Raiders to hire former NFL RB Carnell ‘Cadillac’ Williams to be running backs coach

Former NFL RB Cadillac Williams to be Raiders running back coach

A few weeks ago it was former NFL RB DeShaun Foster who was set to take the running backs coach job in Las Vegas. But Foster got the opportunity to be head coach at UCLA and took it. So, now it’s another former NFL running back who is getting the Raiders RB coach job. Former Buccaneers first round pick Carnell ‘Cadillac’ Williams.

Jon Gruden made the Auburn product the fifth overall pick by the Buccaneers in the 2005 draft. He played seven NFL seasons, six in Tampa and the final season with the Rams.

The past five years Williams has been the running backs coach at his alma mater.

In 2022, he was named the interim head coach after the firing of Bryan Harsin, Williams went 2-2 over the final four games of that season and was retained as associate head coach and running backs coach by Hugh Freeze when he was brought on as head coach last season. Williams resigned after the season.

Raiders to hire former Panthers RB Deshaun Foster as running backs coach

Raiders to hire former Panthers RB Deshaun Foster as running backs coach

The offensive staff in Las Vegas has begun filling out. Just a day after the news broke that they had landed on Kliff Kingsbury as their offensive coordinator, are reports his running back coach will be Deshaun Foster.

Foster was a former second round pick by the Panthers out of UCLA. He spent six seasons in the NFL, the first five in Carolina, with his final season in San Francisco.

Once his playing career was over, he returned to this alma mater as an assistant coach. He left for one season to coach running backs under Kingsbury before returning to UCLA where has been the team’s RB coach the past seven seasons.

Kingsbury clearly thought highly enough of Foster to pluck him out of the college ranks to join him again. And being that Antonio Pierce — a former NFL player himself — has shown a penchant for former players as position coaches, he is clearly onboard with the move too.

Broncos RBs coach Lou Ayeni coached Kareem Hunt and David Montgomery in college

New #Broncos RBs coach Lou Ayeni coached Kareem Hunt and David Montgomery in college. Both RBs are set to become free agents on March 15.

The Denver Broncos are hiring Lou Ayeni as their new running backs coach, according to a report from ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.

Ayeni, 42, played running back, wide receiver and defensive back at Northwestern, winning a Big Ten Championship in 2000. After college, he spent time with the Colts (2004-2005) and St. Louis Rams (2005-2006) before returning to his alma mater to begin his coaching career as a graduate assistant.

Ayeni spent two years as a coach at Northwestern before becoming the running backs coach at Toledo in 2010. He was promoted to associate head coach/running game coordinator one year later. While at Toledo, Ayeni coached star running backs Eric Page and Kareem Hunt, the latter of whom is set to become a free agent on March 15.

After four years at Toledo, Ayeni joined Iowa State as a running backs coach in 2014. He was later promoted to associate head coach/running game coordinator in 2016. While with the Cyclones, Ayeni coached All-American running back David Montgomery, who is also scheduled to become a free agent this month.

Ayeni spent four years at Iowa State before returning to Northwestern as a running backs coach and recruiting coordinator in 2018. In his second stint with the Wildcats, Ayeni coached freshman All-American Isaiah Bowser, who later transferred to UCF, where he scored 16 touchdowns last fall.

Elsewhere on the coaching front, the Broncos are also expected to hire Austin King, presumably as an assistant offensive line coach. King was an assistant OL coach with the Bears last year and a tight ends coach with the Raiders in 2021.

Most of Denver’s coaching staff positions have been filled. We are tracking all of the Broncos’ coaching staff changes on this page.

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C.J. Anderson would like to join Broncos’ coaching staff

C.J. Anderson would like to join the Broncos’ coaching staff.

Former Denver Broncos running back C.J. Anderson would love an opportunity with coach Sean Payton.

Anderson played five years with the Broncos, rushing for 3,051 yards and 20 rushing touchdowns in 58 games. He was a key member of the team’s Super Bowl 50 run in 2015, and he had a 1,000-yard season in 2017.

Anderson, who was recently let go as a running backs coach at Rice University, is now interested in returning to Denver as a coach. Before coaching at Rice, Anderson was a volunteer assistant at his alma mater, California in 2020, and was the head coach of Monte Vista High School in 2021.

While the Broncos have filled many of their coaching positions, running backs coach is a slot that is yet to be filled. Former running backs coach Tyrone Wheatley left the team to become the head coach of Wayne State University earlier this offseason.

