NCAAF: Reports: FIU hiring Duke assistant Willie Simmons as head coach

Date:

Share post:


Florida International is hiring Duke assistant coach Willie Simmons as its next head football coach, according to multiple reports on Saturday.

Simmons, 44, will replace Mike MacIntyre, who was fired Sunday after three consecutive 4-8 seasons.

Other finalists for the position, according to reports, were UCF offensive coordinator Tim Harris Jr., and FIU defensive coordinator Jovan Dewitt, who became interim head coach this week.

Simmons is in his first season as running backs coach at Duke, which went 9-3 in the regular season, but the native of Tallahassee, Fla., has experience as a head coach at the FCS level with a 66-24 overall record.

Simmons was head coach at Prairie View A&M from 2015-17 and at Florida A&M from 2018-23. He guided the latter to a 45-13 record. He was 21-11 (.656) at Prairie View.

Simmons also lists offensive coordinator at Alcorn State (2012-14) and Middle Tennessee State (2011) among his assistant coaching experience.

He played quarterback at Clemson in 2000-02 and at The Citadel in 2003.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Son: Deion Sanders making ‘progress’ amid health issue

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders is improving in his battle with an unspecified health condition, his eldest son...

NCAAF: Minnesota flips commitment of QB Furian Inferrera from Boston College

The Minnesota Golden Gophers received a commitment Saturday from quarterback Furian Inferrera, who had been committed to the...

NCAAF: Xavier Lucas’ attorney denies alleged meeting with Miami amid Wisconsin lawsuit

The attorney for the player at the center of a first-of-its-kind transfer tampering lawsuit by the University of...

NCAAF: Pair of top DBs commit to Notre Dame’s 2026 class

Notre Dame has picked up commitments from a pair of blue-chip defensive backs in the Class of 2026. Joey...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.