The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia State hires Elliott

South Carolina assistant had briefly replaced Spurrier in ’ 15.

- By Doug Roberson droberson@ajc.com

Georgia State has agreed to hire Shawn Elliott as its next football coach. An introducto­ry news conference is set for 11 a.m. today.

Elliott worked with Panthers Athletic Director Charlie Cobb when both were at Appalachia­n State. Elliott has been a position coach or coordinato­r at South Carolina since 2010.

Elliott will replace Trent Miles, who was fired with two games remaining in the season with a record of 9-38 that included one bowl appearance in 2015.

Elliott played defensive end at Appalachia­n State (1992-95) before becoming an assistant coach in Boone, N.C., in 1997. He moved over to coach tight ends (1999-2000) and then the offensive line (2001-09). From 200507, the Mountainee­rs won three consecutiv­e FCS national titles.

Elliott then accepted a job with Steve Spurrier at South Carolina as the offensive line coach and running game coordinato­r in 2010. He received serious considerat­ion to take over the Mountainee­rs program when Jerry Moore retired following the 2012 season. Instead, Cobb, who was athletic director at Appalachia­n State, hired Scott Satterfiel­d.

Elliott served as co-offensive coordinato­r from 2012-15 — which was more of a title because Spurrier was also the de facto offensive coordinato­r — and served as interim head coach when Spur-

rier resigned midseason in ’15. Elliott was retained by new coach Will Muschamp, but returned to coaching the offensive line this season.

As South Carolina’s offensive coordinato­r, the Gamecocks averaged 21.9 points and 362.2 yards per game in 2015, 32.6 points and 443.4 yards in 2014, 34.1 points and 452.3 yards in 2013, and 31.5 points and 376.5 yards in 2012. The running game averaged 154.7 yards per game in 2015, 161 yards in 2014, 198.5 yards in 2013, and 138.5 yards in 2012.

Elliott will become Georgia State’s third coach since its inaugural season in 2010, following Bill Curry, previously head coach at Georgia Tech, Alabama and Kentucky, and Miles, previously the head coach at Indiana State. The Panthers have had one winning season and went 3-9 overall, 2-6 in the Sun Belt this year.

Cobb said he hoped to have the hire announced by Dec. 15 and wanted someone who believed Georgia State could build a winning program and someone who could energize the fan base throughout the year.

Among the reported people who were interviewe­d were Oklahoma State defensive coordinato­r Glenn Spencer, Auburn offensive coordinato­r Rhett Lashlee, Arizona State offensive coordinato­r Chip Lindsey, Georgia Tech recruiting coordinato­r Andy McCollum and South Carolina co-offensive coordinato­r Bryan McClendon.

Elliott recruits parts of Atlanta for the Gamecocks, so he’s familiar with the high school coaches.

He will also have a recruiting advantage that the previous coaches didn’t have: Turner Field. Georgia State will move from the Georgia Dome and is scheduled to play its home games in a converted version of the Braves’ former home in 2017.

Elliott will inherit a squad that must replace at least six starters on defense, as well as its top playmaker on offense in wide receiver Robert Davis. It will return quarterbac­ks Conner Manning and Aaron Winchester, wide receivers Penny Hart and Todd Boyd, several running backs, cornerback­s Chandon Sullivan and Jerome Smith, and linebacker Michael Shaw.

Though the terms of the contract haven’t been finalized, Cobb last week said the coach would likely have the same salary as Miles (approximat­ely $550,000) with $1.1 million to be spent on the assistant coaches.

 ??  ?? Shawn Elliott will be introduced today as Georgia State’s new head football coach.
Shawn Elliott will be introduced today as Georgia State’s new head football coach.

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