Report: Tom Allen closed his introductory press conference as Penn State’s new defensive coordinator

Tom Allen Quickly Immerses Himself as Penn State’s Defensive Coordinator

Penn State officially names Tom Allen as new defensive coordinator

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. | Tom Allen closed his introductory press conference as Penn State’s new defensive coordinator with a giant

smile. He scanned the room, said “We Are” into the microphone and banged the podium twice while standing up. “Love it,” he said,

walking away. It was also a little odd to see Allen wearing a black quarter-zip with Penn State branding on it, though he otherwise

seemed completely comfortable with his new role. For what it’s worth, the longtime Indiana head coach proudly proclaimed that

Michael Penix Jr., his former quarterback, indeed scored on the controversial 2-point conversion play that ended Indiana’s 2000

upset of Penn State. Perhaps Allen’s insistence about Penix’s touchdown was just a display of fierce loyalty to his former players and

school, something that Penn State coach James Franklin has spoken at length about regarding assistant coaches. Yet Allen quickly

immersed himself at Penn State, joining the program’s Signing Day ceremony less than a month after Indiana fired him after seven

seasons as head coach. “You don’t control the clock of the timing of things, you respond, as you do with most things in life. I’m a

football coach, and I just love what I do. This opportunity presented itself, and this time frame was one that I immediately had interest

in,” Allen said Wednesday at Beaver Stadium. “For me, I really expected to get back into it once things happened as they did. [This is]

probably a little quicker than expected, but once again, that’s hard to control.” That script should sound familiar, as Penn State hired

previous defensive coordinator Manny Diaz with an even shorter buffer after Diaz was fired from Miami. Although Diaz is now the

head coach at Duke, and Diaz’s predecessor Brent Pry is the head coach at Virginia Tech, Allen isn’t necessarily thinking of this gig as a

similar stepping stone. “I’m not coming here for that purpose, I’ll tell you that. I’m coming here as the defensive coordinator.  I’m 53

years old. I’ve had some great opportunities. I am so fired up to be in this position at this place,” Allen said. “I can’t wait to be able to

have [defensive coordinator] as my focus and not the 10,000 other things that you have to do when you’re a head coach.” Franklin said

Penn State hires former Indiana coach Tom Allen to replace Manny Diaz as defensive  coordinator - pennlive.com

in early December that he sought a similar scheme and fit to what Diaz and Pry employed as defensive coordinator. Franklin also gave

additional consideration to someone with previous head-coaching experience. He got both with Allen, who had other opportunities

and got a big buyout from Indiana. Moving to another Big Ten program is a unique dynamic for Allen, too. Franklin extended the olive

branch this offseason to gauge Allen’s interest. The two even watched film of the 2023 Penn State-Indiana game during the interview

process. “Tom was in a position that he didn’t need to take this job. I wanted Tom very comfortable with what he was signing up for. I

wanted to be very comfortable with what I was signing up for,” Franklin said, adding that he was finally able to get some sleep after

finishing his recruiting class and hiring two coordinators. “I got coach [Andy Kotelnicki] and I got Tom Allen and everybody signed.

No drama. So I slept more than five hours last night, which was awesome.” Allen’s defined his defensive “DNA” as “takeaways, tackling

and effort,” which includes an aggressive that emphasizes making the quarterback process a lot of pre-snap information. Among the

many factors that attracted Franklin to Allen, the Penn State coach highlighted Indiana boasting the most-improved defense in the

country once Allen took over as defensive coordinator in 2016. Results declined during Allen’s head-coaching career, though Franklin

compared the situation to Diaz’s, who was unsuccessful as the head coach at Miami but guided elite defenses at Penn State. Franklin

was also impressed early in the process with how much of a “football guy” Allen is. As a head coach, Allen said, it’s easy to get rusty on

the inner workings of defense or a specific position group. But Franklin was adamant that Allen still “knows ball.” Franklin has long

held a public respect for Allen, and now with the two working together, the feeling is mutual. “Class oozes from this place and coach

Franklin,” Allen said.

 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*