Alabama is finalizing a deal with former Houston Texans coach Bill O’Brien to be the Crimson Tide’s next offensive coordinator, sources told ESPN.
O’Brien was in the Alabama football complex Wednesday. He also spent time around the team last week leading up to the College Football Playoff National Championship game.
O’Brien, who also served as the Texans’ general manager last year, was fired four games into the 2020 season. That’s after leading the Texans to playoff appearances in four of his first six seasons in Houston.
O’Brien, 51, replaces Steve Sarkisian, who left Alabama to take the Texas head-coaching job.
While his most recent coaching experience was in the NFL, O’Brien also has a long history of coaching in college. He was Penn State’s head coach in 2012-13, helping to rebuild the program following the Jerry Sandusky scandal and NCAA sanctions that followed. O’Brien was Duke’s offensive coordinator in 2005-06 and Georgia Tech’s offensive coordinator in 2001-02.
Similar to Saban, O’Brien also has strong ties to Bill Belichick and coached under Belichick with the New England Patriots for five seasons from 2007 to ’11, the final season as the Patriots’ offensive coordinator.
O’Brien will be Saban’s seventh different offensive coordinator, going back to Jim McElwain, who left following the 2011 season to take the Colorado State head-coaching job.