagles will need to find a new football coach just days before National Signing Day. Not an ideal situation but that is the hand dealt to BC.

The Eagles could look at a few different candidates but the top ones might include Notre Dame offensive coordinator Al Golden and Texas offensive coordinator Kyle Flood. Both have experience running programs but have remained as assistants in recent years.

Former Ohio State Co-defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley leaving Boston College for the NFL

Hafley is on the move again. #GoBucks

If you ever thought you wanted to be a big time college or NFL coach, just remember how many times you have to move your family. Just ask former Ohio State co-defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley. He of course had a history in the NFL before coming to Columbus back in 2019.

He made a name for him self at OSU, leading the defense to one of the best in the country. In fact, he was gone just a year later to take on the opportunity to become the head coach of Boston College in 2020 where he struggled to get the program on better footing than mediocre.

And now, according to news out of Green Bay, Hafley will is heading back to the NFL to take the Packers defensive coordinator position. In other words, Hafley has been a bit of a nomad but getting back to the NFL you figured had to be a goal at some point.

“I loved my four years at Boston College,” Hafley said in a statement released by the school. “This is an exceptional place to coach given the caliber of student-athletes we recruit, the facilities and the support from the University and BC fans. I will miss the players who gave so much of themselves these past four years, and my wife Gina and I will certainly miss the BC community and the many friends we have made here.”

We’ll continue to follow any comings and goings with former Ohio State staff as the news comes across the proverbial wire.

Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes, and opinion. 

Who is new Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley?

Getting to know new Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley.

The Green Bay Packers have their next defensive coordinator. According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Matt LaFleur is hiring Boston College head coach Jeff Hafley.

The news comes out of nowhere. Among the six different reported defensive coordinator interviews that the Packers held, Hafley was not among those mentioned.

Hafley’s roots in the NFL are in the secondary. He got his first NFL coaching gig with Tampa Bay in 2012 as the assistant defensive backs coach. He was then promoted to the defensive backs coach in 2013. Hafley would fill that same role with Cleveland during the 2014 and 2015 seasons, and then San Francisco from 2016 to 2018.

In 2019, he joined the Ohio State coaching staff as co-defensive coordinator and has been the head coach of Boston College since 2020.

Boston College’s best season defensively under Hafley came in 2021. According to the team site, the Golden Eagles’ defense ranked third in passing yards. That same year, the defense ranked top 30 nationally in total defense, red zone defense, first downs allowed, third down rate, team passing efficiency and defensive touchdowns. Boston College also finished with the fewest penalties in the ACC.

In this most recent 2023 season, Boston College ranked 74th in points per game allowed at 28.3 and 64th in total yards per game surrendered. Over his head coaching career, Hafley finished 22-26, including 7-6 in 2023, leading Boston College to its first bowl appearance since 2018, which they won.

Hafley has passed on previous coaching opportunities in the NFL, wrote Thamel, but is making the jump now, in part due to the NIL and the current state of recruiting.

“He wants to go coach football again in a league that is all about football,” a source told ESPN. “College coaching has become fundraising, NIL and recruiting your own team and transfers. There’s no time to coach football anymore.

“A lot of things that he went back to college for have disappeared.”

Hafley has coached in a variety of schemes during his career and spent time coaching under current New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh when he was the defensive coordinator with San Francisco, as well as head coach Kyle Shanahan.

Justis Mosqueda of Acme Packing Co. would also note that during Hafley’s time in Cleveland, one of his assistant defensive back coaches was Bobby Babich, who the Packers also interviewed, and current Packers safeties coach Ryan Downard was also on that staff.

Thamel adds that Hafley is a “longtime” friend of Matt LaFleur’s and a longtime “admirer” of the Packers’ organization.

With Hafley as the defensive coordinator in 2019, Ohio State went from ranking 72nd in yards per play to leading the country in that category. A key teaching point of Hafley’s that season was on tackling, an area where the Packers have been inconsistent at best.

“We don’t just talk about running to the ball,” said Hafley via The Athletic. “To me, the most important thing about tackling is the approach. I got up in front of the whole team, and Ryan had me talking about tackling in front of the whole team.

“I think people spend way too much time just talking about the finish and driving your legs and wrapping up. But people put themselves in such bad positions, where they’re not even close to being in a position to make the play. Everything we do, we just talked about tracking and the angle and the approach and getting yourself in the best position to actually get yourself having a fighting chance to make the tackle. Whether we’re doing a live period or not, we talk about that on every single play.”

It is not yet known what style of defense Hafley will run in Green Bay, but for what it’s worth, Boston College did a run a 4-3, as does Salah, who Hafley last coached under on the defensive side of the ball when in the NFL.  Under Hafley, Boston College ran a heavy dose of Cover-1, a far cry from how the Packers have operated.

“Some or all” of the Packers’ current defensive coaching staff could be retained under Hafley, reported Thamel.

