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Report: Vanderbilt loses defensive assistant to the NFL

SimonGibbs_UserImageby: Simon Gibbs02/10/22SimonGibbs26
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Vanderbilt linebackers coach John Egorugwu is leaving Nashville after just one season with the Commodores, according to a report from The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman, as Egorugwu has accepted an assistant coaching position with the New York Giants under its new head coach Brian Daboll.

Egorugwu returned to the college ranks in 2021 as a member of Clark Lea’s initial staff at Vanderbilt, coming to the SEC from the Buffalo Bills, perhaps explaining his connection to Daboll. While with the Bills, Egorugwu served as a defensive quality control coach and an assistant linebackers coach for four seasons; all the while, Daboll, now the Giants head coach, served as the Bills’ offensive coordinator.

While with the Bills, Egorugwu helped coach the Bills to the AFC Championship game for the first time since 1993, putting together a group of linebackers that finished fifth in the league in opponent pass efficiency and tied for seventh in interceptions.

Before Buffalo, Egorugwu worked with the Baltimore Ravens for two seasons as a staff assistant, coaching the linebackers. He helped coach the likes of Elvis Dumervil, a 2015 Pro Bowl selection, and CJ Mosley, a 2016 Pro Bowl selection.

Egorugwu has worked on the offensive side of the ball, too, but has not coached offense since his last stint in college. He coached the Missouri State wide receivers in 2015, while also coaching Mizzou for three seasons as a graduate assistant, serving both the defensive and offensive sides of the ball.

Egorugwu left just days after Jesse Minter, Vanderbilt’s former defensive coordinator, left the Commodores, too. Minter left after one season to accept the same role at the University of Michigan.

Vanderbilt loses Minter, Egorugwu in back-to-back fashion

Vanderbilt did not seek an external candidate to replace former defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, who left the program to accept the same role under Jim Harbaugh at Michigan, as the Commodores instead elevated newly-hired defensive backs coach Nick Howell as defensive coordinator.

Minter, who spent just one season with the Commodores under head coach Clark Lea, left after one year and Howell immediately emerged as a candidate for the job.

Howell arrived in Nashville from Virginia, and he was hired by Lea this offseason following a few changes in Vanderbilt’s coaching staff. Howell served as UVA’s defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach from 2016 until 2021, helping lead the Cavaliers to the 2019 ACC Championship game, the Orange Bowl and a top-25 College Football Playoff ranking.

Howell worked under former Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall, who stepped down following the 2021 season. He takes over Vanderbilt’s defensive with nine years of coordinating experience; he’s held the same role at Virginia and BYU. Prior to being named BYU’s defensive coordinator, Howell spent six seasons working as an assistant for the Cougars’ defense, and he coached at three different high schools in Utah.

Vanderbilt’s defense was poor in the 2021 season, but the season was largely a developmental year for the program, given that it was Lea’s first at the helm. The defense allowed opposing offenses to amass 458 yards of total offense per game, including 263.8 yards through the air and 194.5 yards on the ground, and it allowed an average of 4.2 touchdowns per game. Vanderbilt struggled, but Minter and the rest of the coaching staff helped put together a strong recruiting class, giving the Commodores some momentum heading into 2022.

Vanderbilt’s 2022 recruiting class was highlighted by All-American Daniel Martin, a 6-foot-3, 195-pound linebacker from Marietta, GA that ranked as a four-star recruit, according to the On3 Consensus, a complete and equally weighted industry-generated average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. Martin joins a recruiting class with several other high-potential defensive players like Darren Agu, a defensive end from Rabun Gap, GA, Clemson transfer Kane Patterson and UConn transfer Jeremy Lucien, to name a few. Now, it could be up to Howell to develop that group.

“Nick brings a wealth of experience on the defensive side of the ball,” Lea said after Howell’s hiring. “Throughout his career, he has proven his ability to develop players and strengthen culture, and he certainly will help move us forward in both areas. I am thrilled to have him as a part of the Vanderbilt football family and looking forward to the positive impact he will have in our program.”

The Commodores will now head into the 2022 season with a new coordinator on each side of the ball. Former offensive coordinator David Raih, who was relieved of playcalling duties earlier this season, was replaced by passing game coordinator Joey Lynch; now, Howell is replacing Minter on the defensive side.