Just saw this (OC)...Maybe more speculation but who knows. | Syracusefan.com

Just saw this (OC)...Maybe more speculation but who knows.

OR!ON31

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Written by Pete Roussel
Posted by: Pete Roussel on Tuesday January 15, 2013
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2012 - 2013 College Coaching Changes
2012 - 2013 NFL Coaching Changes
Syracuse: Look for Scott Shafer to announce George McDonald as offensive coordinator / wide receivers coach, and Tim Lester as quarterbacks coach.
Arkansas: Wide receivers coach George McDonald has resigned to accept an offensive coordinator job, according to the Arkansas-Democrat Gazette. I have not confirmed which college, but McDonald does have ties to Scott Shafer at Syracuse. We just added McDonald to this list of coaches that have accepted 2 different jobs this off-season.
 
Yeah I know, If its true makes you wonde that the staff is really being shuffled.
 
Jim Harris (@jimharris360)
1/15/13, 10:09 AM
New Arkansas receivers coach George McDonald is leaving for Syracuse OC position, my sources tell me. #razorbacks
 
By the way our Transfer WR Funderburke may have been coached by this guy...right?
 
This guy has certainly moved a lot.



George McDonald (American football)

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George McDonald (born May 10, 1976 in Fort Wayne, Indiana) is the current American football wide receivers coach for the University of Arkansas Razorbacks football team football team. Previously, he served as the wide receivers coach for the Cleveland Browns. He also attended Buena Park High School where he had a fantastic four-year career.
[edit] College career

McDonald attended the University of Illinois, where he was a four-year letterman in football as a wide receiver and kickoff returner.[1] He also ran track, earning All-Big Ten honors his senior year.[1]
[edit] Coaching career

McDonald began his coaching career as an assistant coach at Bucknell University, Northern Illinois University, and Stanford University from 2001-2004.[1] He served as the offensive coordinator at Western Michigan University from 2005–2006, and as wide receivers coach at the University of Minnesota from 2007-2008.
On February 11, 2009, the Cleveland Browns hired McDonald as offensive quality control coach.[2]
On May 8, 2009, the Cleveland Browns promoted McDonald from offensive quality control coach to wide receivers coach.
McDonald was hired by the University of Miami as their wide receivers coach on January 11, 2011.
December 19, 2012, McDonald was named the receivers coach at Arkansas.
 
Not sure I like the promotion of a WR coach to OC. I know he was an OC at WMU, but that's not enough experience to give me excitement that Shafer was alluding to in his PC.
 
By the way our Transfer WR Funderburke may have been coached by this guy...right?
No. He was only hired last month. Was at Miami before that.
 
“George McDonald has a reputation as a top recruiter as well as a great teacher and technician,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said. "He knows what it takes to be an NFL receiver and has the ability to teach our players how to be a pro in every aspect so they can maximize their potential in college and set themselves up for a career on the next level.

After two seasons with the Browns, McDonald returned to the college ranks and named him one of the nation's top 25 recruiters in 2012.

http://www.nwaonline.com/news/2012/dec/19/arkansas-hires-mcdonald-coach-receivers/
 
This is a HOME RUN hire from a recruiting perspective. This is exactly what I was hoping for. Green from OC perspective, but this program needs ace recruiters more than anything. We got ourselves one if this is true.
 
Sources: UA assistant McDonald leaving

McDonald began his coaching career as an assistant coach at Bucknell University, Northern Illinois University, and Stanford University from 2001-2004.

He served as the offensive coordinator at Western Michigan University from 2005–2006, and as wide receivers coach at the University of Minnesota from 2007-2008.

On February 11, 2009, the Cleveland Browns hired McDonald as offensive quality control coach.

On May 8, 2009, the Cleveland Browns promoted McDonald from offensive quality control coach to wide receivers coach.

McDonald was hired by the University of Miami as their wide receivers coach on January 11, 2011.

December 19, 2012, McDonald was named the receivers coach at Arkansas.

(2005 Western Michigan coaching staff FTW!)
 
This is a HOME RUN hire from a recruiting perspective. This is exactly what I was hoping for. Green from OC perspective, but this program needs ace recruiters more than anything. We got ourselves one if this is true.
How do we know he is a good recruiter?
 
Well take this in stride,...beacuse as I said before. We all know until confirmed it can just be just rumors.
 
I love this from a recruiting stand point. This along with the Lea hire if that is official are two very very good recruiters. Exactly Exactly what we need...
 
Really like this hire if true. Between him and Lea (if true) we added two top notch recruiters to our staff. Hope by some miracle Adkins/Wheatley would stay and that would be a great recruiting staff.
 
How do we know he is a good recruiter?

Read up on him. He's a GREAT recruiter and has big contacts in Florida. I was quietly hoping we would hire him once we hired Shafer.
 
I think I like this one.

McDonald

George McDonald Bio
Courtesy: Athletic Media Relations
Release: 12/19/2012

George McDonald, who is considered one of the most prolific recruiters in the country and who has coached an extensive list of NFL pupils, was named Arkansas' wide receivers coach on Dec. 19, 2012.

