Clemson University

Oklahoma hires Clemson’s Brent Venables as its next head coach

Clemson defensive coordinator Brent Venables answers questions Tuesday during an on-campus media day
Clemson defensive coordinator Brent Venables answers questions Tuesday during an on-campus media day Special to The State

Brent Venables is headed back to Norman.

After leaving the University of Oklahoma to become Clemson’s defensive coordinator almost 10 years ago, he’s returning to the Sooners program for his first-ever head coaching job, the program announced on Sunday night.

“This is an incredibly special opportunity,” Venables said in a statement. “Julie and I and our family are extremely grateful for the belief in us — and certainly in me — to be the next head coach at Oklahoma, one of the winningest and most tradition-rich programs in college football history. Our memories from Norman, where all four of our children were born, have been nothing but great. We’re looking forward to making another decade-plus of incredible memories as we transition to a new era of Oklahoma football, especially with the opportunity and the challenge to join the SEC, the premier conference in all of college football.

Joe Castiglione, President Harroz and the Board of Regents have given us incredible support that equals the best of the best in our sport. There’s no question we are equipped to compete at the very highest level and attract the best players from across the country. The OU logo has never been stronger.”

Clemson will be looking to hire a new defensive coordinator for the first time since Venables replaced Kevin Steele after the 2011 season. Venables in July received a contract extension from Clemson through 2026 for $2.5 million, making him the highest-paid assistant coach in the country.

His buyout is 25% of his contract, or $625,000. The Salina, Kansas native does have a stipulation, however, that gives him an out “for the purpose of accepting employment as the Head Coach of another football program, including but not limited to a collegiate or professional team,” per his term sheet. As a result of becoming the Sooners’ head coach, he won’t have to pay Clemson.

Venables, 50, replaces Lincoln Riley, who left the Sooners last weekend after five seasons to take the head coaching position at the University of Southern California.

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney, asked earlier Sunday about Venables possibly leaving for Oklahoma, declined to go into any details.

“Definitely not something we’re going to talk about right now,” he said in a press conference discussing Clemson playing in the Cheez-it Bowl. “This is about our team. It’s about this opportunity and this matchup, all those types of things. If there’s something to be talked about there, we’ll discuss that at the appropriate time.”

On Sunday, Low reported that Venables’ top choice for an offensive coordinator at OU is Jeff Lebby, who current occupies the same position at Ole Miss while also serving as the quarterbacks coach. Lebby, who is the son-in-law of former Baylor head coach Art Briles and coached the Bears’ running backs for five years under Briles, signed with the Sooners as a player, but an injury ended his collegiate career early. Instead, he became a student assistant coach with the program and graduated in 2007.

Venables has two sons listed on Clemson’s football roster: Tyler, who is a sophomore safety, and Jake, a redshirt junior linebacker who will forego his final two years of eligibility after struggling with injuries this season.

“A born leader, he helped build and sustain an exceptional culture during his 13 years here at Oklahoma and his 10 seasons at Clemson,” OU vice president and athletics director Joe Castiglione said of Venables via a statement. “He has a track record of establishing meaningful relationships with his players and preparing them for the next level. Brent embraces competition and the challenges that come with it, and there is no doubt in my mind he is the right man to lead OU football into its next great era. We couldn’t be more excited for Brent to return to OU as our head coach and for him, his wife Julie and their children Jake, Tyler, Laney and Addie to call Norman home again.”

Brent Venables coaching history

Following his playing days at Garden City Community College (Kan.) and Kansas State, Venables was a graduate assistant under Wildcats then-head coach Bill Snyder (1993-95). The Kansas native then went to Oklahoma in 1999 to serve as the linebackers coach and co-defensive coordinator until 2003 when he was named the lone defensive coordinator after Mike Stoops left for Arizona. The two combined efforts to lead a defense that only gave up more than 20 points three times for an average of 14.9 points allowed en route to a 13-0 record and national championship in 2000.

In 2006, Venables was named a Broyles Award finalist, the honor given to the best assistant college football coach, after orchestrating an Oklahoma defensive group that led the Big 12 Conference in scoring defense and total defense.

Toward the end of his time in Norman, there was a perceived downturn in the Sooners’ defense, which brought about some unrest from fans. In 2011, Sooners head coach Bob Stoops brought back his brother, Mike, to be the co-defensive coordinator again. That’s when Venables made the tough decision to leave and take the same position under Swinney at Clemson.

From Aug. 6, 2010, then-Oklahoma defensive coordinator Brent Venables answers a question during a news conference at media day in Norman, Okla.
From Aug. 6, 2010, then-Oklahoma defensive coordinator Brent Venables answers a question during a news conference at media day in Norman, Okla. Sue Ogrocki ASSOCIATED PRESS

It didn’t take long for Venables to repeat his success at Clemson, becoming a Broyles Award finalist again in 2015 after his defense finished fourth nationally in third-down conversion percentage (27.7) and in sacks per game (3.2) and fifth in tackles for loss per game (8.4). Two years before that, the Tigers’ defense led the nation in tackles for loss (122) and Venables was one of Rivals’ top-25 recruiters and one of 247Sports’ top-50 recruiters in the nation.

Venables finally won the Broyles Award in 2016 following a season where the defensive unit set a school record of 49 quarterback sacks, which was replaced by the 2018 national championship defense’s record of 54 sacks. That group also had five first- or second-team All-Americans, including two consensus selections in Clelin Ferrell and Christian Wilkins. Both were first-round picks in the 2019 NFL Draft.

During his time at Clemson, Venables won two more national championships with a 6-0 record in ACC title contests. As a full-time assistant coach, he’s never had a losing season over 25 years with 29 bowl games and 21 seasons with 10 or more wins.

This year, Venables’ side of the ball is second in the country in red zone defense behind Georgia and ninth in total defense. The Tigers ended the regular season first in the ACC in points allowed per game (15.0) as well.

Riley was an internal hire at Oklahoma, getting promoted from being the offensive coordinator to the head coach after Bob Stoops, now the interim coach, retired on June 7, 2017. During that time, the Sooners went 55-10 with four Big 12 championships and three College Football Playoff appearances.

Upon Riley’s departure for Southern Cal, it was the first time since 1999, when Stoops was hired, that Oklahoma will have to conduct a true coaching search. Venables’ return, however, keeps the streak of Sooner head coaches with ties to the program alive.

This story was originally published December 5, 2021 at 8:27 PM.

Alexis Cubit
The State
Alexis Cubit serves primarily as the Clemson sports reporter for The (Columbia) State newspaper. Before moving to South Carolina in 2021, she covered high school sports for six years and received a first-place award in the sports feature category from the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors in 2019. The California native earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Baylor University in 2014.
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