Current:Home > MarketsDeion Sanders loses the assistant coach he demoted; Sean Lewis hired at San Diego State -FinanceAcademy
Deion Sanders loses the assistant coach he demoted; Sean Lewis hired at San Diego State
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:36:01
SAN DIEGO — The assistant coach who recently was stripped of his play-calling duties by Deion Sanders has landed a new job.
Sean Lewis, the former offensive coordinator at Colorado under Sanders, has been hired as head coach of San Diego State, a person close to the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly. Lewis will replace Brady Hoke, who retired.
Lewis, 37, previously served as head coach at Kent State, where he directed explosive, fast-paced offenses, including one that averaged 606.5 yards and 49.8 points per game in 2020. He took those credentials to Colorado to work under Sanders in 2023, but his experience there got rocky after a 3-0 start.
What happened in his one season under Deion Sanders?
In one sequence, USA TODAY Sports observed Sanders expressing his displeasure toward Lewis after Sanders’ quarterback son, Shedeur, was sacked in the second quarter of a 28-16 loss at UCLA Oct. 28. The sack was one of seven in the game and that time ended a terrible three-and-out possession for Colorado with 12:42 left before halftime. Sanders made animated gestures toward Lewis with his arms, and Lewis and Shedeur stood there, stoically.
Sanders, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, then stripped Lewis of his play-calling duties for the next game despite the fact that the Buffaloes were 4-4 and ranked No. 5 nationally in passing yards per game with 330.
Sanders instead turned to former NFL head coach Pat Shurmur to call the plays, only to watch the Colorado offense do much worse in its final four games, all losses.
What happened after the play-calling change?
Before Lewis was demoted, the Buffs (4-8) were averaging 408.6 yards per game and had scored at least 36 points in five of eight games. After Lewis was demoted, the Buffs averaged 20.25 points and 273.5 yards per game as Shedeur Sanders was knocked out of action with injuries for the final game and a half.
“We’re not gonna demean Sean Lewis,” Deion Sanders said after making the change. “We’re not gonna do that. We’re not gonna take that tone. Sean is a good man. I think he’s a good play-caller. We just needed change at the time. We just needed to try something else at the time, and that’s what we did.”
At San Diego State, Lewis will take over a team that finished 4-8 this season in its second year playing at its new stadium in Mission Valley. A former player at Wisconsin, he will be expected to deliver the kind of high-flying scoring attack that will fill the seats at the stadium and go to bowl games regularly, as the Aztecs did in 12 of the previous 13 seasons.
Lewis was making $850,000 this season at Colorado in the first year of a three-year, $2.7 million contract but is allowed to break that contract without paying liquidated damages if he gets an NCAA or NFL head-coaching position.
He is the second staffer to leave Colorado since the end of the season last week. Former tight ends coach Tim Brewster announced he had resigned on social media site X, saying Sanders was a “truly amazing man and leader.” Brewster had been demoted to make room for Shurmur under the limit of 10 full-time assistant coaches after Sanders switched play-callers.
Colorado offensive line coach Bill O’Boyle also could follow Lewis to San Diego State after previously working with him at Kent State in the same role. Sanders wants to fortify the offensive line after it gave up 56 sacks in 2023, ranking second nationally in most sacks allowed.
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com
veryGood! (5269)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Caitlin Clark NCAA Tournament stats tracker: How many points has she scored?
- YouTuber Ruby Franke Denies Doing Naughty Things in Jail Phone Call to Husband Kevin Franke
- What we know about the Baltimore bridge collapse
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- New York appeals court scales back bond due in Trump fraud case and sets new deadline
- 'Fallout': Release date, cast, where to watch 'gleefully weird' post-apocalyptic show
- What we know about the Baltimore bridge collapse
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Women's March Madness Sweet 16 schedule, picks feature usual suspects
Ranking
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Tennessee Senate tweaks bill seeking to keep tourism records secret for 10 years
- Women's NCAA Tournament teams joining men's counterparts in Sweet 16 of March Madness
- In New Jersey, some see old-school politics giving way to ‘spring’ amid corruption scandal
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Dairy cattle in Texas and Kansas have tested positive for bird flu
- Oliver Hudson says he sometimes 'felt unprotected' growing up with mother Goldie Hawn
- Small business hiring woes show signs of easing as economy stays strong
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
The 4 worst-performing Dow Jones stocks in 2024 could get worse before they get better
Florida passes law requiring age verification for porn sites, social media restrictions
Death of student Riley Strain continues to appear accidental after preliminary autopsy, Nashville police say
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Everything we know about Shohei Ohtani and his interpreter
4 accused in Russia concert hall attack appear in court, apparently badly beaten
Georgia officials pushing to study another deepening of Savannah’s harbor gets a key endorsemen