Helfrich Named Next Oregon Coach

(Photo: Kirby Lee, USA TODAY Sports)
As many expected, Offensive Coordinator Mark Helfrich has replaced the departed Chip Kelly as Oregon's head football coach.
The news was first reported last night by CBSsports' Bruce Feldman and later Rob Moseley of the Eugene Register-Guard.
The school later confirmed the news and Helfrich was introduced today at a 1 P.M. press conference.
Athletic Director Rob Mullens also sent an e-mail to donors this morning alerting them of Helfrich's hire.
Helfrich has been considered the front-runner to replace Kelly for a while now. The Oregon native was also in line to replace Kelly last offseason during his flirtation with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Oregon reportedly interviewed former Stanford OC Pep Hamilton, as well.
Helfrich has served as Offensive Coordinator for the Ducks during the last four seasons and previously held the same position at Colorado.
With his promotion to Head Coach, WR's coach Scott Frost is expected to move into the Offensive Coordinator role.
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Rob Mullens, Mark Helfrich, Marcus Mariota, De'Anthony Thomas, Brian Jackson, and Rickey Heimuli all spoke during today's 1PM press conference.
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PRESS RELEASE:
Mark Helfrich Named Oregon's 32nd Football Head Coach
EUGENE – University of Oregon Athletics Director Rob Mullens
announced today the appointment of Mark Helfrich as the 32nd head
football coach in the history of the University of Oregon. Helfrich
most recently served as the offensive coordinator with
the Ducks.
“We were looking for a coach who exemplifies excellence,
leadership and character, and who would embrace what our winning
football culture is all about,” said Mullens. “We found that person in
Mark. He is a man devoted to his family, to his players and
to this University and community, and I am excited to see him lead the
Ducks to even greater heights.”
The 39-year-old Oregon native, who served as a graduate assistant
in Eugene in 1997, has accumulated seven seasons as an offensive
coordinator at two BCS schools and 15 years coaching quarterbacks.
Helfrich becomes the first native Oregonian to head the university’s football program since John Warren in 1942.
“The Oregon football program is a source of pride for our
university because of a focus on the student-athlete--on the field, in
the classroom, and in the community,” University of Oregon President
Michael Gottfredson said. “I am confident that Mark Helfrich
has this focus and is very well suited to lead the program."
Helfrich was named Oregon’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks
coach on April 30, 2009 following three seasons in the same capacity at
the University of Colorado (2006-08), five years as quarterbacks coach
at Arizona State (2001-05) which included
his final three campaigns in Tempe, Ariz., as passing game coordinator,
and three seasons as quarterbacks coach at Boise State (1998-2000).
It didn’t take long for Helfrich to be recognized for his impact
on the Ducks’ offensive success as he was named by FootballScoop as its
National Quarterbacks Coach of the Year in 2010 and 2012, in addition to
being one of three finalists as its national
offensive coordinator of the year honor.
He played a significant role in the development of Darron Thomas,
who went on to lead Oregon to the 2011 BCS National Championship Game as
a first-year starter, as well as the 2012 Rose Bowl win over Wisconsin.
Thomas became the school’s first signal-caller
ever to complete more than 30 touchdowns in one season on two separate
occasions, finishing his collegiate career with a school-record 66
scoring strikes.
Helfrich then tutored Pac-12 Conference Offensive Freshman of the
Year Marcus Mariota, who not only quarterbacked the Ducks to a
fourth-consecutive BCS bowl appearance and a 35-17 win over Kansas State
in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl but became the conference’s
first freshman to earn first-team all-league honors since 1989. Mariota
completed his first collegiate season throwing for a freshman school
and conference record 32 TDs.
“Thank you to President (Michael) Gottfredson and Rob Mullens for
this opportunity of a lifetime,” Helfrich said. “As a lifelong Duck fan,
this is a responsibility that I welcome and accept the undertaking that
stands before me to carry on the legacy
of success that has been created by my many predecessors.
“I have been fortunate to have worked with a number of great
football coaches and mentors throughout my career and have utilized that
knowledge to help make me a better coach.”
Over the course of his last 13 seasons, Helfrich has played a
role with offenses that have ranked among the nation’s top-eight teams
in scoring offense six times, the top six in rushing on four occasions,
the elite five in total offense four times as
well as the top five in passing twice.
Mariota established the Ducks’ freshman record for passing
efficiency this season (163.23), finishing seventh in the country as the
Pac-12’s leader, while Thomas was 11th nationally in 2011 and second in
the league in 2010. Arizona State’s Rudy Carpenter
led the nation in passing efficiency under Helfrich’s watchful eye in
2005 after the Sun Devils’ Andrew Walter was second in the Pac-10 in
total offense and third in passing efficiency in 2004. Walter completed
2002 third in the conference in total offense
and passing efficiency while Jeff Krohn led the league in passing
efficiency in 2001.
Walter set Arizona State records for both career (85) and
single-season touchdowns (30) in addition to shattering the previous
Pac-10 record for career TD passes, previously set by Stanford’s John
Elway (77). The third-round NFL draft pick finished his
collegiate career as the school’s career record holder in nearly every
passing category.
Ranking as the third-youngest offensive coordinator in the nation
at Colorado in 2006 (and the youngest at a BCS school), Helfrich’s
offenses were marked by improvement each of his first two seasons in
Boulder.
His first Colorado offense averaged 4.5 yards per carry and
featured three different players rushing for 500 yards or more for just
the 10th time in school history. His 2007 team was just the third in
school history to gain 1,000 yards on offense more
than the previous season in the same number of games, and scored 30 or
more points five times.
During his five-year Arizona State stint, the program blossomed
into one of the top passing teams in the country. In his final season
there, the Sun Devils finished third in the NCAA and led the Pac-10 in
passing yards per game (373.9 avg.). ASU posted
a school-record 4,481 yards passing that season to elevate its
five-year total to 18,686 yards (306.3 avg.).
While at Boise State, Helfrich tutored one of school’s all-time
greats in Bart Hendricks, the 1999 and 2000 Big West Conference Player
of the Year. In 2000, the Broncos led the country in scoring (44.9 ppg)
and finished fifth in passing offense (321.6
avg.) as Hendricks led the nation in passing efficiency (170.63) and
touchdowns (38), and was fourth in total offense (330.3 avg.).
Born in Medford, the 1992 Marshfield (Coos Bay) High School
graduate turned down an opportunity to walk on at Oregon in favor of
attending Southern Oregon University, where he graduated with a
bachelor’s degree in biology in 1996. The four-year starting
quarterback was an NAIA Scholar-Athlete as a sophomore in 1993, leading
the nation in total offense while earning NAIA honorable mention
All-America accolades and first-team Columbia Football Association
honors in the process. That season, he accumulated single-season
school records in passing yards (2,712), total offense (3,196) and
touchdown passes (23), topping the 400-yard mark in single-game total
offense three times.
He began his coaching career as running backs coach at his alma
mater in 1996 before playing and coaching (offensive coordinator) in
Europe with the Vienna (Austria) Vikings in the winter of 1997.
Mark and his wife, Megan, are the parents of one son, Max (6), and one daughter, Maggie (2).