Kliff Kingsbury joins USC’s football coaching staff
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — His first stint at USC lasted all of 34 days, a monthlong layover as offensive coordinator on his way to Arizona and the NFL. There was barely time for Kliff Kingsbury to unpack his bags at Heritage Hall in January 2019 before the Cardinals came calling, handing him an offer he couldn’t refuse.
Four years after he left, Kingsbury has made his way back to L.A.
This time, he won’t call plays. He won’t even be a full-time member of USC’s coaching staff. Kingsbury is expected to join Lincoln Riley’s staff as a senior offensive analyst, working with the Trojans quarterbacks in a support role.
“We’re excited to officially welcome Kliff to our coaching staff and add another outstanding football mind to our program,” Riley said in a statement.
It’s a role for which Kingsbury should be particularly well suited. A prolific college quarterback at Texas Tech, he has accumulated an extensive list of accomplished passers who have spent time under his wing. He’s worked with the likes of Patrick Mahomes and Baker Mayfield at Texas Tech, Johnny Manziel at Texas A&M and Kyler Murray with the Cardinals, earning a reputation along the way as an “Air Raid” passing expert and developer of quarterbacks.
At USC, the well-acknowledged QB guru is expected to work closely with Caleb Williams, giving the reigning Heisman Trophy winner another valuable voice in the Trojans quarterbacks room.
For Kingsbury (35-40 at Texas Tech), USC offers a soft landing after a steep fall from grace as the Cardinals coach. Just 10 months ago, ahead of his fourth season in Arizona, Kingsbury signed a six-year contract extension with the Cardinals through 2027. He’d just taken the Cardinals to the playoffs — but ended up a disappointing 28-37-1.
The relationship soured quickly as Arizona skidded to a 4-13 finish last season, leading to his sudden exit.
The circumstances are vaguely similar to the first time Kingsbury landed at USC. When he agreed in December 2018 to join Clay Helton’s staff as USC’s offensive coordinator, Kingsbury recently had been fired by Texas Tech, where four of his six seasons as coach yielded records below .500. Before that, he’d served short stints as a coordinator at Texas A&M and Houston.
Still, his reputation as a passing guru preceded him when he signed on at USC. Kingsbury was one of the hottest names available on the coaching market. His hire was viewed at the time as a major coup for Helton and embattled athletic director Lynn Swann, both of whom were under fire after a disastrous 2018 campaign.
His early exit only fanned those flames. Kingsbury resigned from his role as offensive coordinator in order to interview with both the Jets and Cardinals. He chose the latter, leaving USC to scramble for a new coordinator.
“I thought that was an incredible opportunity with coach Helton, Mr. Swann, that program, that tradition,” Kingsbury said at the time, “but this is just an opportunity I couldn’t pass up.”
USC eventually settled on Graham Harrell, another former Texas Tech quarterback. He lasted three seasons at USC before Riley — a third consecutive Red Raiders quarterback — took the reins for the 2022 season. Kingsbury spent the next four seasons working with Murray, a quarterback Riley helped coach to a Heisman Trophy win.
The two coaches’ paths had been intertwined long before that. Kingsbury was a senior quarterback in Lubbock, Texas, setting records at the helm of Mike Leach’s Air Raid offense, when Riley joined the Red Raiders as a walk-on.
Now their paths will cross again as Kingsbury makes his way back to L.A., this time as a part of Riley’s staff — and with much lower stakes than before.
latimes.com
_________
After beating CSF this week 4-3, No.21 USC has now won five straight and 16 of their last 19 games.
21-10-1 USC begins a three-game series Friday against 21-11 ORE ST in Corvallis.
Big time LT from Texas AM is in portal. Hensen certainly recruited him to A&M, you think he’s reaching out? It may push more than just Courtland Ford into portal, but I hope we bring him in.
This upcoming month or two should be one of USC’s most interesting offseasons ever. Good things keep happening. How long will this hot streak last? If USC feels it can afford to lose Courtland Ford (I presume he was pushed), LR’s expectations for this 2023 group must be pretty high. Just evaluating LR’s tone and delivery in the answers he publicly gives leads me, in my pretend analyst hat, to believe that he’s pretty happy, and not too tense. Contrast that to Clay Helton who was always simmering with an undercurrent of fear, since he had to worry about answering… Read more »
To quote Twain, comparing the Cat to LR is like comparing lightening to a lightening bug. I think Ford was just the first of several kids who will not be on the team in July. And I agree, I think Ford was asked to leave. I think we will see some big time talent arriving in a couple of months. As you know, I am intrigued by Tackett Curtis. I think he and Cobb significantly changed the ILB room. If Davis continues to develop at ILB, I see Curtis and Cobb as the starters and Lee and Davis as backups,… Read more »
The passing of 61-year-old offensive wizard Mike Leach (Riley’s and Kingsbury’s coach at TT): How the beloved modern-day Mark Twain of today’s sports world will be missed “Leach could talk football all day, but he could also lecture about pirates, the intellect of Geronimo, aliens, life on other planets, evolution, crop yields, how to do a wedding, Sasquatch, locker room dances or any other topic a person could ask or want to chat about. In the sportswriting profession, Leach was a gold mine. Reporters felt very comfortable around him because he was so accessible. His ability to get sidetracked while… Read more »
Mike Leach was probably the most influential collegiate football coach in my life time. Look at those who came out of his “tree”. Saban is by far, to date, the most successful collegiate coach of my lifetime, but not the most influential. The only coach around now who stands a chance of replacing Saban as the best collegiate football HC in history is LR, and he comes directly via Leach.
