Started By
Message

re: Alabama Hires Patriots' TE Brian Daboll as Offensive Coordinator

Posted on 2/16/17 at 8:51 am to
Posted by Bamadoc
Mississippi
Member since Jan 2014
3985 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 8:51 am to
I like Pannunzio at TE ST, he has a wealth of experience and he can continue our pipeline in south Florida.

Not concerned about his NCAA dust up. It has been resolved, and the best compliance staff in the country says he is clean, then that's good enough for me.

Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 9:11 am to
Report: Brian Daboll Expected to be Named OC at Alabama | RollBamaRoll.com
quote:

It appears that Nick Saban has settled on New England’s TE coach.

According to a source, New England Patriots TE coach Brian Daboll will be named the next offensive coordinator for Alabama:

Aaron Suttles @AaronSuttles
@tiderinsider has it that Brian Daboll will be Alabama's next offensive coordinator.
10:48 PM - 15 Feb 2017

NESN out of Boston floated the possibility yesterday as well.

You can bet that Saban sought the counsel of mentor Bill Belichick if Daboll is indeed the man. Indications are that Daboll was the next man up in New England if current OC Josh McDaniels had left for a promotion as expected, but that never materialized. There will certainly be some concern among Alabama faithful that Daboll would look to return to the Pats if the opportunity should arise.

Style-wise, Daboll has generally featured a run-heavy attack in his three short stints as a NFL coordinator. Kansas City RB Jamaal Charles had his heaviest workload in 2012, Daboll’s only season with the Chiefs, and produced 1500 yards rushing. Unfortunately, the entire coaching staff was fired after a dismal 2-14 season. In fact, the head coach was fired after Daboll’s first season calling the plays at all three of his stops.

Of course, it is somewhat unfair to paint Daboll as a failure, or even as a guy who just wants to run the ball, considering the quarterback talent he had at his disposal. In Cleveland, he was given Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn. In Miami and Kansas City he had the immortal Matts Moore and Cassel, respectively. Tough to throw the ball without a serviceable passer.

As always, “trust Saban” will be the mantra here, and if Belichick was indeed ready to give the keys of his offense to Daboll there should be room for optimism.
This post was edited on 2/16/17 at 9:12 am
Posted by spearman
Member since Jan 2011
445 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 9:22 am to
Yeah, was that the year that a receiver didn't catch a touchdown?
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 9:26 am to
Report: Alabama to hire former staffer as TE/ST coach | BamaOnline.com
quote:

Former Alabama support staff member Joe Pannunzio is reportedly rejoining the Crimson Tide program.

Pannunzio will coach tight ends and specials teams at Alabama this fall, according to a report from AL.com's Matt Zenitz. BamaOnLine senior analyst Travis Reier earlier reported Pannunzio had interviewed for the position he is now reportedly accepting.

Pannunzio is leaving his post as Director of Personnel Operations with the Philadelphia Eagles. He left for Philadelphia after working at Alabama as Director of Football Operations from 2011-14. As a college assistant, Pannunzio has coached tight ends and special teams at several stops, including TCU, Minnesota, Ole Miss, Auburn and Miami. He also served as the head coach Murray State (2000-05).

Pannunzio worked with UA Associate Athletics Director for Football Ed Marynowitz both at Alabama and in Philadelphia.

Alabama was in need of a tight ends coach after Mario Cristobal accepted the co-offensive coordinator position at Oregon after the national title game. Running backs coach Burton Burns coached the Crimson Tide's special teams units a season ago.
Posted by Triple Daves
ITP
Member since Sep 2016
5740 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 9:27 am to
That was the last couple years wit Alex Smith and the 3 yard pass offense that they brought in once Daboll left.

The KC offense got better the year after Daboll, but that was mainly due to bringing in Alex Smith instead of Brady Quinn/Matt Cassell.
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 9:58 am to
Who's going to coach WRs?

Perhaps Locksley temporarily, and Saban hires Eric Kiesau in an analyst position to get in sync with Daboll and Locksley and then Kiesau takes over coaching WRs after 10th coach is approved.

Or perhaps Locksley coaches WRs longer term, and Saban uses the 10th coach spot for a dedicated QB "whisperer" -- maybe Marques Tuiasosopo, or someone else. Maybe Kiseau would be a pretty good WR & QB coach.

I'm thinking Saban may want someone in addition to Locksley, such as Kiseau, as a potential successor to Daboll as OC.
This post was edited on 2/16/17 at 12:59 pm
Posted by CapstoneGrad06
Little Rock
Member since Nov 2008
72183 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:31 am to
quote:

Eric Kiesau in an analyst position to get in sync with Daboll and Locksley and then Kiesau takes over coaching WRs after 10th coach is approved.


Why would he leave a near six figure assistant job at Boise, to be an analyst for less than 30K a year?
Posted by alabamabuckeye
Member since Jun 2010
22206 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:32 am to
quote:

Aaron Suttles @AaronSuttles

Busy day for news: Also heard that Dan Werner could be added to Alabama staff as an offensive analyst. Werner has experience developing QBs.


