Tim Brewster (Minnesota)

#1

BYUVol

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#1
Of the possible candidates spoken of, I think Tim Brewster has the coolest wikipedia page, therefore I nominate him, even above Butch Davis and Gary Patterson.

Tim Brewster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Someone recently mentioned him as a dark horse candidate, and I think he should be at the tip of more people's tongues.


"Brewster found out about a young head coach starting at the University of North Carolina, Mack Brown. Not really knowing him, but hoping to get a position, Brewster drove to Chapel Hill and convinced Brown to hire him as an unpaid volunteer assistant for the 1989 season.[2] He gained a full-time job before the following season, and served as a special teams coach, tight ends coach, and recruiting coordinator under Brown."
 
#2
#2
He is widely credited with the rapid ascent of Antonio Gates, who went from an undrafted free agent in 2003 to a first-team All-Pro and Pro Bowl selection in 2004, only his second year in the NFL.

From wikipedia.
 
#4
#4
The guy who went about installing the spread offense at Minnesota? Haha. The Gophers are just very fortunate this season.
 
#6
#6
He is actually a very good coach, and a Winner. He was a beast as a player for Illinois as well, and came to town this year (of course we were expecting a blowout), and he handled business on the road with a very young team. I doubt UT seeks him, but he would be a big improvement from Fulmer, and is a very exciting coach. Prolly not top 5 best choices for UT though.....
 
#7
#7
I've heard very good things about him. He has come up under Mack Brown, has learned from both Marty and Shanahan in the pros, and taken Minnesota from 1-7 start last year tp 7-1 start this year.
 
#9
#9
Tim Brewster

Playing career

As a football player coming out of high school, Brewster was in between playing wide receiver and tight end. He enrolled at Pasadena City College, at the time a major junior college program, and was recruited along with five other players to transfer to the University of Illinois where they were looking to throw to a tight end.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins012107_1-0" class="reference">[2]</sup> At Illinois he was a two-time All-Big Ten Conference selection as a tight end.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins01_2-0" class="reference">[3]</sup> At the end of his first season he played against the University of Alabama in the 1982 Liberty Bowl, Bear Bryant's final game.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins012107_1-1" class="reference">[2]</sup> In his final season he captained the Illini during their run to the 1984 Rose Bowl.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins01_2-1" class="reference">[3]</sup> He was a player at Illinois at the same time current Minnesota Vikings head coach Brad Childress was an assistant coach.<sup id="cite_ref-Reusse02_3-0" class="reference">[4]</sup> He graduated with a degree in political science. The Illinois program named him of the Fighting Illini's ten greatest receivers in 2008.<sup id="cite_ref-4" class="reference">[5]</sup> Following his college career, he made an unsuccessful attempt at establishing a professional playing career in the NFL. He was cut during training camp for both the 1984 New York Giants and the 1985 Philadelphia Eagles.

[edit] Coaching career

[edit] Early college

Brewster found out about a young head coach starting at the University of North Carolina, Mack Brown. Not really knowing him, but hoping to get a position, Brewster drove to Chapel Hill and convinced Brown to hire him as an unpaid volunteer assistant for the 1989 season.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins012107_1-5" class="reference">[2]</sup> He gained a full-time job before the following season, and served as a special teams coach, tight ends coach, and recruiting coordinator under Brown.
When Brown was hired as head coach at the University of Texas following the 1997 season, Brewster followed him and worked as tight ends coach from 1998-2001.<sup id="cite_ref-5" class="reference">[6]</sup> As a recruiter for Texas, he helped land a number of highly touted players, including Vince Young.<sup id="cite_ref-Shelman01_6-0" class="reference">[7]</sup>

[edit] NFL

After 13 years with Mack Brown, Brewster decided to try coaching in the National Football League to "enhance my Xs and Os [. . .] and study the game at a level without distractions" that come with college players and NCAA requirements.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins012107_1-6" class="reference">[2]</sup> Brewster gained his first NFL coaching experience when he was hired as the tight ends coach for the San Diego Chargers, a position he held from 2002 to 2004. He is widely credited with the rapid ascent of Antonio Gates, who went from an undrafted free agent in 2003 to a first-team All-Pro and Pro Bowl selection in 2004, only his second year in the NFL. Brewster was held in such high esteem by his peers that he served as assistant head coach during the 2004 season. He was hired by the Denver Broncos as their tight ends coach prior to the 2005 season, and served in that capacity for two seasons before moving on to the University of Minnesota.

