D.J. Durkin Official Press Release

Submitted by MLaw06 on

 

ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- University of Michigan head football coach Jim Harbaugh announced the first of his assistant coaching appointments on Thursday (Jan. 8), hiring D.J. Durkin as the Wolverines' defensive coordinator and linebackers coach. Durkin comes to Ann Arbor after spending the past five seasons at the University of Florida (2010-14), including the last two years as the Gators' defensive coordinator and linebackers coach.

"D.J. is one of the top young defensive coordinators in football, and I look forward to having him work with our student-athletes," said Harbaugh, the J. Ira and Nicki Harris Family Head Football Coach. "He will make an excellent addition to our staff."

"Reuniting with Jim at the University of Michigan is an opportunity that I could not pass up," said Durkin. "We had some great times working together at Stanford, and I look forward to producing great results at Michigan. I look forward to coaching in the Big Ten after growing up in that footprint. I am excited to return to the Midwest and recruit and teach some of the best and brightest young men in the country."

Durkin, who served as interim head coach for the Gators' 28-20 victory over East Carolina in the Birmingham Bowl on Jan. 3, joined Florida's coaching staff as special teams coordinator and linebackers coach in 2010 before being promoted to defensive coordinator in 2013. The Gators' defense thrived in two seasons under Durkin's guidance, finishing 15th in total defense (329.8 yards per game) last season and second in the SEC and eighth in the country in total defense (314.2 yards per game) in 2013.

Florida's 2014 squad finished the regular season fifth in the country in yards allowed per play (4.45), ninth in the nation in yards allowed per rush attempt (3.16) and 10th in the NCAA in yards allowed per pass attempt (5.9). Defensive lineman Dante Fowler Jr. and defensive back Vernon Hargreaves III garnered All-SEC first team accolades, and linebacker Antonio Morrison was an all-conference second team selection.

In Durkin's first season as defensive coordinator in 2013, the Gators' proved to be one of the elite units in the nation, ranking among the best in a number of major categories. Florida finished first in the SEC and seventh in the country in pass defense (171. 8 yards per game), sixth in first downs allowed (16.1 per game) and 15th in scoring defense (21.1 points per game) while allowing only 27 touchdowns, the sixth fewest in the nation.

Prior to his tenure in Gainesville, Durkin spent three seasons with Harbaugh at Stanford (2007-09), where he was the Cardinals' defensive ends coach and special teams coordinator. Under Durkin's tutelage, Stanford's defensive ends helped the Cardinal rank 11th nationally in sacks per game in 2007 and 2009.

A native of Youngstown, Ohio, Durkin came to Stanford after serving two seasons on the coaching staff at his alma mater, Bowling Green, where worked with the defensive ends in 2005 before taking over responsibilities with the linebackers and special teams in 2006.

Durkin began his coaching career at Bowling Green, where he was a four-year starter for the Falcons from 1997-2000. Following graduation, he served as a defensive graduate assistant for two seasons (2001-02). In 2001, Bowling Green's defense ranked first in the Mid-American Conference in total defense as well as four other major categories. Following a two-year stay at Bowling Green, Durkin moved on to Notre Dame, where he assisted the Irish staff in all defensive aspects with concentrated duties on the defensive ends. He worked closely with the program's all-time sack leader, Justin Tuck, in 2004.

As a player, Durkin was a four-year starting defensive end and outside linebacker at Bowling Green from 1997-2000 and served as one of the team captains for two seasons. He started a total of 33 games in his career and recorded 131 tackles, including 28 for loss. He led the team in sacks in 1998 and finished second in that category in 2000. He also received numerous awards during his playing career, including the Ken Schoeni Award for character and toughness, the Carlos Jackson Award personifying the values of a student-athlete and the Leadership Award.

Durkin earned his bachelor's degree in business marketing from Bowling Green in 2001 and added a master's degree in educational administration and supervision in May of 2004. He attended Boardman High School, where he was an all-conference and all-Northeast Ohio selection.

He and his wife, Sarah, have one daughter, Abigail, and one son, Luke.

 

http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/010815aaa.html

 

Let's give a big welcome to Coach Durkin!!

erald01

January 8th, 2015 at 11:08 AM ^

How do we get rid of this J Ira and Nicki Harris bullshit naming? Can Hackett change that or give the donation back..its so tacky and sounds like pop warner coach naming

MLaw06

January 8th, 2015 at 11:14 AM ^

What's wrong with the naming?  I think it's an honor and it's quite common in universities to have endowed positions. 

As background, the coaching position was endowed earlier this year with a generous $10 million contribution.

“This gift was a way to honor and pay tribute to the history and tradition of Michigan Football and the joy it has given my family throughout the years,” J. Ira Harris said in a statement Thursday. “We are proud to be a part of the Michigan family and to provide resources that will continue our tradition as Leaders and Best.”

 

Gerald R. Ford

January 8th, 2015 at 11:47 AM ^

Mr Spicywiener


I totally agree. I got in a huge pissing match on the board last week with somebody about this. I personally have an endowed position at my university and tried to make the case for the parallel in the athletic department. The issue that was brought up was that the donation was a one time donation and was not structured to perpetually support a portion of salary. If true, that makes it different from typical endowed chairs. Either way, I personally don't have a problem with it. I would have preferred that it would have been structured to offset a portion of the total salary annually.




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samsoccer7

January 8th, 2015 at 11:16 AM ^

Can we please stop with bashing the naming of the head coach position?  It's really beneath us.  Lots of schools do it and it's a fundraising thing, pure and simple.  It also helps keep advertising out of the stadium, even though that's not the only reason to do certain things.  But lots of schools do it, it brings in money, and it's not a big deal at all.  R-E-L-A-X.

erald01

January 8th, 2015 at 11:21 AM ^

It seems like a lot of you mention "a lot of schools doing it" please name a few and why havent we heard it before? I have seen a lot of press conferences and never noticed it from other schools. I am not loosing sleep over it, I just wish they kept the naming more internal as opposed to putting in every article or actual press conferences.

MLaw06

January 8th, 2015 at 11:35 AM ^

Per MLive.com, "Vanderbilt, Stanford, Boston College and Northwestern are a few of the larger names with endowed coaching positions. Michigan State, meanwhile, is one of several schools across the country currently in search of a coaching endowment donation."

http://www.mlive.com/wolverines/index.ssf/2014/02/brady_hoke_honored_to_have_for.html

DPUblue

January 8th, 2015 at 12:58 PM ^

It's the same as naming a building for a university....a way to raise money. It needs to be done and it is only ever mentioned in official press releases. 

 

This isn't about everyone does it either and that's the only thing that makes it ok. People love their University and want to help wherever possible. Operating costs of universities are immense and overwhelming. An institution for higher education (NOT online for-profit "college") is possibly the worst business model you could ever conceive so you absolutely need to find a buck where ever possible.  

 

An endowed title for a football coach is one hell of a trade for a 10 (!!!) million bucks for a university. Just be thankful it's not the Papa John's Head Football Coach. J Ira and Nikki Harris gave for no other reason than the fact that they love Michigan...that's one hell of a gesture. 

**steps off soapbox***

Proclus

January 8th, 2015 at 12:00 PM ^

I'm actually rather pleased to see that sort of thing, since it is evidence of the reason that Michigan can afford to pay NFL money to coaches without resorting to tacky corporate sponsorship deals that have a larger impact on fans' sensibilities: Hackett: "Ira! We want to hire Jim Harbaugh, but we don't want to ask him to take a pay cut. Do you think you could spot us about ten million bucks?" Ira: "Sure, Jim. Would you mind mentioning my family's name in connection with Harbaugh in a few official press releases?" Hackett: "Ira, you drive a hard bargain, but I think we can swing that."

Michigasling

January 8th, 2015 at 7:01 PM ^

I think some of the discomfort we have comes from not being used to naming people after other people.  Buildings we're used to, and Al Glick is lucky to have two terse syllables, gives euphonious character to "Field House."

It's also that we're not used to this in college sports, whereas lots of professorships are endowed, in fields where money is harder to come by and full names with titles aren't spoken aloud so often over national media and at press conferences, except for that one big day at the Nobel ceremony, if you're lucky.

[OT: Jeopardy just came on in the background.  First contestant from Ann Arbor.  Have to sign off now and listen.]

maize-blue

January 8th, 2015 at 11:29 AM ^

I'm excited to see what this defense looks like and how it plays. EDIT: However I am ever so slightly nervous about the 3 man front defenses he runs. Visions of the Wisconsin pounding RR's 3-3-5 into dust haunt.

Perkis-Size Me

January 8th, 2015 at 11:41 AM ^

I think there's a bit of a difference between DJ Durkin, a guy who's consistently coached top defenses in the SEC, and GERG, a guy who was asked to coach a defense he knew absolutely nothing about.

There might be some growing pains if he switches us over to a 3-4 base, but don't expect GERG-like results.



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cigol

January 8th, 2015 at 11:20 AM ^

I like the super star young Harbaugh mold coach. As long as he doesnt get poached for a head job, he could be a great long term replacement should Harbaugh get the ship sailing straight and decides to chase a super bowl in a few years.  

LSAClassOf2000

January 8th, 2015 at 11:26 AM ^

I chuckle because the official releases are essentially serving as confirmation of things that have either already been confirmed or were more or less assumed based on current evidence at this point - such is the modern news cycle, or so it seems. Either way, glad to see the official announcement and welcome to Michigan (officially), D.J. Durkin!

MichLove

January 8th, 2015 at 11:26 AM ^

To say I am beyond excited about Durkin running our defense with Mattison working on his staff would be understating my feelings.. I cannot wait to see what this defense will look like. Get ready for big time passion, intensity, recruits, and results.

This is going to be an all-star staff!

gwkrlghl

January 8th, 2015 at 11:50 AM ^

Bo & Carl Pelini
Bob, Mark, & Mike Stoops
Jim Tressel
Doc Elliott
Durkin

Probably some others I'm not remembering, but a very impressive list for such a relatively small city