Mel Tucker hired as head coach at Michigan State

Last week, it was announced that long-time Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio would be stepping down. This week, former Alabama assistant coach Mel Tucker announced that he would be Dantonio’s replacement. BREAKING: #CU coach Mel Tucker has …

Last week, it was announced that long-time Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio would be stepping down. This week, former Alabama assistant coach Mel Tucker announced that he would be Dantonio’s replacement.

While many consider it a home run hire for the Spartans, Tucker’s departure from Colorado has created a lot of controversy and discussion, mostly because the decision came days after tweeting this out:

It’s understandable for Colorado fans to be frustrated, but at the time of the above tweet, Michigan State hadn’t offered to double his salary while also meeting a lot of other appealing demands. In other words, the job became too much to refuse.

Alabama head coach Nick Saban, who Tucker worked for during the Crimson Tide’s 2015 national championship season, made a statement on Michigan State’s decision:

Outside of Tucker, Alabama fans should also be wondering about the status of former Tide defensive lineman Antonio Alfano.

The former five-star prospect announced his decision to transfer to Colorado back in early November, mostly because he wanted to play under Tucker.

Now, it looks like that won’t be an option for Alfano.

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Paul Chryst is the best argument Mel Tucker can make at MSU

Mel Tucker through the lens of Paul Chryst

Yes, I am on record as saying the Mel Tucker hire by Michigan State is not an especially impressive one. Yet, I have acknowledged as well that head coaching hires often defy the conventional wisdom or the majority reaction.

Ed Orgeron has been a home run. Tom Herman has fallen far short of expectations. Jim Harbaugh hasn’t been a total bust, but he has been curb-stomped by Ohio State, not merely outclassed. It seems like an impossibility that Harbaugh will win a division title at Michigan in the next two years. (Maybe in 2022, Ryan Day’s recruits might not hit the sweet spot, but Michigan isn’t beating OSU in Columbus this upcoming November if the Buckeyes are healthy at the most important positions.)

I and anyone else who evaluates coaching hires must allow for the possibility of being wrong. If I am wrong on Mel Tucker at Michigan State — if Tucker surpasses my expectations and becomes a worthy successor to Mark Dantonio — Tucker will author a surprising story of achievement and vindication.

If there is a coach in the Big Ten who offers at least some evidence — a tangible, living example — that this kind of hire can work, it is none other than the head coach of the Wisconsin Badgers. Yes, I am referring to Paul Chryst.

Ryan Day is a unique example among current Big Ten coaches, inheriting a completely loaded roster entrusted to him by Urban Meyer. That is a conspicuously rare coaching situation not easily comparable to anything else we see in the United States, let alone the Big Ten.

Among the other prominent — and generally successful (to varying degrees) — head coaches in the Big Ten, most of them showed they could win as head coaches elsewhere.

James Franklin at Vanderbilt before coming to Penn State.

Jim Harbaugh at Stanford (not to mention the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers).

P.J. Fleck at Western Michigan.

Jeff Brohm at Western Kentucky.

Kirk Ferentz doesn’t fit this dynamic at Iowa… and Paul Chryst doesn’t fit this dynamic at Wisconsin. Ferentz, though, hadn’t been a head coach in Division I (FBS) football when he took the Iowa job. Chryst had… and it didn’t work out for him.

Chryst was consistent at Pittsburgh… but not in an impressive way. Chryst’s Panthers went 6-6 in all three regular seasons. He coached two of those three bowl games, but not the third, having been hired to coach Wisconsin by Barry Alvarez. (Joe Rudolph coached that bowl for Pitt at the end of the 2014 season, interestingly enough.) Chryst’s record in three seasons at Pittsburgh: 19-19. It was hardly, on paper, the kind of resume which lent itself to an upward move on the coaching ladder.

Yet, Alvarez knew Chryst and trusted him. Chryst was familiar with the Wisconsin Way. It has worked out quite well. Alvarez looked past a head coach’s unimpressive resume as a head coach, and focused instead on the many years Chryst had spent in the salt mines of coaching in other roles and capacities. That accumulated experience sold Alvarez, and it turns out that Alvarez’s instincts were entirely correct.

