Former Broncos TEs coach takes over as UNC-Charlotte’s interim coach

Tim Brewster, who coached Broncos tight ends from 2005-2006, has been named interim head coach of the Charlotte 49ers.

A former Denver Broncos assistant coach is getting a head coach job at the college level, at least on an interim basis.

After parting ways with Biff Poggi halfway through their season, the Charlotte 49ers have named Tim Brewster their interim head coach.

Brewster, 64, is a veteran coach who served as Denver’s tight ends coach from 2005-2006. The Broncos’ top tight ends in those two seasons Jeb Putzier, Stephen Alexander and Tony Scheffler.

Brewster left Denver in 2007 to become the head coach of the Minnesota Golden Gophers. After going 15-30 over four seasons, Brewster was let go in 2010. Since then, he has spent time with eight other colleges, each time as an assistant coach.

Before joining UNC-Charlotte as an associate head coach and tight ends coach earlier this year, Brewster served as Colorado’s tight ends coach under Deion Sanders in 2023. He also coached with Sanders at Jackson State in 2022. Before that, Brewster spent time at Florida, North Carolina, Texas A&M, Florida State and Mississippi State.

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Tim Brewster’s resignation marks first offseason change to Colorado’s coaching staff

Assistant coach Tim Brewster announced his resignation from Coach Prime’s staff

The first of what could be many offseason changes to Colorado’s staff became official on Sunday when Tim Brewster announced his resignation. Brewster began the season as Colorado’s tight ends coach but was moved to an analyst role when Pat Shurmur was promoted to co-offensive coordinator.

The crowning achievement of Brewster’s lone year in Boulder was his work with walk-on Michael Harrison, who was converted from a wide receiver to a tight end over the summer. As the only tight end Colorado used all season, Harrison finished with 284 receiving yards and five touchdowns.

Here’s how social media reacted to Brewster’s resignation:

Colorado coach says walk-on Michael Harrison could become one of the Pac-12’s best TEs

Tim Brewster said that #cubuffs walk-on Michael Harrison could become one of the Pac-12’s best tight ends

We’ve got another lesser-known player in the mix to start at TE for the Buffs next season.

Appearing on The Sports Forum Radio Show on July 6, Colorado TEs coach Tim Brewster said that walk-on Michael Harrison, who joined the Buffs in 2020 as a walk-on wide receiver, could become one of Pac-12’s best tight ends.

“6-3, 225 (pounds), 4.5-ish (40-yard dash), got crazy ball skills. He’s got an element of toughness,” Brewster said on The Sports Forum. “I really feel good about our ability to come together and make this guy one of the top TEs in the Pac-12 next season. I really believe that.”

Harrison redshirted during that COVID-shortened 2020 season but played in all 12 games on special teams in 2021, recording four special teams points. Last season, he hauled in two passes for 12 yards.

The San Francisco product also scored a touchdown in April’s spring game.

Brewster’s comments about Harrison change everything for me with how I look at Colorado’s TE room. Before this, it was Louis Passarello, Elijah Yelverton and Caleb Fauria in my top three, but you now have to consider Harrison a candidate to start in 2023.

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Tim Brewster seeing 2025 Texas TE Jeremiah Scoby as a strong fit for Colorado

2025 Texas TE Jeremiah Scoby gave an encouraging update on his relationship with Colorado

Colorado’s depth at tight end is somewhat concerning as the 2023 season approaches.

After Seydou Traore surprisingly hit the transfer portal in April, the Buffs were left with a group of tight ends without much college football experience. Meanwhile, TEs coach Tim Brewster mentioned earlier this week that he’s high on walk-on Michael Harrison, a converted wide receiver.

With that being the current state of the TEs room, the next two recruiting classes are of critical importance. Looking at the 2025s, Colorado has been locked in on Texas three-star Jeremiah Scoby for some time now, offering him in early December just three days after Deion Sanders was hired as head coach.

The 6-foot-2, 200-pound TE visited Boulder for the spring game and remains interested in the Buffs, per Adam Munsterteiger of BuffStampede.

“Coach Brewster has been telling me he really wants me to come to Colorado because he feels like I am what they need at the tight end position,” Brewster told BuffStampede. “He loves how I play, how versatile I am on the field.”

Scoby also told BuffStampede that he excels in perimeter and attachment blocking, two skills that indeed fit well into what Brewster is looking for at TE.

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

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JUCO product Dallen Bentley a target for Colorado’s thin TE room

Snow College TE Dallen Bentley received an offer from the #cubuffs

Following the departure of Seydou Traore, Colorado is in desperate need of tight ends. The Buffaloes currently possess just three on scholarship — Caleb Fauria, Erik Olsen and spring football standout Louis Passarello — without much game experience between them.

Tight ends coach Tim Brewster is now looking for reinforcements and on Wednesday, JUCO prospect Dallen Bentley announced he received an offer from Colorado. Bentley finished with 114 receiving yards and two touchdowns last season for Snow College (Utah) and has since picked up other Division I offers from Louisville, San Diego State and New Mexico.

In December, the Buffaloes earned a commitment from one of Bentley’s now-former Snow College teammates, offensive tackle Isaiah Jatta.

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

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Takeaways from Colorado football’s offensive coaches’ press conference

What were your takeaways from CU’s offensive coaches’ press conference?