Thoughts?
Posted by CrimsonFlounder
Gulf Coast
Member since Feb 2011
1057 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:38 am to
Where is Werner from and what QBs has he developed?
NVM, should have googled first. Well Bo and Swag beat Bama and had some big numbers, but were mistake prone.
This post was edited on 2/16/17 at 10:40 am
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:39 am to
quote:

Why would he leave a near six figure assistant job at Boise, to be an analyst for less than 30K a year?

I was pretty clear that analyst would be only until the 10th coach is approved. A six figure position coach at Bama with an opportunity to be "groomed" for next Bama OC seems to trump WR coach at BSU.
Posted by Cobrasize
Birmingham
Member since Jun 2013
49682 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:43 am to
quote:

Eric Kiesau in an analyst position

I'm beginning to think you have a strange fixation with this guy.
Posted by OldPete
Georgia
Member since Oct 2013
2804 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:43 am to
quote:

Where is Werner from and what QBs has he developed?
NVM, should have googled first. Well Bo and Swag beat Bama and had some big numbers, but were mistake prone.

Also at Miami, he worked with Torretta, Walsh, Erickson, Dorsey, and Berlin, to name a few...
Posted by CapstoneGrad06
Little Rock
Member since Nov 2008
72183 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:44 am to
quote:

I was pretty clear that analyst would be only until the 10th coach is approved. A six figure position coach at Bama with an opportunity to be "groomed" for next Bama OC seems to trump WR coach at BSU.


But it also a gamble. The NCAA was supposed to approve the tenth assistant in May. Now it's pushed until possibly 2018. Who knows when it will actually be passed?

And I've been an advocate from the beginning of getting Kiseau back. But I doubt he's giving up a sure thing in Boise to possibly get a full time gig a year from now at Alabama. He already has the experience with Nick Saban on his resume. He seems to have rebounded from the Fresno State fiasco.
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:46 am to
Dan Werner Bio (Ole Miss)
quote:

Dan Werner, a highly successful veteran offensive mind, is in his fifth season as head coach Hugh Freeze’s co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach. 

This marks Werner’s second term at Ole Miss, having worked alongside Freeze on the Rebels’ offensive staff in 2006 and 2007. 

With Werner helping direct the offense in 2015, Ole Miss set program records for scoring (531), touchdowns (68), total offense (6,731), passing yards (4,351), passing touchdowns (35), 50+ point games (4) and games with more than 600 yards of offense (3). The Rebels led the SEC and were top 10 nationally in scoring (40.8), total offense (517.8 ypg) and passing (334.7 ypg).

Werner, a 2015 Broyles Award nominee for the nation’s top assistant, coached first-year signal caller Chad Kelly to a record-breaking season. The Manning Award finalist led the SEC in passing yards (4,042), points responsible for (246) and total offense (4,542), setting school records and ranking third all-time in league history with his passing and total offense yardage numbers. Kelly was repsonsible for a school-record 41 touchdowns and tied Eli Manning’s best Ole Miss mark of 31 scoring passes.

The quarterback developement did not start with Kelly. Under Werner’s tutelage, Bo Wallace broke Ole Miss school records for career total offensive yards (10,478), 300-yard passing games (11), completion percentage (63.0) and pass efficiency (140.8) and went 24-15 as the Rebels’ starting quarterback. In just three years as a starter, Wallace ranked in the SEC’s top 10 all-time in total offense and passing yards.

Wallace was named a semifinalist for the Maxwell Award and Davey O’Brien Award after passing for 22 touchdowns and putting up more gaudy stats in 2014. He finished fourth in the SEC in passing (245.7 ypg) and total offense (261.0). He also ranked fifth in completion percentage (60.1), passing touchdowns (22) and pass efficiency (142.2).

Wallace also excelled in 2013 under the leadership and guidance of Werner, who was a nominee for the Broyles Award that year too. Wallace finished third in the SEC and 26th nationally with 257.4 passing yards per game, and was also third in the SEC and 26th nationally in total offense with 284.7 yards per game as an individual.

As a unit, the Ole Miss offense again scored more than 30 points per game. Ole Miss broke then-school records for total offense (473.3 ypg), pass completions (310) and pass attempts (490). The Rebels ranked third in the SEC in passing offense (283.3 ypg) and fifth in total offense, while finishing top 25 in the NCAA in both categories.

In 2012, Werner helped turn around a Rebel offense that ranked at or near the bottom of the SEC in every statistical category in 2011 to rank top five in the SEC and top 50 in the nation in scoring, total offense and passing.

Wallace shined in his first year under Werner’s tutelage. The 2012 Conerly Trophy winner ranked fifth in the SEC and 45th in the NCAA in total offense (260.3 ypg), fourth in the SEC in points responsible for (14.3/game) and fifth in passing (230.3 ypg).

In his first stint in Oxford, Werner’s offense fueled BenJarvus Green-Ellis to a record-breaking two-year run. The future NFL running back became only the second player in school history to reach the 1,000-yard single-season mark twice, and he ended his tenure No. 5 on the Rebels’ career rushing list.

