Kendal Briles will be South Carolina’s new offensive coordinator, reports say
South Carolina is getting close to hiring its next offensive coordinator.
Late Monday, ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported that “South Carolina is finalizing a deal to hire TCU’s Kendal Briles as the school’s new offensive coordinator. An agreement is expected to come together in the near future.”
The (Fort Worth) Star-Telegram, citing a source, reported that “Briles accepted the offer from head coach Shane Beamer to become the next offensive coordinator at South Carolina on Monday night.”
Nothing was official from South Carolina, but a Board of Trustees meeting is scheduled for 9 a.m. Thursday with one item on the agenda: “approval of athletics personnel contracts.”
The move comes after USC finished with a 4-8 record and missed a bowl for the second time in two years. The Gamecocks produced one of the worst offenses in the SEC, leading to Beamer firing first-year OC Mike Shula in early November.
South Carolina will be Briles’ sixth school as an offensive coordinator. He worked the last three seasons at TCU as associate head coach, offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.
Briles is 43 years old. His 2025 offense at TCU averaged 425.3 yards and 30.8 points per game. (The Gamecocks, by comparison, were at 336.3 yards and 22.7 points per game this season).
His 2023 offense at TCU averaged 466.7 yards per game, the best mark of his three seasons there.
Before TCU he worked at Arkansas, Florida State, Houston, FAU and Baylor.
His philosophy includes playing with tempo and an offensive playbook that’s heavy on run-pass options.
Kendal Briles coaching history
Among Briles’ three seasons at Arkansas, the 2022 offense averaged 471.4 yards per game.
In his only season at Florida State in 2019, the Seminoles offense averaged 29.1 points and 403.2 yards per game.
In 2018 at Houston, the Cougars ranked in the top 10 nationally in both total offense (512.5 yards per game) and points per game (43.9).
His offense at FAU in 2017 averaged 40.6 points per game and 498.4 total yards.
He worked nine years at Baylor and called the offense for two seasons. The 2015 offense there led the nation with 48.1 points per game and 616.2 yards of total offense.
Beamer’s history with OCs at USC
Briles will be Beamer’s fourth offensive coordinator hire since taking over the Gamecocks in 2021.
And even after the offense bounced back in the final three games of 2025 under interim play-caller Mike Furrey, the Gamecocks’ totals were still abysmal.
The team finished in the bottom three of the conference in average points (22.67), total yards (336 yards per game), rushing yards (111 ypg), first downs (17.6 per game), sacks allowed (43) and more.
All the while, redshirt sophomore quarterback LaNorris Sellers — who came into the season as a projected Top-5 pick in the NFL Draft — regressed from his marvelous 2024 season.
The South Carolina offenses under Beamer’s first OC, Marcus Satterfield (2021-22), were inconsistent, at best. Running a pro-style offense, USC averaged under 23 points his first year and nearly 32 his second, a figure bolstered by a 63-point outburst against Tennessee.
After Satterfield, Beamer brought in Dowell Loggains (2023-24), who had a lot of NFL experience but also had experience coaching at Arkansas. The Gamecocks couldn’t overcome a disastrous offensive line in 2023, but improved in 2024 as Sellers came into his own.
When Loggains took the head coaching job at App State, Beamer — hoping to keep continuity for Sellers — promoted Shula, who spent the 2024 season as an assistant quarterbacks coach under Loggains.
That quickly turned into a disaster. South Carolina’s offensive line imploded. Playmakers didn’t have the space to create explosive plays. And Sellers almost looked like he was thinking too much, consistently missing routine throws.
And now comes Briles, a new face who will be tasked with turning around South Carolina’s offense and, thus, the entire Gamecocks program.
This story was originally published December 8, 2025 at 9:45 PM.