On Thursday, the Colorado Buffaloes’ offensive coaching staff met with the media to discuss a wide range of topics, from the personnel at CU to all things Deion Sanders.

Offensive coordinator Sean Lewis was first up at the podium, followed by running backs coach Gary “Flea” Harrell, offensive line coach Bill O’Boyle, wide receivers coach Brett Bartolone and finally, tight ends coach Tim Brewster. In those five names alone, the Buffaloes have scored three former head coaches in what has become quite the staff for Coach Prime.

Expectations have been through the roof with what this staff has done through recruiting, and here is everything you need to know from the press conference:

Colorado football: Offensive coaches speak on new-look Buffs

There was a lot to like from what Colorado’s offensive assistants had to say

With spring football set to start in less than a month, Colorado’s five on-field offensive assistant coaches spoke to the media on Thursday to discuss their first few months in Boulder.

Offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Sean Lewis took the podium first, followed by wide receivers coach Brett Bartolone, running backs coach Gary “Flea” Harrell, O-line coach Bill O’Boyle and tight ends coach Tim Brewster. Each talked about their decision to join Deion Sanders in Boulder, coaching philosophies and the plan moving forward for their respective unit.

Together, Coach Prime’s offensive staff certainly didn’t lack energy.

Below are my favorite quotes from each assistant:

Flipped to Stanford, Gators lose out on this 2022 tight end recruit

Florida football lost its only tight end recruit in the class of 2022 to the Stanford Cardinals.

Thursday afternoon, CJ Hawkins announced via his Twitter that he will be stepping away from his commitment to the Florida Gators. Instead, he’ll be pursuing an opportunity with the Stanford Cardinals. A member of the class of 2022, Hawkins is a three-star recruit who had agreed to play in Gainesville early in the recruiting cycle but ultimately was persuaded to flip.

“After a long and personal search, I have decided to step away from my pledge to my childhood dream school University of Florida,” wrote Hawkins in his statement. “Making a decision has undoubtedly been extremely difficult given the university’s track record on the gridiron and in the classroom. With that said, I’d be ignoring my heart if I did not embark on this life altering opportunity.”

”At this time, and with great excitement, I would like to announce my intention of committing with Coach David shower and signing with the Stanford University Football program this  December.”

Hawkins is a totally blank slate in ways both good and bad. He has only one season of football under his belt and his sports background is rooted in basketball. That being the case, his 6-foot-7-inch frame is cut, but not bulky enough to play the tight end position at the college level yet.

He’s a functional athlete, but his blocking technique, routes, footwork, and hands all needed an overhaul to be an SEC-level player. On the flip side of that coin, he hasn’t had time to learn bad habits and he has the physical foundation to become a vicious blocker and a matchup nightmare.

The idea of building him from the ground up was intriguing enough to draw offers from a whole bevy of SEC, Pac-12, and Big Ten teams. However, the fundamentals come first and they’re nearly nonexistent in his game.

There was never much of a chance that Hawkins would find the field early in his college career, a fact he likely understood when he committed to UF. It’s a good bet he saw the opportunity to get playing time sooner with the Cardinals and decided it was best for him and his career.

We wish Hawkins all the best in his career with Stanford, but this is a disappointing loss despite the fact that he was a long term project.

Tight ends coach Tim Brewster has a great reputation but his inability to parlay the development and eventual record-setting draft position of Kyle Pitts into a powerful recruiting tool is both frustrating and befuddling. Hawkins’ departure leaves the Gators without a tight end in the class of ‘22.

The pickings are slim to add a replacement, as most SEC-level players in the class are spoken for and the top tight ends have either ignored Florida’s advances or outright stated disinterest in playing in Gainesville.

Follow us @GatorsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

Florida’s TE coach Tim Brewster asks his corps to be every-down players

Florida tight end coach Tim Brewster said he isn’t concerned about replacing Kyle Pitts and looks forward to the challenge.

The majority of questions Florida tight ends coach Tim Brewster was asked Monday was about how the Gators planned to replace Kyle Pitts. It’s not surprising because Pitts became the only tight end to ever become a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given annually to the nation’s top pass-catcher.

But Brewster said he isn’t concerned about it and looks forward to the challenge. Currently in his tight end room is redshirt senior Kemore Gamble, junior Keon Zipperer, redshirt freshman Jonathan Odom, freshman Nick Elksnis and Gage Wilcox. None of them present the athleticism and matchup nightmare that Pitts did.

However, Brewster won’t play any of them unless they commit to becoming a three-down player. Some other programs opt to send in their best pass-catching player or their strongest run-blocker based on the play call. But it makes it easier for the defense to predict a play call if they do their scouting homework.

“You’re not going to send a guy in to catch a pass, another guy goes in to block,” Brewster said, according to Swamp247. “We’re looking to build complete tight ends. So whoever plays for us is going to be really good. I’ve got tremendous confidence in my guys. I truly love my guys. I love my room, and I love the grind, guys.”

He said Pitts’ ability to become a better run blocker allowed him to become the highest-drafted tight end in NFL history.

Gamble has the most experience in the Florida tight end room. He has nabbed 17 catches for 218 yards and three touchdowns. Zipperer adds 14 catches for 176 yards and three touchdowns. Gamble believes he’s ready to be a three- or four-down player.

Regardless of who is out there, Brewster said they’re going to make sure they put them out there in a position that they can succeed in.

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