As quarterbacks coach, Werner developed Seth Adams from a walk-on to the SEC’s seventh-ranked passer with 1,979 yards in 2007. That year also saw future NFL receivers Mike Wallace and Shay Hodge each haul in six TD passes, while Dexter McCluster and Marshay Green were key offensive weapons.

Werner boasts three decades of coaching experience, including a total of eight years in two terms at the University of Miami when he tutored outstanding quarterbacks and directed some of the best offenses in college football.

Werner helped Miami to eight bowls, four national championship games and three national titles during his combined tenure. He also played an integral part in the development of several of the Hurricanes’ greatest QBs, including 2001 Maxwell Award winner Ken Dorsey, 1992 Heisman Trophy winner Gino Torretta as well as Heisman candidates Steve Walsh and Craig Erickson.

The Miami passing game flourished under Werner’s guidance. In 2001 and 2002, Dorsey posted totals impressive enough to place high in voting for the Heisman Trophy both years. In 2004, he tutored Brock Berlin to a resurgence, as Berlin moved into the Miami record book with single-season rankings of seventh in touchdown passes, ninth in passing yards, and 10th in total offense.

Over his last five seasons (2001-05) at Miami, Hurricane quarterbacks threw for more than 14,500 yards and 114 touchdowns under Werner, giving balance to an offensive philosophy predicated on equality between the run and the pass. The 2005 Canes finished 9-3 and ranked third in the Atlantic Coast Conference in scoring offense (27.1) and pass efficiency (133.6).

Werner’s second stint in Coral Gables was preceded by a spectacular 2000 season as offensive coordinator at Murray State. He built the Racers offense into one of the most potent on the FCS level, as the team ranked 11th nationally in total offense (452 yards per game) and 13th nationally in passing yardage (276 yards per game).

Prior to his lone season at Murray State, Werner was an offensive consultant to Auburn Head Coach Tommy Tuberville during the 1999 season. Before the job at Auburn, Werner was an assistant coach at James Madison University for four seasons from 1995-98. He began his tenure at JMU as assistant head coach/quarterback coach/passing game coordinator in 1995. In 1997 he was promoted to offensive coordinator/assistant head coach. From 1991-94, Werner coached at Louisiana Tech, where he was an assistant coach in charge of running backs and inside receivers. In 1993, he was promoted to offensive coordinator/quarterback coach.

Werner joined the coaching staff at UNLV in the spring of 1990. At UNLV, he was an assistant coach in charge of quarterbacks. In the fall of 1990, Werner left the college game for one season to serve as offensive line coach at Miami’s Southridge High School.

As a graduate assistant at Miami during the 1987-88 seasons, Werner worked with UM quarterbacks Steve Walsh, Craig Erickson and Gino Torretta during an era in which the Hurricanes went 23-1 and won the 1987 national championship. In 1989, he was a volunteer assistant coach working with the wide receivers on another Miami national championship team.

Werner began his college coaching career in 1986 as an assistant at Cornell University. Prior to that, Werner coached five seasons on the high school level.

Werner graduated from Western Michigan University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in education in 1983. He attended Parkway Central High School.
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:51 am to
Ole Miss fires off. coordinator Dan Werner, Barney Farrar | Clarion-Ledger Dec 8, 2016
quote:

Ole Miss’ shopping list grew from one coordinator to two Thursday morning.

In what was unexpected news, the school announced co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Dan Werner, who held those titles the previous five seasons, would not return next season.

“His leadership and experience were invaluable in the development of our quarterbacks," coach Hugh Freeze said in a statement. "These are always very difficult decisions, but at this time, I believe it is best for our program to have a fresh approach.”

The school also announced Barney Farrar, Ole Miss’ assistant athletic director for high school and junior college relations, would not have his contract renewed and was no longer a member of the staff...
This post was edited on 2/16/17 at 10:52 am
Posted by TideSaint
Hill Country
Member since Sep 2008
75855 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:53 am to
Werner didn't recruit because of sick child so an analyst position would make sense for him.
Posted by phil4bama
Emerald Coast of PCB
Member since Jul 2011
11455 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:57 am to
But as an analyst he can't be an on the field QB coach canhe?
Posted by Triple Daves
ITP
Member since Sep 2016
5740 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 10:57 am to
But what exactly can Werner do in an analyst role? From all the pre-title game media, it sounded like Hurts basically had no contact with Sark during the season. How can a coach develop a QB without interacting with them?
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 11:00 am to
quote:


I'm beginning to think you have a strange fixation with this guy. 

Nah. Just thinking he might be a likely hire since Saban does fairly often hire guys who have worked for him before. But it appears Saban has other plans (Werner) anyway.
This post was edited on 2/16/17 at 11:09 am
Posted by LSU12223
Member since Sep 2016
1482 posts
Posted on 2/16/17 at 11:00 am to
legally no, but im sure the analysts do a little coaching with closed practices
first pageprev pagePage 25 of 31Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter