A few names to keep in mind as Alabama hires a new offensive coordinator.
Once again, Alabama is in the market for a new offensive coordinator. This is the third such search since Lane Kiffin took the FAU head job officially began Sunday afternoon with Brian Daboll going to the Buffalo Bills.
That leaves Nick Saban needing to hire both an offensive coordinator and defensive coordinator a week after winning a national championship.
So, who will be the fourth Alabama offensive coordinator in the last 13 months? We have a list of candidates worth exploring for the Crimson Tide.
Mike Locksley, Alabama WR coach
The former New Mexico head coach is the early favorite for the job. He brings continuity to the quarterback situation after spending last year coaching the receivers and the year before that as an Alabama offensive analyst.
Locksley has offensive coordinator experience at Illinois (2005-08) and Maryland (2012-15). He was also the interim head coach of the Terps after Randy Edsall was fired. Saban has not promoted from within for the offensive coordinator job except for last year when Steve Sarkisian was bumped up from offensive analyst to coordinator before the Peach Bowl.
Several former and current Alabama players voiced their support for Locksley's promotion Sunday on social media.
George Godsey, Detroit Lions assistant
The former Houston Texans offensive coordinator was a candidate for the Alabama OC job when Daboll was ultimately hired a year ago. He went to the Detroit Lions instead as a defensive assistant in charge of special projects. Godsey coached three seasons under Bill Belichick with the Patriots, so working for Saban wouldn't be such a shock to the system.
Dan Enos, Michigan WR coach
The former Arkansas offensive coordinator's name has been mentioned with Alabama openings in the past. He recently was hired by Michigan as the receivers coach, though a coordinator role is possible,
according to the Detroit Free Press. He's getting paid $150,000 a year for the first season, the Free Press reported but would get bumped to at least $750,000 with a coordinator title.
Jedd Fisch, former UCLA offensive coordinator
Like Godsey, Fisch was a candidate for the job last year when Daboll was hired. He had a job as the UCLA offensive coordinator leading QB Josh Rosen at the time. Now, he's currently a free agent. Fisch has been an offensive coordinator all but one year since 2009 with Minnesota, Miami Hurricanes, Jacksonville Jaguars, Michigan and UCLA.
Chip Long, Notre Dame offensive coordinator
The North Alabama grad and Birmingham native just finished his first season at Notre Dame. He helped turn around a 4-8 team in 2016 into one in playoff contention through early November. Before that, Long was the offensive coordinator for the dynamic 2016 Memphis team. He brings youth and success with multiple offensive schemes.
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