That is fundamentally what Michigan State is banking on with Mel Tucker. He coached a defense at Georgia to the national title game, and it came within an eyelash of beating Nick Saban’s Alabama team for all the marbles. Tucker has worked on the coaching staffs of Nick Saban and Jim Tressel. He coached as an assistant for over 20 years before getting his chance to be a head coach at Colorado. Michigan State isn’t basing its decision on one year in Boulder in 2019, but on two decades of expertise.

Chryst had over two decades of (assistant) coaching experience when Alvarez picked him as the successor to Gary Andersen.

Wisconsin hopes Mel Tucker doesn’t work out at Michigan State… at least not when the Spartans play the Badgers. Yet, if Tucker does refute me and anyone else who is not impressed by this hire, he will follow in the footsteps of Paul Chryst and Wisconsin.

Did I ever tell you sports were endlessly fascinating?

Twitter reacts to Michigan State hiring Mel Tucker as football coach

The shocking turn of events led to some pretty excellent Twitter content.

It has been a whirlwind couple of days for the Michigan State football program and if you need evidence of that, look no further than Twitter.

We recently compiled the story of the Luke Fickell portion of the coaching search and boy was that a strange roller coaster ride.

Now that Michigan State has found its next coach in former Colorado boss Mel Tucker, Michigan State football players and fans alike are breathing an excited sigh of relief. Let’s check in on some of the reactions from current and former players, as well as fans.

We’ll start with the first reports of the news and go from there. Credit to Hondo Carpenter for scooping this one.

The Athletic’s Colton Pouncy with some (always) wise words for us all.

College football maestro Spencer Hall with the appropriate reaction, followed by a necessary request.

New recruit Darius Snow appears to be a fan.

The official announcement tweet. Excellent work finding a Mel Tucker photo with no Colorado logo on it. (or photoshopping it off)

Mark Dantonio said people would crawl to Michigan State for the job . . . apparently they’re happy enough to fly private to get to East Lansing.

Noteworthy that Tucker is the 2nd African American head coach in MSU history and projected to be the second-highest-paid black head coach in all of football! MSU’s legacy with integration in football is one to be proud of and I’m happy that continues.

Current players seemed pretty pleased with the announcement.

And some former players have weighed in as well.

Current wide receiver CJ Hayes had the best reaction. Print the shirts.

Of course the fans had to weight in. Beloved MSU Twitter misery Matt Sheehan has a good point.

New hashtag, y’all!

Mel Tucker seems pretty dang cool.

Of course, MSU backed up the Brinks truck (paid a lot of money) for Tucker, so we had to celebrate that.

Yep.

It’s been a wild coaching search on the internet, but today has been a very fun day for MSU Twitter.

Mel Tucker will be formally introduced as Michigan State’s 25th head coach during a 6:30 PM press conference, which will be aired live on BTN.

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Mel Tucker, who worked for Nick Saban at Michigan State, returns

More on Mel Tucker

Mel Tucker to Michigan State is a case of a career coming full-circle. Mel Tucker’s coaching career began in 1997. Where? At Michigan State. Yes, you can look it up: Tucker was a graduate assistant.

Who was the head coach for the Spartans at the time? Someone you might have heard of: Nick Saban. Yep, Tucker can very legitimately call himself a member of the Saban coaching tree. Before he was Kirby Smart’s defensive coordinator at Georgia, he coached Alabama’s defensive backs in 2015, when the Crimson Tide won one of Saban’s many national championships. A full 15 years earlier, in the 2000 season, Tucker coached defensive backs for Saban at LSU.

Mel Tucker isn’t just returning to Michigan State. A Saban disciple is returning to a school where Saban was once head coach.

The fascinating plot nuance of Tucker coming to East Lansing is that Nick Saban never won big at Michigan State. Saban had to figure out a few things (or, if you prefer an alternative viewpoint, move to the SEC) before he won big and became one of the greatest college football head coaches of all time. Tucker has been on the sideline with Saban in moments of prosperity, yes, but also in the seasons when Saban did not rule college football with imposing totality.

We can only speculate now. As we have noted in other articles, Tucker comes to Michigan State as a mystery man. He could turn out to be great, but his portfolio as a head coach is incomplete. We don’t know he will be bad, but we don’t know he will be good, either. We have to wait and see. Michigan State did not hire a proven head coach here.