[edit] Minnesota Golden Gophers head coach

On January 15, 2007 it was reported on ESPN.com that Brewster was the choice of University of Minnesota athletic director Joel Maturi to replace Glen Mason as the Gophers head coach.<sup id="cite_ref-7" class="reference">[8]</sup> Various local news outlets, including WCCO and the Star Tribune, could not confirm the veracity of the report. The following day, January 16, Minnesota associate athletic director Tom Wistrcill confirmed that Brewster was indeed the University's choice, with the contract signed in the early morning<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins01_2-2" class="reference">[3]</sup>. He was officially presented as the new head coach on Wednesday, January 17 at the McNamara Alumni Center on the University of Minnesota campus. At his first press conference, Brewster stated that his immediate goals for the program were to "win the Big Ten championship" and "take the Gopher Nation to Pasadena."<sup id="cite_ref-Shelman01_6-1" class="reference">[7]</sup>
Brewster signed a five-year contract worth $1 million annually: $400,000 in base salary, $400,000 in supplemental salary and $200,000 in deferred compensation that will vest after his contract expires.<sup id="cite_ref-Shelman01_6-2" class="reference">[7]</sup> Additionally, he can earn up to $700,000 in annual bonuses if the Gophers reach several goals including: win the Big Ten title ($200,000; $75,000 for second place), the national championship game ($300,000 for reaching the game; an additional $50,000 for winning), any non-title BCS bowl game ($200,000; $100,000 for each bowl game played on New Year's Day or after that is not a BCS game; $25,000 for pre-New Year's Day bowl games), as well as reaching maximum goals in two academic categories, the Academic Progress Report (up to $50,000) and sixth-year graduation rates (up to $100,000 for 75%).<sup id="cite_ref-Strib051707_8-0" class="reference">[9]</sup> He decided not to retain any of his predecessor's assistant coaches.<sup id="cite_ref-Scroggins011907_9-0" class="reference">[10]</sup>
 
#11
#11
He had a rough first year at Minnesota but he's not doing too bad this season. His lone loss came against Ohio State
 
#13
#13
So we would hollar BREW at football and BRU at basketball. Easy to remember. Cool.
 
#15
#15
read this interesting post on another board....


The search will go something like this:

Tier One Candidates:
Butch Davis
Lane Kiffin
Will Muschamp

Butch may not come at this time and Lane and Will may be gone by the time we get there, but these would be atop the wish list. However, be prepared for Tennessee to offer Butch more money than would make UNC comfortable. I'm doing research this AM, as I have time, on what Roy Williams makes as UNC's hoop coach. Expect Tennessee to throw Butch considerably more than whatever it is that Roy makes and put UNC on the spot. I know they HAVE the money, but UT may get Butch AND Roy a raise before this is all over.

Tennessee may pull the Ronald Reagan "Cold War" game on them.

Tier Two:
Tim Brewster
Todd Graham
Mark Dantonio
Kyle Wittingham

These are the guys that you are "pretty sure" you can get if you are Tennessee. Brewster is an intriguing guy, but he's had one great year and one really bad one. Hard to say how attractive he would be. Graham is the name a former All-SEC guy at Tennessee threw out on Nashville drive time radio yesterday. Has an impressive body of work and a good team this year. Gus Malzahn, his OC, has a good rep, so he would be a good one. Dantonio is a solid coach, but he's not the "sexy" candidate. His style of play is somewhat boring offensively. But his teams block, tackle, and play good D. Wittingham is kind of MY fallback guy. His Utah teams are always solid. I wonder if he is LDS though?

The sleepers:
Brian Kelly
Sean Payton
Marvin Lewis

Kelly may not be a good fit, but he's a good coach. The other two are NFL guys who are either about to get bounced (Lewis) or underpaid somewhat (Payton).
 
#16
#16
The guy just knows what it takes to run a CFB program. Recruiting, S&C, scheduling, promoting, hiring good coordinators, you name it. His commitment to recruiting at Minnesota is unbelievable; everything, even the most minute of details is about recruiting at Minney.

From another board. Sounds familiar.
 
#17
#17
said he heard from someone that will be involved in the new coaching search said watch out for the golphers tim brewster.
 
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#20
#20
big ten coach? can i vomit in my mouth and swallow and vomit and swallow and.....
 
#25
#25
Wasn't Brewster an assistant at Texas? I am asking I really do not know for sure.
 
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