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Montgomery named coach, new assistants to follow

By Kevin Chlum, Senior Staff Writer

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Published: Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Updated: Sunday, February 14, 2010

Shane Montgomery has spent the past few weeks recruiting, assembling a coaching staff and dealing with the media - all part of his new job. Montgomery, 37, became the youngest Division I-A head coach and the 32nd head coach at Miami on Dec. 28. "There were a variety of reasons (for hiring Montgomery) - continuity of leadership, he demonstrated integrity, character and knowledge of the game," Athletic Director Brad Bates said. "His ability to recruit and develop players has been exceptional." He replaces Terry Hoeppner, who compiled a 48-25 record in six seasons as Miami's head coach. Hoeppner left to become the head coach at Indiana University and took five assistants with him. Montgomery has visited the 10 high school players who committed to Miami when Hoeppner was head coach. "I tried to make them feel good about their commitment and me as head coach," said Montgomery, who was Miami's offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach since 2001. "I let them know the same values and philosophy they were looking for are still here." All of the committed recruits intend to stay with Miami, Montgomery said. Montgomery decided to retain three assistants who did not go with Hoeppner - wide receivers coach and recruiting coordinator Brian Von Bergen, safeties coach Tim Cooper and strength coach Dan Dalrymple. "I felt like they fit in with the beliefs that I have and it obviously is good to keep one guy on both sides of the ball who been in program to help ease the transition," Montgomery said. Montgomery said the offensive and defensive philosophies of Miami football will remain similar to recent seasons. "I plan on be heavily involved with the offense and heavily involved in play calling," he said. "After losing most of the staff, I want to make sure we get off to good start and get the new guys comfortable with our system." Montgomery said he has about half of the staff hired and the rest will be hired within the next week to 10 days. He said he could not release the names of his assistants until they were officially announced today. Bates said hiring process to replace Hoeppner involved a lot of research, including speaking with representatives from the National Coaching Association, the National Black Coaches Association and people who worked with potential candidates. "We met with people who we felt were strong candidates and assessed their ability to be the leader of our program," he said. Montgomery was the players' choice, according to quarterback Josh Betts. Bates consulted players during the search, Betts said. "The biggest thing is (Montgomery) is a players' coach," Betts said. "He communicates well with players and has a great relationship with everyone. Betts thought having the continuity of Montgomery and other assistants will help next year's team. "I think keeping a couple guys will be great for us," he said. "It's a nice changeup but at the same time, it helps to keep the same system we were on and continue our success."

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