Yet, with all that having been acknowledged, there certainly is a powerful human drama to be found in the Mel Tucker story. Imagine how great a name he could make for himself if he leads the Spartans to a lofty place. He would be able to say he did something Nick Saban, his foremost teacher in college football alongside Jim Tressel (for whom Tucker coached at Ohio State in the early 2000s), never achieved.

Whether a coach succeeds or not is a constant source of drama in sport. When a coach has a story as intriguing as Mel Tucker’s, that drama is magnified to a considerable degree.

Reaction: Michigan State set to hire Mel Tucker as 25th head football coach

What do we make of Michigan State’s newest head coach?

Mostly expletives. That was the initial reaction.

Let me set a scene for you. I have allergies. They always flare up at night. That means, depending on the severity of symptoms, every night I take either a Benadryl or Xyzal tablet to help ease my face so I can sleep. Tuesday night was a Benadryl night. The pill goes down and the countdown clock to my brain seizing to a crawl begins.

I also love to decompress with Scott Van Pelt’s Sportscenter. It’s a perfect pre-bed sports show. Last night Matt Sheehan and I recorded a rollicking podcast reacting to Michigan State’s win over Illinois. I edited that sucker, got it scheduled to publish and shut my laptop for the night just as the Benadryl was hitting the spot. Perfect. Time to lie down on the couch and let SVP take me home.

Then a text.

“I’ve got the tucker news.”

It’s always alarming to receive work texts after 1:00 AM (I record SVP and had just flipped it on). This one was from the SpartansWire editor Andrew Brewster. He’s out on the west coast, so thankfully he was still awake. And for the life of me, my Bendryl-infused brain could not come up with a single person named “Tucker” that I should be aware of.

“Who the hell is Tucker?” I thought for a full minute. I finally realized I should probably check Twitter to see what was going on. I open up the app on my phone and the first thing I see is a tweet from The Athletic’s Colton Pouncy.

“HELLO.”

It clicked. Oh, [bleep]. Michigan State just hired Mel Tucker. From there it was a race to gather as much information as was available, reconvene with Sheehan to record *another* podcast, all while my brain slowed to the point of idling. If you listen to that podcast, and you should and subscribe to Locked On Spartans while you’re at it, you’ll slowly hear me deteriorate through the episode. By the end I couldn’t even make words. What a wild night.

Instead of bombing a coke and some green tea to get my brain back on, I thought better of it; retreating to bed upon completion of the podcast. No matter how much caffeine I took in, anything I wrote last night would have been a disaster. That’s where this piece comes in.

Michigan State hiring Mel Tucker is significant for a number of reasons. Not only are they getting a coach that checks off a ton of the boxes, the program has announced that financially they’re ready to take the jump into the next tier.

Let’s start with Tucker.

Some fans might look at Mel Tucker’s single season as Colorado head coach and be unimpressed with the 5-7 record. I get the reaction, but it’s very important to build the context around that. Colorado has had a rough go of it in football lately. They’ve been an after thought in the PAC-12 since they joined the conference. It’s not a big money program and the tradition of winning their is getting further in the rearview with each passing year. That said, Tucker was certainly building something there. Just go find a tweet from anyone that covers Colorado football and look at the fan reaction to this news. They are furious and devastated.

Part of that is what Tucker had already brought to the table from his past. He’s a defensive mind whose earliest days in coaching were in rooms with Nick Saban and Mark Dantonio. He was a GA on Saban’s Michigan State staff, with Mark Dantonio as defensive backs coach. When Saban left for LSU, he brought Tucker with him to coach the DBs. Tucker then left LSU for Ohio State to be the defensive backs coach for Dantonio’s OSU defense. There he won a national title with the team in 2002. After a long NFL stint–which we will get back to–Tucker re-entered the college game as an associate head coach and defensive backs coach with Saban at Alabama where the Tide won a national championship. Alabama DC Kirby Smart took the head man job at Georgia and brought Tucker with him as defensive coordinator. There Tucker helped lead the team to the national championship game in 2017. From there he went to Colorado for a year and that brings you up to date.

Suffice to say, the man has been an integral part of some of the most successful college programs of the last two decades.

Tucker is also regarded as an ace recruiter. His 2020 Colorado class is ranked No. 35 in the country and No. 7 in the PAC-12. That’s the highest Colorado has been in the rankings since they joined the conference. He was also rated as one of the best recruiters in the country during his time at Georgia.

