Darrin Chiaverini

Darrin Chiaverini
Sport(s) American football
Current position
Title Co-Offensive Coordinator / Recruiting Coordinator / Receivers
Team Colorado
Conference Pac-12 Conference
Biographical details
Born (1977-10-12) October 12, 1977
Corona, California
Alma mater University of Colorado
Playing career
1995-1998 Colorado
1999-2000 Cleveland Browns
2001 Dallas Cowboys
2002 Atlanta Falcons
2004-2006 Austin Wranglers (AFL)
Position(s) Wide receiver
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2007 Mt. San Antonio College (WRs)
2008 Mt. San Antonio College (Co-OC)
2009 UCLA (Assistant ST)
2010-2013 Riverside City College (Assoc. HC/Co-OC/STs)
2014 Texas Tech (STs)
2015 Texas Tech (STs/Outside WRs)
2016 Colorado (Co-OC/WR's/Recruiting Coordinator)

Darrin Chiaverini (born October 12, 1977) is an American football assistant coach and former wide receiver in the National Football League for the Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys and the Atlanta Falcons. He was formerly the special teams coordinator and outside wide receivers coach for Texas Tech prior to joining Colorado.[1]

Early years

Prior to his arrival at the University of Colorado, Chiaverini led the state of California in receptions with 88 and had 1,188 yards receiving in 1994 while attending Corona High School in Corona, California. Chiaverini was inducted into the Corona High School Hall Of Fame on October 13, 2010.

College career

Chiaverini played at the college level from 1995-1998 for Colorado at the wide receiver position. In 1998, he won the inaugural Buffalo Heart Award given to the Colorado Buffalo player that best "demonstrates grit, determination and toughness."[2] During Chiaverini's tenure, Colorado had two 10 win seasons. The Buffaloes won three bowl games during this time - the 1996 Cotton Bowl, the 1996 Holiday Bowl, and 1998 Aloha Bowl. Chiaverini was team captain for the Buffs in 1998.

Professional career

Chiaverini was selected in the fifth round (148th overall) of the 1999 NFL Draft by the Cleveland Browns. He ranked 5th among NFL rookies in 1999 with 44 catches, 487 yards, and four touchdowns. He holds the Browns' record for most catches by a rookie in a game with 10 receptions against the Jacksonville Jaguars.[1] On August 28, 2001, he was traded to the Dallas Cowboys in exchange for a conditional seventh round draft choice (not exercised).

With the Dallas Cowboys he was a reserve player, recording 10 receptions for 107 yards and 2 touchdowns, before being waived on June 13, 2002.

On July 2, 2002, he was signed as a free agent by the Atlanta Falcons.[3] A quadricep injury limited to 7 games and no receptions during the season. After not being re-signed, he finished his NFL career with 62 catches for 662 yards and seven touchdowns.

Following his stint with the Falcons, Chiaverini went into the Arena Football League where he played from 2004-2006. While there, he accrued 213 receptions for 1,944 yards and 33 touchdowns for the Austin Wranglers.

Coaching career

Junior college

Chiaverini began his coaching career in 2007 as the wide receiver coach for Mt. San Antonio College.[1]

In January 2010, Chiaverini was hired by Riverside City College (RCC) as associate head coach, Co-Offensive/Special Teams/Recruiting Coordinator. Chiaverini helped Riverside to a 10-1 record and a Central Division Championship during the 2010 season. The Riverside Tigers defeated Los Angeles Harbor College in the Central Division Championship Bowl in November 2010. RCC was 1-9 in 2009 and the 10-1 record in 2010 marked one of the biggest turnarounds in junior college football history.

In 2011, RCC recorded a perfect 11-0 record, snapping Mt. San Antonio College's 26 game win streak. Riverside College went on to capture back to back Central Division Championships and was ranked #1 in Southern California in the final poll conducted by the California Community College Athletic Association/CCCFCA Football Poll (11/13/2011). Riverside concluded their season with a 31-14 win over Saddleback College in the Golden State Bowl (11/19/2011). RCC led the nation in scoring offense and set two school records, averaging 49.6 points per game while scoring 64 touchdowns.