Tabbed as one of the top 25 recruiters in the country by in 2012, McDonald has helped haul in some of the top recruiting classes in the country. The 2012 Miami class was ranked No. 8 in the country by ESPN.com and No. 9 in the nation by At their request, this network is being blocked from this site., 247Sports.com and Rivals, with Scout also ranking the class No. 1 in the ACC and the other three services ranking the Hurricanes' class as the second-best in the conference. In the two classes he helped put together at Miami, the Hurricanes signed 15 four-star players and two five-stars. The class he helped assemble at Minnesota in 2008 was ranked 17th in the nation and third in the Big Ten by Rivals and included seven four-star athletes.

McDonald has spent the last two seasons coaching wide receivers at the University of Miami and also served as passing game coordinator in 2012. Prior to his time in Coral Gables, he was the wide receivers coach for the Cleveland Browns for two seasons. He has groomed 10 wide receivers who played in the NFL and also worked with Braylon Edwards, Josh Cribbs and Mohamed Massaquoi while in Cleveland.

In 2012, the Hurricanes ranked 28th in the NCAA in passing offense with an average of 295.4 yards per game through the air. Miami also ranked in the top five in the ACC in total offense, scoring offense and pass efficiency. Sophomore wide receiver Phillip Dorsett ranked ninth in the ACC in receiving yards per game and 10th in the conference in receptions per game.
In his first season at Miami, McDonald led junior Tommy Streeter to a breakout season, as Streeter finished the year with 46 receptions for 811 yards. His yards-per-catch average of 17.6 was the highest among ACC receivers with at least 40 catches, and his yardage total ranked fifth in the ACC. McDonald also oversaw senior Travis Benjamin's climb up the Miami record book as he finished his career sixth on the school's all-time receiving yards list with 2,146 and on the reception list with 131.

McDonald began his time in the NFL as offensive quality control coach for the Browns in February of 2009 and was quickly promoted to wide receivers coach in May. In his first season in Cleveland, rookie receiver Massaquoi ended the year as the team's leader in receptions, receiving yards and receiving touchdowns. The next season, Massaquoi and Cribbs each averaged more than 12 yards per reception and combined to grab 59 catches for 775 yards.

McDonald also gained valuable NFL experience from training camp internships with the New York Jets in 2004 and 2006, Chicago Bears in 2005 and Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2007.
Before being hired by the Browns, McDonald spent two seasons at the University of Minnesota. There he coached Eric Decker to twice break the school's single-season receptions record, first with 67 in 2007 and again with 84 in 2008. Decker also accumulated 1,074 receiving yards in 2008 and earned first-team All-Big Ten recognition. He finished his career as the Gophers' career record holder for catches and receiving yards.

McDonald spent two seasons before Minnesota at Western Michigan, where he tutored current Green Bay Packers star receiver Greg Jennings. In his first season working with McDonald, Jennings was named the 2005 MAC Offensive Player of the Year, the conference's co-MVP and a Biletnikoff Award semifinalist.

Prior to his time at Western Michigan, McDonald was the tight ends coach at Stanford in 2004 and coached Alex Smith, who was picked in the third round of the 2005 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and currently plays for the Cleveland Browns. Smith was a finalist for the Mackey Award and also earned first-team All-Pac-10 and second-team All-America honors in 2004, when he led the Cardinal with 52 receptions for 706 yards and three touchdowns.

McDonald's first full-time coaching job was at Northern Illinois, where he coached wide receivers from 2001-03. In his first season, he oversaw Darrell Hill's development into a second-team All-MAC performer and draft pick by the Tennessee Titans. Hill caught 38 passes for 822 yards and seven touchdowns that year and also tied the NIU record with three straight 100-yard receiving games. In 2002, Sam Hurd broke the school's record for receiving yards by a sophomore with 512, and the next year Dan Sheldon broke Northern Illinois' record for receiving yards by a junior with 763. Sheldon ended his career as the Huskies' career record holder with a mark of 21.1 yards per catch.

While at NIU, McDonald also coached P.J. Fleck who ranked third in school history in career receptions (179) and fourth in receiving yards (2,162). Fleck had the second-most receptions in a season (77) in NIU history and led the Huskies in receiving yards in both 2001 (732) and 2003 (1,028). Fleck, who was recently named the head coach at Western Michigan, owns the Northern Illinois record for punt returns (87) and ranks second in punt return yards (716) in a career.
Northern Illinois finished 2003 with a 10-2 record and made its debut at 10th in the BCS standings in week 9 of the season and ended the year 21st in the BCS, the only time the team finished a year ranked in the BCS until 2012.

McDonald was a two-sport athlete at Illinois, making his mark in football and track and field. He was a four-year letterman for the Illini at wide receiver and also contributed as a kickoff returner, totaling 1,276 yards on 57 returns. He ran track for two seasons, earning All-Big Ten honors during his senior year when he won the Big Ten indoor championship in the 60-meter dash with a school-record time of 6.74 seconds. He graduated from Illinois in 1999 with a degree in health planning and administration.
 

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