For all of the great things Mark Dantonio did at Michigan State, recruiting top-flight talent wasn’t one of them and it’s partially what made sustaining success difficult. It’ll be very interesting to see what Tucker, a guy who has had recruiting success all over the country, can do as head man at Michigan State.

That leads perfectly into the next bit of information we need to get into. The money. According to multiple reports Tucker is set to get a substantial raise, more than doubling the $2.7 million he was slated to make at Colorado. That’s definitely a positive sign, knowing the school is willing and able to back up the Brinks truck. But more important, and I think mist exciting about this whole thing, is what MSU is prepared to do around Tucker. According to reports, Michigan State is giving Tucker a $6.4 million salary pool to hire assistants. That is big time. Last year Ohio State led the Big Ten with a $7.3 million salary pool. After that was Michigan at $6 million.

Last year MSU’s assistants had the third-highest reported salary pool (reported because Penn State doesn’t have to report their salaries). However, that was a $4.9 million pool that was out of whack due to MSU’s coaching shuffle. Jim Bollman and Dave Warner did not lose pay despite getting demoted, so Michigan State essentially had three offensive coordinator salaries on their books. Mike Tressel was their highest-paid assistant and he ranked 16th in the Big Ten. Due to longevity, eight of MSU’s assistants made between $400,000 and $600,000, which isn’t how a typical salary pool would be structured.

Having the second-highest salary pool for assistants in the conference is big time. It’s what will allow Tucker to make aggressive runs at coaches like Kentucky’s Vince Marrow, who has been dubbed “The Big Ten Killer” for his ability to poach top prospects away from Michigan and Ohio State. In college football, having a robust and well-paid staff is key to sustaining success and Michigan State has announced they are ready to spend with the big boys.

In addition to that, Tucker secured guarantees to grow the strength and conditioning program at MSU. Anybody who follows the program knows injuries have been a major factor for Spartan football and that needs improving. A financial push to improve the strength program is hugely important. There is also word that Tucker pushed for guarantees in facility improvements, the current ammunition of choice in recruiting warfare. If this all pans out, it will take Michigan State from a competitive program that spends at a decent rate, to a big time player with coaching and facilities that rival anyone in the country.

As for Tucker himself, he seems like a coach players absolutely love. This video recent signee Darius Snow posted on Twitter does a pretty good job of showing that.

He’s a high-energy guy, but is also tough and demanding. Those last two things aren’t a surprise given the college football coaches he learned under.

However, it isn’t all sunshine and daisies with Tucker’s football career. Just ask any MSU fan that hails from Chicago and roots for the Bears. Tucker had a less-than-stellar run in the NFL. He was a defensive coordinator for three different teams over a seven-year span, with mixed-to-poor results. Most recently he was defensive coordinator for the Chicago Bears in 2013 and 2014. Those Bears teams finished 25th and 28th in defensive DVOA. Before that he was in the same position at Jacksonville and had smilier results. Although he did help the 2011 defense improve from dead last in DVOA during the 2010 season to fifth for 2011. He also served as defensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns in 2008.

Here’s my take on all of that. In the NFL, the talent you have really matters. It’s a different world than college because of the salary cap. Tucker certainly did not succeed in the NFL. There’s no arguing that. But, he also was a part of two bad organizations in Cleveland and Jacksonville. The Jaguars teams he coordinated were flatly terrible. There’s only so much coordinating one can do. The Chicago stint is tough, given the Bears history as a defensive juggernaut in the NFL. And while his Bears defenses were bad, they weren’t historically awful. They just didn’t live up to the really high standards Chicago has.

There’s no doubt about it, the NFL provided a host of negative years on his resume. But again, the NFL is a totally different animal. While it’s not quite apples to oranges, it is very different. The player are professionals. Everybody has a crapload of money. The general manager dictates the roster. The margins between good and bad are incredibly slim. I’m not going to totally ignore Tucker’s NFL career, but he has enough successes in college to make me believe that his NFL years are more of an exception than a rule.