Anderson was a fan favorite in Denver, and fans would undoubtedly like to see him back on the team in some type of coaching role.

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Rice parts ways with running backs coach C.J. Anderson

C.J. Anderson, who won Super Bowl 50 with the Broncos, coached RBs at Rice in 2022. He’s now a free agent coach.

C.J. Anderson’s time as a coach at Rice University has come to an end.

Rice parted ways with several members of its football staff this week, including running backs coach C.J. Anderson, according to a report from KPRC-TV’s Aaron Wilson.

Cameron Montgomery led the Owls with 561 rushing yards last season. Juma Otoviano ranked second with 403 yards and two total touchdowns.

Anderson, who won Super Bowl 50 with the Denver Broncos in 2015, started his coaching career as a volunteer assistant at California, his alma mater, in 2020. Anderson then spent a season as the head coach at Monte Vista High School in 2021 before joining Rice ahead of the 2022 season.

Anderson is now a coaching free agent and the Broncos have a running backs coach opening after Tyrone Wheatley left the team to become the head coach of Wayne State University. Becoming a RBs coach at the NFL level just four years after getting into coaching would be a big jump, so Anderson would presumably be more likely to join as an assistant if Denver goes that route.

Anderson, 32, played in three Super Bowls during his seven-year career in the NFL from 2013-2019. He totaled 4,397 yards from scrimmage and scored 27 touchdowns while playing for the Broncos, Carolina Panthers, Los Angeles Rams and Detroit Lions.

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Broncos RBs coach Tyrone Wheatley leaves team to coach college program

Broncos RBs coach Tyrone Wheatley has left the team to become the head coach of Wayne State University.

The Denver Broncos lost running back Tyrone Wheatley to college football on Thursday.

Wheatley, 51, has left the Broncos to become the head coach of Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. This will mark his second stint as a head coach at the college level after previously holding that title at Morgan State from 2019-2021.

An experienced running backs coach who spent ten years playing the position with the New York Giants and Oakland Raiders, Wheatley joined the Broncos last year after the team hired Nathaniel Hackett.

Hackett was fired last December and Denver is now seeking a new head coach. Hackett’s holdover coaches are not guaranteed to be retained by the team’s next coach, and several are seeking opportunities elsewhere.

Hackett himself was hired as an offensive coordinator by the New York Jets. Broncos offensive coordinator Justin Outten has interviewed with three teams, quarterbacks coach Klint Kubiak interviewed with two teams and defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero has drawn interest from five teams.

Meanwhile, Denver has eight known candidates for its head coach opening. DeMeco Ryans is believed to be the favorite to replace Hackett.

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Beloved Cowboys RB coach Gary Brown passes away, age 52

The popular assistant produced three rushing champs in seven seasons with the Cowboys; he succumbed to cancer on Sunday. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Gary Brown, who coached the Cowboys running backs for seven seasons, passed away Sunday at the age of 52.

As reported by Clarence Hill Jr. of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Brown had been battling cancer.

“Gary Brown had a big heart partnered with a big smile and a big personality,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said as part of a statement Sunday night. “His energy and spirit were infectious. He lit up every room he walked into and touched the lives of those who knew him, loved him.”

Brown played running back in the 1990s, spending time with the Oilers, Chargers, and Giants over eight seasons. After returning to both the high school and college ranks to begin a coaching carer, he worked his back to the pros on Eric Mangini’s staff in Cleveland in 2009.

The Cowboys hired Brown in 2013; he was in Dallas through the 2019 season. He most recently served as running backs coach for Wisconsin, hired in Madison in March 2021. He did not travel with the Badgers to their bowl game this past December due to cancer treatments.

Over Brown’s seven seasons as running backs coach in Dallas, Cowboys ball carriers won three NFL rushing crowns.

DeMarco Murray notched back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons in 2013 and 2014, led the league in rushing yards in 2014, and was named the NFL Offensive Player of the Year Award in 2014. He earned three Pro Bowl nods for his play.

Ezekiel Elliott won the rushing title in two of his first three seasons and went to three Pro Bowls, all under Brown’s tutelage.

Brown had an especially tight bond with his backs, something TV viewers got to see during the 2018 Amazon series All or Nothing: A Season with the Dallas Cowboys.

