Kirby Smart on process of hiring four new assistant coaches this offseason

Kirby smart made four new on-field assistant coach hirings this offseason. He discussed that process at his spring practice press conference.

There’s been no time for Kirby Smart to kick back and relax after his Georgia Bulldogs won the College Football Playoff national championship in January. 

In addition to constant recruiting, Smart was tasked with hiring four new on-field assistant coaches to fill openings these past two months.

Smart’s hires include:

WR coach Bryan McClendon — replaces Cortez Hankton, who left for LSU

OL coach Stacy Searels — replaces Matt Luke, who retired after the season

DB coach Fran Brown —replaces Jahmile Addae, who went to Miami

OLB coach Chidera Uzo-Diribe —replaces Dan Lanning, who went on to become head coach at Oregon

Both McClendon and Searels are very familiar hires, as both coached at UGA under Mark Richt and have pre-existing relationships with Smart.

Smart mentioned that he sought advice from some of his seasoned assistants, and named Glenn Schumann, Tray Scott and Dell McGee as coaches who he discussed the hirings with throughout the process.

“We went through an interview process at every position,” Smart said. “We interviewed multiple people at each and every position, think about what’s the best overall for our program, for our culture we built here, take input from the coaches on the staff been here a long time, Dell McGee, Glenn Schumann.  These guys have been part of our program. Tray Scott. They are the culture.  We want people that want to be here and want to be part of that.

It’s very demanding what’s required of college coaches.  You’ve seen guys move on to the NFL, seen guys step out, you’ve seen guys go onto other places, but it’s not going to ever change at the University of Georgia.  The standard of excellence that you want to have in recruiting and spending time with your players, and these four people meet that criteria.

They’re also people I trust and some I’ve known, some I have not known.  But the ones that we didn’t know we did a lot of research on and felt like they were best for the job.”

Here’s a look at the new hires in greater detail.

Former Georgia OL coach Matt Luke on why he resigned

Matt Luke explains why he stepped away from coaching…

Former Georgia offensive line coach Matt Luke resigned from the Bulldogs’ program in February after two seasons with UGA.

The former Ole Miss head coach said he did what he came to Athens to accomplish — win a national championship.

A little over a month later, Luke decided it was time to step away from coaching to spend more time with his family.

During an interview on Monday with Dawgs247’s Rusty Mansell on the “Junkyard Podcast” (full video below), Luke went into further detail on why he resigned from coaching at the age of 45.

“Coaching football’s all I’ve ever done my entire life. From the time I graduated, I’ve been a ball coach. There’s a lot of fear, nervousness about it because you’ve never done anything else, but I just didn’t want to have any regrets,” Luke said. “My oldest son’s 14 and my youngest one’s 10, and I just didn’t want to have any regrets about seeing them grow up and being there.

“I’ve been blessed and fortunate in my career. Being able to go out winning a national championship — I told Kirby I would try to help him win one; it just happened a little faster than I thought.”

Syndication: Online Athens

Smart took time to find Luke’s replacement, eventually settling on UNC’s Stacy Searels, who coached under Mark Richt at UGA from 2007-10. 

Luke explained that part of what made the decision to step away from coaching so difficult was how well he was treated by Smart and the Georgia program. He also touched on the moment he made his players aware of his decision.

“It was a very tough decision, and what made it even harder was the way people treated me here from the time I got here in Athens — the way people treated me, the way Kirby and Mary Beth treated my family. Everybody was first class from the time I got here, and it made it a very, very tough decision,” Luke said.

“Probably the hardest thing was walking in that offensive line room talking to those players. But I do think when I said, hey, I’m not going anywhere else. My family and I, we’re going to stay here in Athens. I’m doing this for my family. And I think they appreciated that and respected that.”

What new offensive line coach Searels will do at Georgia remains to be seen, but he will have some pretty big shoes to fill. Georgia’s SEC blocking rankings over the last two years under Luke were very impressive:

Run block:

No. 4 in grade

No. 3 in EPA per play

No. 3 in Positive EPA %

EPA = expected points added (efficiency measure)

Pass block:

No. 1 – pass block grade

No. 1 – pass block efficiency (accounts for No. of PB snaps)

No. 1 – lowest pressure rate allowed

No. 2 – lowest knockdown percentage (sacks & hits vs. No. of snaps)

** Via Brett Rollins (PFF)

Watch the full interview with Mansell below.

Report: Georgia expected to hire back UNC’s Stacy Searels as OL coach

Report: Georgia is expected to hire UNC’s Stacy Searels as its next OL coach. He coached under Richt at UGA from 2007-10.

Per a report from DawgsHQ, Georgia is expected to hire North Carolina’s Stacy Searels as its next offensive line coach.

Searels – who coached the Bulldogs’ offensive line from 2007-10, working under Mark Richt at the time – just completed his third season with the same position in Chapel Hill under Mack Brown.

Searels replaces Matt Luke, who stepped down earlier this month, as the next UGA offensive line coach.

Prior to working at UNC, Searels coached again under Mark Richt with the Miami Hurricanes, holding the position of offensive line coach from 2016-18.

His resume over the last 30 years is impressive:

1992-93: Auburn (GA)

1994-2000: App State (OL)

2000-02: Cincinnati (OL)

2003-06: LSU (OL)

2007-10: Georgia (OL)

2011-13: Texas (OL)

2014-15: Virginia Tech (OL)

2016-18: Miami (OL)

2019-21: UNC (OL)

Searels was a three year starter at Auburn in the 1980s and earned first-team All-America honors from both The Associated Press and Football News as a senior in 1987.