In 2013, Riverside's offense accrued 6,399 total yards, another school record. Additionally, Riverside's special teams ranked near the top in multiple categories since Chiaverini's arrival and have blocked a school record 22 kicks in 4 seasons as well as having had one of the top punt return units in the nation leading the conference in punt return yards 3 out of 4 seasons. Also in 2013, Riverside returned a school record 3 kickoff returns for touchdowns.

Chiaverini also served as the recruiting coordinator for the school. Riverside transferred 42 players to Division I (NCAA) schools from 2010-2013. Riverside went 40-5 over those 4 seasons and won 3 conference titles and 4 Bowl Championships and 24 consecutive home wins. Chiaverini also served as the special teams Coordinator in the East-West Shrine Game under former NFL Head Coach Jerry Glanville in 2013 and 2014 for the East Team.[4]

Division I

In 2009, Chiaverini was the assistant special teams coach under Frank Gansz, Jr. for the UCLA Bruins. UCLA's special teams ranked among the best in the Pacific-10 Conference in 2009. UCLA went on to defeat Temple 30-21 in the 2009 EagleBank Bowl in Washington, D.C..

Chiaverini was named the special teams coordinator for Texas Tech on January 16, 2013, becoming the first full-time special teams coach at the school since 2009. In 2014 Texas Tech improved from last in the conference in Net Punting in the Big 12 Conference in 2013 to 2nd in the Conference in 2014 with a 42.2 Net Average. Texas Tech also Ranked 2nd in Kickoff Coverage in 2014 with a net average of 40 yds with Oklahoma and Kansas St. During the 2014 season, Kicker Ryan Bustin set the school record for field goals made with 50. Texas Tech was also plus 3 in the NCAA in +/- ratio in 2014 on Special Teams.[1] In 2015, Chiaverini was named the outside wide receivers coach in addition to his special teams duties. In 2015 Darrin Chiaverini was 1 of 30 Coaches in the NCAA selected to the NFL-NCAA Coaches Academy in Louisville, Kentucky. In 2015 Texas Tech's Special Teams ranked 12th in the nation in Special Teams Efficiency according to ESPN. Ranking was based on the point contributions of each unit to team's scoring margin, on per play basis. ESPN ranked Texas Tech's offense 2nd in the nation in Offensive Efficiency. Texas Tech's offense set a school record in 2015 with 596 points scored breaking the previous record set in 2008. Texas Tech's offense finished 2nd in the NCAA in scoring (46.6 points per game) and total offense 594.5 yards per game). Wide Receiver / Kick Returner Jakeem Grant was 5th in the nation in Kickoff Return yards with 1017 yards and tied a school record with 2 kickoff returns for touchdowns in 2015. Grant garnered 2nd team All-America honors from the Associated Press, Sports Illustrated and CBS and was named Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week twice in 2015. Freshman placekicker Clayton Hatfield ranked 8th in the nation and 1st in the Big-12 in Field Goal Percentage 0.875%. Punter Taylor Symmank finished his career Top 2 in school history with over 43 yards per punt. Texas Tech did not have a field goal or punt blocked during the 2014 and 2015 seasons.

Chiaverini departed Texas Tech for his alma mater Colorado in December 2015 being named Co-Offensive Coordinator / Recruiting Coordinator / Wide Receivers.[5]

Personal life

Darrin Chiaverini completed his bachelor's degree in communications in 2006 from the University of Colorado. He went on to complete his Master's degree in Human Performance and Sport Sciences in 2009 from New Mexico Highlands University. He resides in Boulder, Colorado, with his wife Shannon and their two children, Curtis and Kaylie Chiaverini.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Darrin Chiaverini Named Special Teams Coordinator". Texas Tech University. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  2. Ringo, Kyle. "Colorado football: Buffalo Heart Award key part of senior day at CU". Buffzone.com. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  3. http://a.espncdn.com/nfl/columns/pasquarelli_len/1401421.html
  4. "East Team Heach Coach". Shriners Hospitals for Children. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  5. Munsterteiger, Adam. Twitter https://twitter.com/adamcm777/status/676848631433981953. Retrieved 15 December 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)

External links

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