Brown had been diagnosed twice with cancer, the first time while he was in Cleveland. He underwent chemotherapy and surgery and was given a clean bill of health.

He received his second diagnosis just after the Cowboys’ coaching change in early 2020. A malignant tumor was found near Brown’s pancreas.

After taking a year off, Brown joined the Wisconsin staff for the ’21 season, even as he went through immunotherapy.

“When you’re sitting by yourself and you’re alone and you’re thinking about what’s next,” he said per the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, “you really think about the things that could be taken away. Not only football but your family and your friends.

“It’s going to do one of two things to you. It’s going to eat you up and you’re going to fold up and go into a corner and die, or you’re going to fight. My parents raised me to fight.”

Brown is survived by a wife, two daughters, and a son.

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After adding Tyrone Wheatley, Broncos expected to hire at least 3 more coaches

The Broncos officially announced Tyrone Wheatley as their new RBs coach on Wednesday. Denver has at least three more hires on the way.

The Denver Broncos have hired Tyrone Wheatley as their new running backs coach, the team announced Wednesday.

Wheatley, 50, had a 10-year career as a running back in the NFL before going on to coach at the college and pro level. He most recently served as the head coach at Morgan State from 2019-2021.

Wheatley becomes the 14th outside hire head coach Nathaniel Hackett has made so far this offseason. At least three more additions are on the way, all from the same team.

The Broncos are expected to hire Los Angeles Rams secondary coach/pass game coordinator Ejiro Evero, Rams assistant special teams coach Dwayne Stukes and L.A.’s assistant defensive line coach, Marcus Dixon.

Evero will be Denver’s defensive coordinator, Stukes will be the special teams coordinator and Dixon will become the defensive line coach, with all three coaches getting promotions after winning Super Bowl LVI.

The Rams are holding their Super Bowl parade in Los Angeles today. The Broncos could make the three hires official as soon as later today, but Thursday might be the most likely day for an announcement.

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‘Isn’t it Ironic:’ Lincoln Riley, USC feel the sting of betrayal in Running Back Coach’s ‘Choice’

USC and Lincoln Riley stung by running backs coach Tashard Choice who makes quick exit for the Texas Longhorns.

“What goes around comes around.” It’s a saying many of us have heard all of our lives. “You reap what you sow.” That’s another one. The primary tenant, our choices have consequences and sometimes negative ones.

That’s what Lincoln Riley and the USC Trojans are facing as they watch their recently hired running back’s coach, Tashard Choice, leave his post with USC to join Steve Sarkisian’s staff at the University of Texas. Choice, who played for the Dallas Cowboys, heads back to Texas, where he’s highly respected, having coached with the Cowboys before joining the college ranks at the University of North Texas.

Before his incredibly brief stint with USC, he was with his alma mater, Georgia Tech.

Everyone’s been feeling great over in Los Angeles after the Trojans poached Riley, several assistants, and players in the 2022 and 2023 recruiting classes from Oklahoma. A move that was reportedly in the works for months came to fruition while the sting of Oklahoma’s loss to in-state rival Oklahoma State was still fresh. Less than 24 hours after the upset loss, Riley got off a plane, still wearing his Oklahoma Sooners Jordan’s, and took the helm as the next head coach at USC.

What many in Los Angeles are feeling after Choice decided to go to the Texas Longhorns is what many who follow the Oklahoma Sooners felt about Riley’s decision.

Betrayed.

My colleague over at the Trojans Wire argues that this is different from what many college coaches do when they leave one job for another. But the feeling that Riley, and what many in Trojans’ circles are feeling, is not dissimilar to what Oklahoma leadership, players, coaches, and fans felt upon Riley’s departure.

Now a stung Lincoln Riley has to not only find a new running back coach, but wonder if anyone else will stab him in the back. – Matt Zemek, Trojans Wire

Is Tashard Choice’s decision to leave the Trojans after reportedly joining the staff unprofessional? On the surface, it would appear so. Sure, he had just joined the staff, but it’s no different from how coaches move around in college football circles. Here one day, gone tomorrow.

Every coach in college football is looking for the next great opportunity. That’s what Lincoln Riley cited as his reason for leaving the security and established success at the University of Oklahoma. Opportunity. Choice did the same.

And while Riley feels the sting of betrayal of a recently hired coach bailing for what he believed to be a better opportunity, he can look back and reflect on how his decision went down and wonder if he’s simply reaping what he sowed.

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

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