Dan Werner

Dan Werner was scapegoated when Coker was trying to keep his job. His work at Mississippi was spectacular and Nick Saban is NOT known for hiring washed-up or untalented coaches and/or consultants.

I don't know about "scapegoated," offense at Miami was awful '03-'05.
 
Advertisement
I think this is just as good:

View attachment 74759
@brock 😄
N35Fdef.gif
 
Advertisement
Dan Werner, a highly-successful veteran offensive mind, was named the Gamecocks’ quarterback coach in January 2018. Werner comes to Columbia after one season as an offensive analyst at Alabama under Nick Saban. He spent the previous five years as the co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach at the University of Mississippi under head coach Hugh Freeze.

In 2016, Ole Miss led the SEC in passing offense (314.9 yards per game), was third in total offense (464.3 ypg) and fourth in scoring offense at 32.6 points per game.

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), garnering Werner his second nomination for the Broyles Award as the nation’s top assistant coach.

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 from 2012-14. In just three years as a starter, Wallace ranked in the SEC’s top 10 all-time in total offense and passing yards.

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.

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. He 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 quarterbacks, including 2001 Maxwell Award winner Ken Dorsey, 1992 Heisman Trophy winner Gino Torretta as well as Heisman candidates Steve Walsh and Craig Erickson.

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.

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/game) and 13th in passing yardage (276 yards/game).

Werner was an offensive consultant to Tommy Tuberville at Auburn 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, he coached three 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 in Missouri.

Werner’s wife’s name is Caysie. He has two children, Maya and Ian.
his offense was out of date 15 yrs ago and u thought richt was bad lmao no just no. the man isn't an oc for a reason god its like when people want kehoe back for third stint did u watch his last stint as oline coach
 
That was years ago... posted by his agent.. someone linked it to this board
Interesting. When he was terminated from Miami was this site operational? One would think if his agent was promoting information like that it would not be a terribly difficult undertaking to track it down and repost here. Oh well...providing documentation after attacking someone on this message board is not high on the to-do-list.

By the way...Dan Werner is one of the finest human beings on the planet.
 
Advertisement
I was all on board until I saw his wife spells her name "Caysie". HARD pass.
 
Advertisement
I don't know about "scapegoated," offense at Miami was awful '03-'05.
Dan Werner found himself in the unenviable position of being micro-managed having to do exactly what his boss was saying, even when believing the approach was wrong. After the Werner termination I believe the offense regressed even further that led to Coach Coker's dismissal. If you want to grade Dan Werner then critique his work at Mississippi and Alabama.
 
Advertisement
his offense was out of date 15 yrs ago and u thought richt was bad lmao no just no. the man isn't an oc for a reason god its like when people want kehoe back for third stint did u watch his last stint as oline coach
You have not one clue as to what you are claiming...NOT ONE!

He's not an Offensive Coordinator by choice, as his wife died suddenly and unexpectedly, which left him devastated as well as their children. The Canes would be running on high octane if Dan could be convinced to take the job.

You are uninformed and stupid!
 
Advertisement
Back
Top