Packers expected to hire Boston College coach Jeff Hafley as defensive coordinator

The Packers are hiring Boston College coach Jeff Hafley as the team’s new defensive coordinator.

The Green Bay Packers are expected to hire Boston College coach Jeff Hafley as the team’s new defensive coordinator, according to Pete Thamel of ESPN.

Hafley, 44, will replace Joe Barry as Matt LaFleur’s leader of the defense in 2024.

Hafley has been the Boston College coach since 2020. His teams were 22-26. Despite his current run in college football, Hafley has seven years of experience coaching defense at the NFL level.

He broke into the NFL in 2012 as an assistant defensive backs coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers under coach Greg Schiano and defensive coordinator Bill Sheridan. He moved up to defensive backs coach in 2013 before moving to coach defensive backs for the Cleveland Browns in 2014 and 2015 under coach Mike Pettine and defensive coordinator Jim O’Neil. In 2016, Hafley went to San Francisco to coach defensive backs for O’Neil and the 49ers. He remained in San Francisco for the transition to Kyle Shanahan and defensive coordinator Robert Saleh in 2017 and remained in the role through the 2018 season.

In 2019, Hafley was the co-defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach for Ohio State.

The connections to Pettine, Shanahan and Saleh are clear. All three either worked with LaFleur or have close ties. Hafley was also in San Francisco with brother Mike LaFleur and Packers offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich.

Hafley, a New Jersey native, played wide receiver at Sienna from 1997 to 2000. He entered coaching at the collegiate level in 2001.

Packers Wire will have more on Hafley and the hire at defensive coordinator.

Michigan State football: 2024 nonconference opponent Boston College loses head coach

MSU’s big time 2024 nonconference opponent Boston College has lost their head coach, according to reports

The focal point of Michigan State’s 2024 non conference schedule is a road trip to the northeast, for a road trip against Boston College of the ACC. That road trip may have gotten easier for the Spartans.

Boston College head coach Jeff Hafley is leaving the program, and will be joining the Green Bay Packers as the team’s new defensive coordinator.

Boston College will have a hard time hiring a coach, and retaining the roster, before this fall.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Cory Linsner on Twitter @Cory_Linsner.

Boston College coach touts ‘very impressive’ part of Clemson’s team

With his team being a three-touchdown underdog at home this week, Boston College coach Jeff Hafley acknowledged the Eagles have their work cut out for them against Clemson. Hafley, now in his third season in charge of Boston College’s program, has …

With his team being a three-touchdown underdog at home this week, Boston College coach Jeff Hafley acknowledged the Eagles have their work cut out for them against Clemson.

Hafley, now in his third season in charge of Boston College’s program, has yet to notch a win over the Tigers during his tenure, something the Eagles will try to change Saturday when the series is renewed at Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill.

But Hafley knows that’s easier said than done. He heaped praise on Clemson’s improved offense, noting quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei’s passing efficiency. Hafley touted Will Shipley, who didn’t play against Boston College last season because of an injury, as a future NFL running back. He also made a point to mention a more experienced offensive line as well as a big-bodied group of receivers that have all helped Clemson average 41 points through the first five games.

But it’s Clemson’s defense that’s grabbed most of Hafley’s attention, particularly what the Tigers are doing against the run. The Tigers are yielding the second-fewest rushing yards in the country (69.6 per game) with the help of a defensive line that’s continued to produce at a high level despite not playing whole yet this season because of injuries.

“They’re huge and long,” Hafley told local reporters this week. “Their front seven is very impressive. Their tackles are huge. Their defensive ends have really good length. I know (former Clemson linebacker James) Skalski’s not there anymore, but their linebackers are really good players. They’re fast.

“They’re really a good defense overall. They’re well-coached. A new coordinator obviously (in Wes Goodwin), but he’s done a really good job. They really haven’t missed a beat. They’re still one of the best defenses in the country with some of the best players in the country. We’ll have our work cut out for us.”

One area Boston College’s offense may look to have some success against Clemson is the passing game. The Eagles are throwing for nearly 240 yards per game while Clemson’s struggles in the secondary have the Tigers giving up more yards through the air than anybody in the ACC (263.2 per game).

Yet Hafley said he’s not necessarily buying the back end being the weak link of the Tigers’ defense. He pointed to “some deep balls” in Clemson’s double-overtime win over Wake Forest that he believes have skewed the numbers for the Tigers’ pass defense. Clemson allowed nearly 17 yards per completion in that game.

Clemson rebounded last week by limiting NC State to less than 9 yards per catch in a 30-20 victory.

“They’ve rotated a bunch of guys at corner, so they’ve played a bunch of corners,” Hafley said. “But I think their secondary is pretty talented. I think their defense in general is really talented.”

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce limited edition signed cards from the freshmen football players are now in our online store.  There are only 100 of each signed.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!