Houston has fired offensive coordinator Kevin Barbay ahead of its regular-season finale against BYU, the school announced Tuesday.
Shawn Bell, Houston’s quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator, will serve as interim offensive coordinator and play caller.
The Cougars (4-7, 3-5) rank last in FBS in scoring offense at 13.6 points per game as well as last in the Big 12 in total offense, passing offense and yards per play. Houston has averaged 6.6 points per game in its losses and clinched a losing season with a 20-10 loss to Baylor on Saturday.
Barbay joined coach Willie Fritz’s staff for his debut season after serving as Mississippi State‘s offensive coordinator in 2023.
“We are grateful to Kevin for his dedication and contributions to our football program this season,” Fritz said in a statement. “As we continue to assess every aspect of our program, it is clear we have not met our offensive standards. … Our focus is on finishing the season strong Saturday against BYU.”
The Cougars made a midseason quarterback change, benching returning starter Donovan Smith for Louisiana transfer Zeon Chriss, and secured wins over TCU, Utah and No. 17 Kansas State before back-to-back losses to Arizona and Baylor with bowl eligibility on the line.
Barbay had one year remaining on his contract and will be owed $750,000 by Houston, offset by earnings from his next job.
Georgia wide receiver Colbie Young, who hasn’t played for the Bulldogs since his arrest Oct. 8 on misdemeanor charges of battery and assault on an unborn child, returned to practice Monday after being cleared to do so by the university’s Equal Opportunity Office.
Sources told ESPN on Tuesday that Young, who had been suspended from the team since his arrest, will not be allowed to play in games until his legal matter is resolved. He has an arraignment scheduled for state court in Athens, Georgia, on Dec. 10.
“The Title IX office at UGA cleared Colbie so he was allowed to return to the team activities, including practice,” Young’s attorney, Kim Stephens, told ESPN. “We expect and hope that the prosecutors will follow the Title IX office’s lead and dismiss the charges against Mr. Young in the very near future.”
Young was working off to the side during Monday’s practice.
According to an Athens-Clarke County Police incident report obtained by ESPN, a 20-year-old woman, who described herself as Young’s ex-girlfriend, told police that she went to his apartment to discuss their relationship.
When the conversation became heated after she discovered he was on the phone with another woman, the complainant said Young “grabbed her left arm near her biceps and triceps and physically pulled her out of his room.” The woman said Young was “using derogatory terms and being demeaning of her.” She said Young went back to his room and locked the door.
The woman told police she started to collect her belongings when a friend called her phone. When she answered, the woman told police, “Mr. Young came out and grabbed her from behind. She said that he picked her up and began to squeeze her torso and abdomen very hard. She said she felt like [Young] was trying to harm her.”
The police officer noted in the report that he observed a bruise and discoloration on the bottom of the woman’s chest where it meets the abdomen, and redness on her right side. The police officer transported the woman to an Athens hospital for treatment.
In the affidavit, the woman said the police report was “slanted and does not accurately portray what occurred on Oct. 8.”
“I did go to Colbie’s apartment late at night to talk to him about our relationship and my pregnancy,” the woman said. “Colbie asked me to leave more than once while I was there. I did not leave until I became upset with him and did not think our conversation was productive.
“Colbie did not place his hands on me in any way during the conversation and argument that was inappropriate or unwanted. He did not hit me. He did not push me. He did not cause any bruising or marks on me. He did not injure me in any way.”
Young, who transferred to Georgia from Miami, has 11 catches for 139 yards and two touchdowns this season.
The No. 10 Bulldogs close the regular season against rival Georgia Tech at home Friday night (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN+). They’ll play the winner of Saturday’s game between No. 3 Texas and No. 15 Texas A&M in the SEC championship game on Dec. 7.
With a victory in the SEC title game, Georgia would secure a berth in the CFP for the third time in four seasons. The Bulldogs would probably be considered for a CFP at-large berth if they lose to the Texas/Texas A&M winner.
DURHAM, N.C. — Duke coach Manny Diaz says quarterback Maalik Murphy will face discipline “internally” after extending both of his middle fingers skyward in celebration after throwing a long touchdown pass early in the weekend win against Virginia Tech.
Diaz said Monday that Murphy’s exuberant gesture, caught on the ACC Network national broadcast, was directed at offensive coordinator Jonathan Brewer in the booth after a bit of practice “banter” from a few days earlier. Diaz said the Texas transfer just let his excitement get away from him but still called it “unacceptable in our program.”
“There was a practice in the middle of last week when we [were] throwing post after post after post, and we weren’t completing them,” Diaz said. “And it was again and again and again and again. And at the end of that, there was a remark made in jest that, ‘If you throw a post for a touchdown in the game, then you can flick me off,’ from Coach Brewer.”
Murphy’s gesture came after he uncorked a ball from deep in Duke’s own end and caught Eli Pancol perfectly in stride across midfield, with Pancol racing untouched for an 86-yard score barely 2 minutes into the game.