We’ll have to wait and see how the Mel Tucker era plays out at Michigan State, but the school has made a statement with the hire. They are ready to do what it takes financially to compete with the biggest programs in the conference and the country. That is an exciting development. The coming weeks will be huge as Tucker begins to allocate that money while trying to take Michigan State from a competitive program that can on occasion punch above their weight, to one that is consistently battling for conference titles.

Back up the Brinks truck.

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Mel Tucker to Michigan State is better than Wisconsin hoped

Michigan State reportedly has a coach

The disclaimer which has to be mentioned at the start of every reaction to the hire of a new head coach is that outcomes aren’t guaranteed.

Pete Carroll was not viewed as a great hire by USC 20 years ago. That turned out pretty well for the Trojans.

Tom Herman was viewed as a great hire for Texas. The Longhorns have zero Big 12 championships and zero 11-win seasons since he arrived in Austin. Texas has lost at least four games in all three of Herman’s seasons on the job.

Ed Orgeron just led LSU to one of the greatest seasons in college football history. I buried LSU and athletic director Joe Alleva for making that hire a few years ago. LSU got the last laugh.

These things often work out very differently from what pundits and commentators (myself very much included) expect. We always need to say that and acknowledge it when new head coaches are hired.

That having been said: Any Big Ten school other than Michigan State should feel relatively good about Mel Tucker leaving the Colorado Buffaloes to go to East Lansing as Mark Dantonio’s successor.

Yes, Tucker could turn out to be great. He could hire a great offensive coordinator, which — for any defensive specialist, as Tucker is — acquires considerable importance for anyone in his position. Yet, if you’re a Wisconsin fan, or an Ohio State fan, or a Michigan fan, or a Penn State fan, or an Iowa fan, are you quaking in your boots that Mel Tucker is reportedly coming to Michigan State (with the deal not having been formally announced, it should be noted)?

I would highly doubt it.

Tucker was Kirby Smart’s lieutenant at Georgia and did great work in leading the Bulldogs’ defense to a national championship game appearance. He obviously has solid credentials. Yet, as a head coach, he is entirely unproven. He had only one year at Colorado, so his grade is not a “bad” one so much as it is incomplete. Yet, in that one year, he was hardly overwhelming. Colorado went 5-7.

Maybe the Buffaloes were ready to rise in 2020. We will never know. Yet, in the absence of being able to see Year 2 for Tucker in Boulder, we can’t definitively say, “Wow, Tucker has really made a mark as a head coach.” He isn’t a flawed candidate, but he is an unproven one.

Luke Fickell was a proven candidate based on his work in Cincinnati. Pat Narduzzi was less proven, but at least somewhat proven.

Michigan State probably could have done a lot worse than Mel Tucker… but it also could have done a lot better. Wisconsin fans, on balance, should be happy today.

Michigan State’s Mel Tucker reportedly reaches out to Kentucky lead recruiter

Mel Tucker is making a push for Kentucky assistant and ace recruiter Vince Marrow

Michigan State’s new head coach is wasting no time assembling a staff and not just because it’s the middle of February.

According to Matt Jones of Kentucky Sports Radio, Tucker has already reached out to Kentucky’s Associate Head Coach and Tight Ends coach Vince Marrow to join him at MSU.

Marrow is regarded as one of the best recruiters in the country and even had Jim Harbaugh and UofM trying to lure him away from Kentucky. They key here is that Tucker and Marrow are very close friends that both have strong ties to Ohio. Plus, Michigan State has reportedly given Tucker an assistant salary pool of more than $6 million, which would give Tucker the flexibility to offer Marrow a salary that Kentucky either couldn’t or wouldn’t match. Jones said on his morning radio show that MSU’s offer would include a substantial pay raise. It’s an interesting situation and–while seemly under the radar–could end up being very impactful.

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Michigan State Reportedly Hires Mel Tucker

Mel Tucker has been a head coach at any level for all of 17 games. Five of those came as interim head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2011 before spending last year at Colorado where he went 5-7.

The surprising news last week of Mark D’Antonio stepping down as Michigan State’s head coach led the Spartans on a wild goose chase to find their replacement.

A week later seemingly everyone Michigan State had approached responded with a “thanks, but no thanks”.

Former Spartans defensive coordinator under D’Antonio turned Pitt head coach Pat Narduzzi wasn’t interested.

San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh declined.

Luke Fickell was the show pony but cited “family reasons” for staying at Cincinnati instead of return to the Big Ten East.