Lincoln Riley on USC’s “great fit” with Kliff Kingsbury (four years older than LR) — “(About a month or so ago, we connected, and) I asked Kliff in passing if it was something he’d be interested in and described it to him,” Riley revealed. “He thought about it for a little bit and it just ended up being a great fit really for both sides. He’s obviously got familiarity with our offense; he’s got familiarity with a lot of the members on our staff. So I think that it certainly made sense. “Obviously, his experience as a head coach on… Read more »
I like Rialto’s point, KK is accepting the low salary to collect on his NFL contract. But he also may be positioning himself to go back to the NFL. He will be working with QBs Caleb Williams and Malachi Nelson. Both of them are future NFL starters. Who might they want as an OC or at the very least QB coach, maybe even HC at the next level. In the mean time SC gets more coaching upgrades, win-win.
I don’t think KK will be at USC for more than a season because of other excellent HC ops that open up to him. I wonder if he could have already nailed down a strong HCing position had he wanted? Seems likely even though he didn’t work out in Arizona. For now, USC’s gonna be KK’s perfect re-entry launch pad. He’s got a highly-visible spot on what already is a very well-regarded team with a generational-type Heisman QB. KK should be able to significantly help the Trojan QB position for 2023. Any offensive game-planning insights are gravy as I see… Read more »
Like Saban has done so well, LR may have begun a similar practice of bringing in ‘big name’ idle coaches for 1yr stints wanting to keep active in the sport. Its another big move keeping USC once again in the National News spotlight. Great on many levels. Recruits at any position will take note USC is invested in being the best. LR kept Grinch on, to keep the D staff in place for at least another season. Let’s see who comes in transfer player wise after Sat. There may even be an D analyst in the works who will be… Read more »
Petero, The high profile D analyst has already been hired. His name is Greg Brown. Great credentials. Was DC at the Carolina Panthers last year.
Given the ‘reporting boundaries’ USC has in place, I’ve heard 3 different reporters (Different sites) with extensive USC history hint/mention, watch for significant news next few weeks concerning D. Its either significant transfers, or to additional D analysts. LR has said we would continue to bring in transfers after 4/15, we know that. “Significant news” seems to be beyond what is common speak.
Just what USC needs, more offense. I have read Kliff is accepting a minimum salary so he can take advantage to the money owed to him by his NFL failures. Tell me again how many football championships Texas Tech have won? I am not excited about this as some people are.
Some say he fails upward better than most.
Others say his legacy with numerous dangerous-at-one-time QBs surpasses all.
I wouldn’t probably want KK as my HC. But he’s just a QB coach/advisor at USC from what I can gather. He’s an absolute no-brainer for what Lincoln Riley self-evaluated as a need with the program.
It’ll be very interesting to see how long KK sticks with USC this time, and where does he head next?
I say one year and think it is a good move. Agreed I don’t want him as a HC but think his next move somewhere else will be as an OC. He is good with QB’s and we are paying Pennie’s on the dollar.
I love LR’s move here. Imagine how much knowledge KK picked up in four years as an NFL HC, regardless of his success, or the perceived reasons for his failure. I’m thinking more and more that USC will actually win the Pac-12 championship. So many things are looking up about USC football in this compressed period of time, post-Cotton Bowl. That game may turn out to be a benefit in the immediate future which I didn’t really foresee. But LR shows no signs whatsoever of backing down from thoroughly trying to fix rather exposed weaknesses ASAP. I’m drinking way too… Read more »
Allen, I am feeling the same way. I am far from sold on Grinch, but LR is certainly making the right moves. We will see how much improvement Grinch has in him. I am convinced last year’s late D collapse was as much on him as it was on the level of talent (which was clearly not very good).
Ole Kliff may surprise everyone and stick around for a while, making the Cardinals pay him all that is due. With that in mind it could be the final ingredient to bringing Raiola to USC.
Rialto, IF LH had only upgraded the O staff, I might agree with you. But, he also upgraded the D staff in the same way by adding Greg Brown, who is a very highly thought of D coach (he was the DC for Carolina last year). I think it is pure genius adding KK as a staff member. First, KK costs nothing (as did Greg Brown) – they still are being paid by their former employers. Second, KK will make SC better in several regards: first, he is obviously a sensational O coach, one of the best in the business… Read more »
you will never be able to convince me otherwise—K.K. got to Heritage Hall and saw what a dumpster fire the Uncle Hugs-styled football program really was. He put word out through his agent, no doubt. That message was: “get me the hell out of here!”
Wouldn’t you have?
Oh HELL yeah!
ATL, Never thought about that angle. I think you are right.