Aaron Roderick

Aaron Roderick (December 20, 1972) is an American college football coach and former player. Roderick played as a wide receiver at Ricks College and BYU.

Aaron Roderick
Current position
TitleQuarterback Coach & Passing Game Coordinator
TeamBYU
Biographical details
Born (1972-12-20) December 20, 1972
Bountiful, Utah
Playing career
1994–1995Ricks JC
1996–1998BYU
Position(s)Wide Receiver
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1999–2001BYU (GA)
2002Snow JC (RB)
2003–2004Southern Utah (OC/QB/RC)
2005–2009Utah (WR)
2010Utah (Co-OC/WR)
2011Utah (WR)
2012–2013Utah (PGC/WR)
2014Utah (QB)
2015-2016Utah (Co-OC/QB)
2017BYU (offensive consultant)
2018-presentBYU (PGC/QB)

Coaching career

In 2010, Aaron Roderick accepted the position as Utah's co-offensive coordinator and receivers coach.[1] This is the same position that he was offered before the 2009 season, which he briefly accepted before opting to go to the Washington to be the receivers coach. A few weeks later he returned to Utah, citing personal reasons, to be the receivers coach.[2]

Roderick began his coaching career at BYU, his alma mater, as a graduate assistant for the offense. He then spent a year at Snow College before getting hired by Southern Utah University. He spent two years at SUU as the offensive coordinator, recruiting coordinator, and running backs coach. After those two years he left for the University of Utah where he was the receivers coach for 5 years. [3]

After a brief hiatus from coaching, Roderick returned to his alma mater, joining the coaching staff at BYU in 2018 as the passing game coordinator and quarterbacks coach. In 2019, Roderick was a 2019 Broyles Award nominee, an annual award given to the nations top assistant coach.[4]

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gollark: Maybe the design was bad or maybe people messed up the execution. But a good design factors in some degree of problems in the execution side.
gollark: The existence of working ways to modify them as needed isn't guaranteed.
gollark: Yes. It's still a bad fire extinguisher regardless of how good the designers thought/claimed they were being.
gollark: Systems have no intentions. People in them might, and the designers probably did, and the designers also likely claimed some intention, and people also probably ascribe some to them. But that doesn't mean that the system itself "wants" to do any of those.

References

  1. "Utah Utes football: Kyle Whittingham shakes up coaching staff". Deseret News. Retrieved February 24, 2010.
  2. "Aaron Roderick Returns to Utah". Official Website of Utah Athletics. Archived from the original on March 5, 2009. Retrieved February 24, 2010.
  3. "Aaron Roderick Bio". Official Website of Utah Athletics. Archived from the original on January 7, 2010. Retrieved February 24, 2010.
  4. https://www.heraldextra.com/sports/college/byu/football/byu-coach-aaron-roderick-named-2019-broyles-award-nominee/article_063b3f99-ac6a-5d8b-b22c-88b134b85bb6.html
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