I get why it’s so tough to fill – just look at your immediate competition in the area: Michigan, Notre Dame, Ohio State and Penn State are all right there competing for the same talent while those three have a clear step ahead. Then factor in the timing of the opening being about as bad as possible and the hesitation to take the job is even more understandable.

Finally overnight Tuesday into Wednesday it appears they’ve found their replacement, one that has had some success as a coordinator but has had an extremely limited sample as head coach.

Mel Tucker has been a head coach at any level for all of 17 games. Five of those came as interim head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2011 before spending last year at Colorado where he went 5-7.

Maybe they’re famous last words but some people are head coaches while others are excellent coordinators. Not that anything is wrong with that, but I’m hard pressed to get too excited for Tucker leading the charge if I’m a Michigan State supporter.

Tucker’s greatest accomplishments as a coordinator come from 2002 when he helped guide Ohio State to an unlikely national title and 2015 when he helped Alabama win it all in the middle of their dynasty as an assistant head coach/defensive backs coach.

I’m not knocking what he did at Alabama but am I to supposed to think it was the defensive backs coach that was so responsible for that year of success?

Tucker had a stop at Georgia where he ran the defense and coached the defensive backs from 2016-18.

Perhaps it’s because I saw his defenses up close in covering the disasters that were the 2013 and 2014 Chicago Bears, but I’m not sold on Tucker in charge.

Perhaps he steps in and ups recruiting at Michigan State, something they’ve regressed on a bit of late. But will he be able to improve and modernize an offense that largely looked out of 1991 the last five seasons?

I suppose Michigan State doesn’t have to panic and promote an assistant to save face and Tucker’s hiring does at least help that. But it’s hard to see this being a knock out hire for a mostly career coordinator who hasn’t coached in the Big Ten since 2004.

For a guy with such little head coaching experience, entering a division already home to Ohio State, Penn State and Michigan feels like he’s entering a Blackjack table that has a stacked deck against him.

Michigan State and Notre Dame are scheduled to briefly renew their rivalry with a home-and-home in 2026/2027. Time will tell if Tucker can essentially upset the house and be around for those.

Report: Mel Tucker has ‘agreed in principle’ to become new MSU Football head coach

According to Bruce Feldman of The Athletic, Colorado head coach Mel Tucker has agreed to become the new head coach at Michigan State.

Ladies and gentlemen, we have some breaking news from Bruce Feldman of The Athletic. According to Feldman, Colorado head coach Mel Tucker has ‘agreed in principle’ to become the new MSU Football head coach, replacing Mark Dantonio at Michigan State.

According to reports last weekend, Tucker had removed his name from consideration for the role, but according to Bruce Feldman, the MSU decision-makers made Tucker repeated offers until it became ‘impossible to ignore.’

Here is the initial report from Bruce Feldman of The Athletic:

Tucker, who played in college for Wisconsin, started his coaching career with Michigan State back in 1997 as a graduate assistant. He has since gone on to coach for numerous teams, including Ohio State, LSU, the Cleveland Browns, the Chicago Bears, Alabama, Georgia, and most recently he was the head coach of Colorado, where he went 5-7 in his first year as a head coach.

He had his first stint as a head coach as the interim coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars where he went 2-3 in 2011.

Details are still emerging about the deal, and it obviously hasn’t been officially been confirmed by the University as of 1:23am ET. More to come tomorrow no doubt.

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Michigan State reportedly loses assistant Terrence Samuel to UNLV

The former wide receivers coach is headed back to the offensive side of the ball at UNLV

In a time when Michigan State is attempting to add a coach, they just lost another one.

Former wide receivers coach Terrence Samuel, who was swapped to assistant defensive backs coach in the infamous coaching shuffle of 2019, has been hired away by UNLV to be their wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator. ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg first reported to the news.

Samuel has been with Michigan State for nine years, the first eight of which were spent coaching the receivers. During those eight seasons Samuel’s players earned All-Big Ten recognition eight times, including two Big Ten Receivers of the Year in Tony Lippett (2014) and Aaron Burbridge (2015). Five Spartan receivers have been drafted into the NFL since Samuel’s arrival in 2011 and that number could increase this year with Cody White and Darrell Stewart Jr. as potential selections.

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