As he began skipping downfield to celebrate, Murphy chest-bumped teammate Star Thomas and then extended both arms in the air with his middle fingers raised.
Brewer said Monday he missed the gesture in real time, but then saw it on a replay moments later.
“Some things you say on the field when you’re coaching obviously isn’t meant to be taken literally when you’re trying to get after somebody in that world,” Brewer said.
Murphy threw for 332 yards and three touchdowns with three interceptions in the 31-28 win for the Blue Devils (8-3, 4-3 Atlantic Coast Conference), who close the regular season at Wake Forest.
Kiley McDaniel covers MLB prospects, the MLB Draft and more, including trades and free agency.
Has worked for four MLB teams.
Jeff Hoffman is one of the most sought-after relievers in this offseason’s free agent class after a dominant run with the Philadelphia Phillies, but it took an incredible career turnaround to get him here.
On the eve of the 2023 season, the former No. 9 overall pick failed to make the Minnesota Twins‘ Opening Day roster and became a free agent. He had just 0.9 career WAR at the time — and 0.0 WAR in his previous five seasons. But he caught on with the Phillies on a minor league deal and went on a two-year tear after being added to the major league roster in May 2023, posting 3.5 WAR that ranks fifth in the majors among relievers in that span. Now, he is poised to cash in after rediscovering what made him a high draft pick in the first place.
There are a number of questions as the 31-year-old right-hander prepares for his offseason payday: how he made this turnaround, if he wants to transition back to being a starting pitcher, if the vibes in Philly are strong enough to compel him to return and what his priorities are in finding a new club.
I caught up with Hoffman as he chooses his next home (or decides to stay in his current one).
How Hoffman turned it around
To understand how Hoffman reinvented himself in Philadelphia, you first must understand where things started to go wrong. Hoffman went from a top prospect to a struggling young pitcher with the Colorado Rockies and Cincinnati Reds.
After being selected by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 2014 draft while recovering from Tommy John surgery, he made 13 minor league starts the next season before being dealt to Colorado in the Troy Tulowitzki trade. Hoffman made the big leagues in 2016 with the Rockies and posted a solid 1.1 WAR campaign in 2017, primarily as a starter (99⅓ innings, 4.76 ERA). After that, though, he was either injured or ineffective, including two seasons with the Reds and a spring training with the Twins. Hoffman doesn’t mince words on what held him back early in his professional career, pointing to the instruction he was given and his attempt to integrate it all.
“I was fed a lot of mechanical bulls— through my early years, coaches trying to make their mark,” Hoffman said. “[Mechanics] was like the ball and chain I was tied down to. If I would have picked and choosed through that stuff, I wouldn’t have ended up wasting a few years early in my career. … I’m a learner, I’m a listener, I took a few too many of the mechanical cues, always trying to please and be respectful of whoever is giving the information.”
Still, Hoffman believes the gradual accumulation of new parts of his game ultimately helped turn him into an All-Star. He just needed to fine-tune what he had picked up along the way and learn to pitch without having too many intrusive thoughts (and outside voices) in his head.
“When I stopped thinking about ‘Where’s my front side?’ or ‘When is my heel on the ground?’ and all that B.S., I was able to improve my command, my velocity got better and I’m not necessarily trying to throw hard now, that’s just how it’s coming out,” he said. “My body is moving the way I want to move.”
The pitch mix that figures to get him an eight-figure contract this winter started with things he implemented during his turbulent times in Colorado and Cincinnati.
“In Colorado, I introduced a splitter. It wasn’t a true splitter, more of a splitter-changeup. It wasn’t coming out as hard, I didn’t throw it as much as I should have,” Hoffman said. “I had always thrown a curveball. I was always attached to it. I didn’t mess with a slider much, then Cincinnati brought a slider to me, trying to get the velo up. I couldn’t get it up to 86-88 miles per hour to match the splitter, I was really fighting with that. … ‘Why can’t I do that if I’m throwing my fastball 95 miles per hour?'”
How Hoffman dominates
Had the Twins taken just a little bit more time to see what they had, perhaps Hoffman’s breakout would have come in Minnesota instead of Philadelphia. He points to that spring with Minnesota as the first time he felt like the same pitcher who had impressed scouts as a draft prospect.
“It was the beginning of my delivery getting back to what it looked like in college. My stuff was coming out better and more explosively, getting ugly swings again, good positive signs.
“If you look at me now vs. Cape Cod and early in my career … I now look a lot more similar to my college career than how I looked in Cincinnati and Colorado. I’ve completely shed some of that early minor league stuff that I was given.”
When considering why free agent Jeff Hoffman is getting attention as a starter, I dug into my old scouting notes/video for this dandy from the Cape on July 17, 2013.
7.2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 11 K
He was sitting 93-97 mph with life, dropping hammers and mixing in a few changeups. pic.twitter.com/dJPWK5BMxN
Hoffman’s stuff was so nasty during his time in the prospect-filled Cape Cod League that watching him pitch there in 2013 remains among the most impressive amateur starts I have scouted.
