Ryan Day began a new chapter in his coaching career last season.
Settling into more of a CEO-style role at the helm of Ohio State, he delegated offensive play-calling responsibilities.
It was a departure from his previous five seasons as the Buckeyes’ coach, but his staff included Chip Kelly as offensive coordinator.
Kelly is a longtime mentor for Day, beginning a quarter-century ago when he coached him at New Hampshire, providing a level of inherent trust between them. During Big Ten media days last year, Day said, “I trust Chip with my life.”
But the arrangement won’t change following Kelly’s departure for the NFL.
Brian Hartline, the wide receivers coach who was elevated to be the primary coordinator, will also call plays next season, Day said in an interview with The Dispatch this week.
“I’m still going to be a part of it,” he said, “but Brian is ready to call plays.”
Hartline, who was the co-coordinator with Kelly last season, was previously the primary coordinator in 2023, though the offense still ran through Day.
“I just felt like at that time that I wasn’t quite ready to give up the play-calling,” Day said.
A former offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach before his promotion to replace Urban Meyer in 2019, Day has had more administrative roles in recent years due to changes within college football.
Along with helping to facilitate name, image and likeness opportunities and mining the transfer portal, he will also begin to manage revenue-share payments for players next season, provided the settlement of three antitrust cases against the NCAA is given final approval in April.
The issues have increasingly pulled him out of the weeds of game planning over his tenure.
Since he became the Buckeyes’ full-time receivers coach in late 2018, the 38-year-old Hartline has been regarded as an…
Source link : https://sports.yahoo.com/article/ohio-state-football-coach-ryan-174223623.html
Author : The Columbus Dispatch
Publish date : 2025-02-27 17:42:00
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.