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Brian
Wright
Assistant Coach
Ninth
Season
(Wooster, 1994)
In his four years as Youngstown State's offensive coordinator, Brian Wright
has helped the program put up some record-setting numbers on the field.
Wright is in his ninth year overall at YSU where he has
handled the quarterbacks every campaign.
Last year, junior Brandon Summers took over as the signal
caller in record fashion. Summers set school marks for completion
percentage and passing efficiency while throwing the most regular-season
touchdown passes (18) since Ron Jaworski.
The offense switched to a spread formation and the passing
game got an immediate boost. Three wide receivers had more than 30
receptions, the first time three players have caught 30-or-more passes
in the same year since 1994. For just the second time since 1990 the
Guins had more yardage passing than rushing.
The offense scored 28-or-more points on seven
occasions in 2008.
The 2007 campaign was a bittersweet year for the program as
four-year starter Tom Zetts concluded a brilliant career. Zetts
completed his career as the school's all-time leader in passing yards,
completions, attempts, touchdowns, starts, 200-yard games and completion
percentage.
As a senior, Zetts was a second-team All-Gateway pick and for
the third straight campaign he was a first-team Academic all-conference
pick.
As a unit in 2007, YSU put up 27.4 points per contest while
totaling 4,035 yards of total offense and committing 15 turnovers. The
offense was fairly balanced with 196.5 yards coming on the ground and
170.4 coming through the air each game.
In the past four years, the Guins have scored 30-or-more points
24 times, including
10 40-point games. The Guins have scored more than 21 points on 35
occasions. In his first three years as the offensive coordinator, the
Penguins averaged 360 yards or more per game (382.3 in 2005, 381.6 in
2006 and 366.8 in 2007) - a school record for consecutive seasons above
350 yards.
In 2006, the Guins amassed 5,343 yards of total offense -
third most in school history -- averaging 381.6 per game - the sixth
best total. A scoring juggernaut, YSU averaged 31.4 points per contest -
fourth best in school history - while scoring more than 30 points eight
times and at least 27 points on 10 occasions.
The offense had a school-record seven All-Gateway selections, including
placing three on the first team. Two of those individuals were
All-America selections - tailback Marcus Mason and center Ryan Jewell.
YSU relied on a solid ground game in 2006 averaging 223.7
yards per game while the throwing for 157.9 a game. The offense had
three 200-plus yard single-game rushing performances and 300-yard
passing contest during the campaign. Of the 58 touchdowns scored by the
team, 55 came from the offense, including 38 via the rush.
While clicking on all cylinders during 2006, the offense was
just as talented - and extremely balanced - in 2005.
The offense averaged 382.3 yards per game, the fifth-best
total in school history and the best per game output since 2001.
The unit averaged almost identical numbers on the ground and
through the air. The 191.6 yards rushing and 190.6 yards passing per
contest. The passing yardage was the most averaged by the squad since
1987.
The offense had five players named the All-Gateway team,
including two first-team selections.
YSU was also good at holding onto the football as the offense
committed 16 turnovers, the second-lowest total in the past nine
seasons.
In 2004, Wright helped
Tom Zetts, then a redshirt freshman, have
one of the best seasons by a first-year signal caller in school history.
Zetts, who was named the Gateway Conference's All-Newcomer team,
completed 60.4 percent of his passes for 1,822 yards and 16 touchdowns
while just throwing seven interceptions.
Prior to the 2004 season, Wright had
the title of recruiting coordinator added to his list of duties.
In 2003, Wright worked as both the quarterbacks and wide
receivers coach. Kyle Smith finished the 2003 campaign with 530 yards
receiving, the most by a Guin since 1999.
In 2002, redshirt freshman Aaron Marshall took over the starting
duties on the fourth game of the season and had a solid campaign. YSU
went 5-2 with Marshall at the helm as he earned Gateway Football
Conference All-Newcomer Team honors.
In 2001, quarterback Jeff Ryan was a second-team
All-Gateway Football Conference and honorable-mention All-America
selection. Ryan finished his career as the Penguins’ all-time career
leader in touchdown passes, total offensive yardage, total plays and
rushing yards by a quarterback.
That year, Ryan completed 96-of-161 passes for 1,201
yards and eight touchdowns while rushing for 521 yards, the second most
by a quarterback in a single season.
Before becoming a member of the YSU staff, he spent
three seasons on the coaching staff at Walsh University.
In 2000 at Walsh, he was the offensive coordinator and
quarterbacks coach as the Cavaliers finished 7-3. Three members of his
offensive unit earned NAIA All-America honors in 2000. The Cavs averaged
32.8 points and 378.1 yards per game while finishing second in the
Midwest Division of the Mid-State Football Association.
At Walsh University, Wright spent three seasons working
with the offense. The last two years he was the offensive coordinator
and the quarterbacks coach. In his first season in 1998 he coached the
wide receivers and was the team’s passing game coordinator. He also
worked with the special teams.
Wright spent the 1997 season with the Penguins as an
offensive graduate assistant in charge of the wide receivers and helped
with the on-campus recruiting aspects of the program. That year the
Penguins finished 12-3 and beat McNeese State 10-9 in the Division I-AA
National Championship game.
For two seasons he was a offensive graduate assistant
at Walsh where he worked with the wide receivers from 1995 through 1997
prior to joining the YSU staff his first time.
Wright had a standout career as a wide receiver at the
College of Wooster from 1990 through 1994. Wright was a three-year
letterwinner and was a two-time captain for the Scots as a wide
receiver. In his final two seasons, he led the team in receptions and
receiving yards. His football career was cut short by a knee injury his
senior season. He was a student assistant his final year at Wooster.
He earned his bachelor’s degree in business economics
at the College of Wooster in 1994 and his master’s in education from
Walsh in 1998.
Brian and his wife, Laura, have two sons Jacob and Joe, and a daughter, Marielle.
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