But there is one area where Hoffman clearly exceeds even that early version of himself. He has the Twins to thank for unlocking the velocity that has made the slider his signature pitch.
“Pete Maki [Twins pitching coach in 2023] said let’s try a cutter. Throw it like a fastball then flick left at the end. It was terrible but it was 89 miles per hour in a bullpen session. ‘Oh s—, that works!’ It was just a chase to repeat the velo, even if I gave up a home run, just throw it 89 miles per hour and call it a slider. Day by day, chasing that … sometimes it just takes a mental cue, and you are behind the ball instead of beside it [at release].”
Armed with a mid-90s fastball and an upper-80s slider and split when he joined the Phillies’ bullpen, Hoffman was ready to be unleashed.
“Fastball, slider, split all feel the same out of my hand, just the grip changes,” Hoffman said. “They all come out like I’m throwing 100 [mph] down the middle and the grip and spins take care of the movement. The force on which fingers is the key.”
He thinks of his arsenal as four fastballs that all move in different directions. “My splitter is no longer [an] off-speed pitch, it’s just a different version of my fastball. My sinker is a bowling ball type fastball, the slider is one that moves left. I view my split as a split-finger fastball and not a forkball, that’s important. … It helps me to have a high velo floor on everything.”
Hoffman had a history of worse-than-average walk rates until landing with the Phillies. That, too, was more of an approach issue than a physical one. “There are command pitchers and stuff pitchers, don’t ask one to be the other.”
“Like in golf, aim for the center so you can miss a bit right or left,” Hoffman said. “I don’t think I’m a command pitcher but I’m not bad at throwing strikes. I’m going to beat you because it’s too hard for the hitter to make the decision.”
You probably don’t expect a late-inning, fire-breathing reliever with swing-and-miss stuff to be that focused on throwing the ball in the strike zone, but it’s key to how Hoffman attacks.
“I think about the hitter being defensive to what I’m doing, not trying to perform the perfect pitch. It’s a game of swing decisions and I want to put pressure on those decisions. I can get swings off the plate because they know I’m challenging them and coming into the zone.”
Hoffman doesn’t look at a ton of dense information after the game, instead he measures himself by three metrics: in-zone miss rate, zone rate, and barrel rate. “I like to keep it 88 miles per hour and lower. If I start giving up 95-plus [mph exit velo batted balls], all it takes is the right trajectory and it could be out of the park. Late in the game, you can’t be giving that up. Starters are told the solo home run won’t kill you. As a reliever, the solo home run kills you.
“What I’ve taken from all the stats, video, study, and Edgertronic video is that the way the ball comes out of your hand helps you really understand why the pitches move the way they do. It makes it easier to make adjustments and it’s a game of adjustments. You don’t necessarily have your best stuff every night but need to make it work.”
Starter or reliever?
While Hoffman ranks near the top of the list of relievers in this winter’s class, there is growing industry chatter that teams are kicking the tires on him as a starter — if he’s interested in signing on for a new role.
“I think I would be a great starter if given that opportunity again,” Hoffman said. “It was cool seeing what [Reynaldo Lopez and Jordan Hicks] did last year and, for me with how healthy I am and what I’ve done the last few years with my arsenal, it’s an interesting thought. … It makes sense that guys with deeper arsenals than most relievers have found success.”
Hoffman understands that returning to a major league rotation for the first time since Colorado moved him to the bullpen following the 2019 season would be a unique test. He also knows there is an unmatched feeling to pitching in the pressure-packed high-leverage situations he has thrived in the past two seasons.
“Until it got brought back up [by interested teams], I assumed that ship had sailed. … It would be totally different than the first go round. I feel like I’m 24 years old again. … I’m moving the way I’m supposed to now. I view [starting] as a great challenge. I’m as healthy as I’ve ever been. I would welcome the opportunity. … I love pitching out of the bullpen and late in games, too.”
He’s open to a new career twist, but he’s also quite happy with who has become.
“All things being equal, I want to get the last out.”
What Hoffman wants this winter
Hoffman has more to weigh this winter than signing as a starting pitcher or as a reliever.
During his time in Philadelphia, he became accustomed to pitching in the biggest spots for one of the best teams in baseball, in front of one of the most passionate fan bases in the sport. Those factors make a return to the Phillies a strong possibility.
“It’s hard to even explain what it feels like pitching in Philly, because of the noise, how in tune with the game [the fans] are, it feels like the field surface is alive,” he said. “When the big moments happen, you can hear it from the ground up, like the stadium has the same heartbeat as you.”
If Hoffman does leave the Phillies for a new team, he’ll be looking for an organization with similar priorities.
“The thing that’s most important to me is being on a contender, playing deep into October,” he said. “Playing meaningful baseball, it makes the clubhouse that much more enjoyable when everyone is playing for the same thing. That’s what I want out of my next situation.”