Ryan Walters (American football)
Ryan Walters is an American football coach and former player who is serving as the defensive coordinator for the Illinois Fighting Illini. He formerly played for Colorado and was the defensive coordinator for the Missouri Tigers.
Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Defensive Coordinator |
Team | Illinois |
Conference | Big Ten |
Biographical details | |
Born | Los Angeles, California | January 21, 1986
Alma mater | Colorado |
Playing career | |
2004–2008 | Colorado |
Position(s) | Safety |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
2009 | Colorado (SA) |
2010 | Arizona (GA) |
2011 | Arizona (DB) |
2012 | Oklahoma (GA) |
2013 | North Texas (CB) |
2014 | Memphis (CB) |
2015 | Missouri (S) |
2016 | Missouri (co-DC/S) |
2017 | Missouri (co-DC/Secondary) |
2018 | Missouri (DC/Secondary) |
2019–2020 | Missouri (DC/S) |
2021–present | Illinois (DC) |
Playing career
A native of Los Angeles, Walters played safety collegiately at Colorado for the Buffaloes from 2004 to 2008 where his father, Marc, played quarterback between 1986 and 1989.[1] During his father’s playing days he was babysat by Eric Bieniemy.[2] Ryan started 33 of 46 games for Colorado, and earned honorable mention All-Big 12 honors and first-team All-Colorado honors from the state's National Football Foundation his senior year. During his senior season he was made a team captain for the Buffaloes, and was voted that seasons team MVP by his teammates.[3]
Coaching career
Colorado
Ryan began his coaching career as a student assistant at Colorado working with the secondary in 2009
Arizona
Ryan spent two years on the coaching staff at Arizona, where he served as a graduate assistant in 2010, and was promoted to defensive backs coach for the 2011 season.
Oklahoma
Walters went to Oklahoma as a graduate assistant cornerbacks coach in 2012, as the Sooners went 10-3 and played in the 2013 Cotton Bowl.
North Texas
Ryan coached cornerbacks at North Texas for the 2013 season. The team would end up playing in 2014 Heart of Dallas Bowl.
Memphis
He spent the 2014 season as the cornerbacks coach for the Memphis Tigers helping them reach the 2014 Miami Beach Bowl.
Missouri
Walters joined Gary Pinkel's Missouri staff in February of 2015 [4]following Barry Odom, from Memphis to Missouri. He began as a safeties coach before becoming the co-defensive coordinator in 2016 and, eventually, the full time defensive coordinator in 2018 in addition to serving as the secondary coach.[5] He was a holdover after the 2020 coaching change to Eliah Drinkwitz.[6]
Illinois
In January of 2021, a report surfaced that Walters was among three finalists to join Bret Bielema's new staff at Illinois. The other finalists were reportedly Oklahoma State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, and Arkansas defensive coordinator Barry Odom, Walters former boss at Missouri. Odom eventually elected to stay with Arkansas, and on January 6, 2021, Walters was announced as the new DC for the Illini.[7][8]
Family
Walters and his wife Tara have two sons, Aaron and Cason.[9]
References
- "Walters born to be a Buff". The Denver Post. 2008-11-13. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
- Schiffer, Alex (August 14, 2019). "Chiefs' Eric Bieniemy once babysat Mizzou's defensive coordinator. Now he's a mentor". The Kansas City Star.
- "Ryan Walters - Football". University of Colorado Athletics. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
- Evans, Thayer. "Memphis CB coach Ryan Walters joins Missouri staff". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
- Dryden, Aaron. "Enjoy Ryan Walters while you can..." rockmnation.com. SBNation. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
- Baugh, Peter. "From limbo to let's go: Why it made sense for these Missouri coaching holdovers to stay on". The Athletic. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
- Brice, John (January 4, 2021). "Strong trio emerges in Illinois DC search". footballscoop.com. Football Scoop. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
- Brice, John (January 6, 2021). "Bielema dips into SEC for key coordinator hire". footballscoop.com. Football Scoop. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
- "Ryan Walters". mutigers.com. Missouri University SID. Retrieved January 6, 2021.