The Columbus Dispatch

OSU handles special teams with a committee of coaches

- Joey Kaufman

A series of gaffes by Ohio State's special teams last season culminated in January with the dismissal of the assistant tasked with coordinati­ng them.

But instead of replacing Parker Fleming with another dedicated special teams coach, Ryan Day settled on another idea.

He opted to largely divide the responsibi­lities among a group of assistant coaches.

The arrangemen­t has resulted in safeties coach Matt Guerrieri and linebacker­s coach James Laurinaiti­s leading punt and kickoff and co-offensive coordinato­r and wide receivers coach Brian Hartline and tight ends coach Keenan Bailey working on returns as the Buckeyes go through their second week of spring practice.

The structure of the staff is new to Day, who had designated one of his 10 on-field assistants to oversee the special teams units in each of his first five seasons at the helm of the program.

Before Fleming spent three seasons as the special teams coordinato­r, it was Matt Barnes who held the title in addition to safeties coach.

But eschewing one effectivel­y allowed Day to promote Laurinaiti­s from his role as a graduate assistant and balance the number of assistants between the offensive and defensive sides of the ball.

It also came at the suggestion of Jim Tressel, the former Buckeyes coach who placed an emphasis on special teams during his decade-long tenure, at times referring to the punt as the most important play in the sport.

While Tressel tapped Luke Fickell as his special teams coach for 2002 and 2003, he did not have anyone holding that title for the following seasons, splitting up the duties among his position coaches.

After speaking with Tressel earlier in the offseason, Day chose to follow that blueprint, anticipati­ng a level of enthusiasm among the roster.

“As a player, you want to really impress your position coach, you want to impress your coordinato­r, you want to press the head coach,” Day said. “Sometimes the special teams coordinato­r can be a little bit lower down the line, but when your position coach is

up there, and he's coaching special teams, and being the head coach and being a very much a part of it with them, it provided a lot of buy in from the players. It really made sense to me.

“We're doing it a little bit different, but that that resonated with me, and I thought that was the right thing to do this year.”

In turning to a by-committee setup, Day has seen his involvemen­t with special teams increase and also leaned on Rob Keys, a quality control coach who has worked with the special teams for the past two seasons.

Keys had been the coach of Findlay, a Division II program, for 11 seasons, before joining the Buckeyes in the off-field role.

A member of the support staff, Keys is unable to coach players during practice, but Day pointed out that he will

have a valuable role behind the scenes.

“He's allowed to coach the coaches,” Day said, “and he can really do a lot of the legwork in terms of off the field stuff, breaking down the film, helping to get things organized as we get into the meetings.”

The reliance on a member of the support staff to guide special teams is not uncommon at the highest level of college football.

When Georgia won consecutiv­e national championsh­ips in 2021 and 2022, it did so with Scott Cochran, the special teams coordinato­r, working in an offfield capacity.

Kirk Benedict, a special teams analyst who was promoted last month to replace Cochran as the coordinato­r, is continuing as a member of the support staff rather than as an on-field assistant.

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Ohio State coach Ryan Day has seen his involvemen­t with special teams increase this spring.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Ohio State coach Ryan Day has seen his involvemen­t with special teams increase this spring.

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