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Marcus Freeman

Marcus Freeman

American football player and coach (born 1986)

7 min read

Marcus Louis Freeman (born January 10, 1986) is an American football coach and former linebacker who is the 30th head football coach at the University of Notre Dame. He previously served as the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at Notre Dame in 2021. Freeman was also an assistant coach at the University of Cincinnati, Purdue University, Kent State University, and Ohio State University.

Freeman played college football at Ohio State and was drafted by the Chicago Bears in the fifth round of the 2009 NFL draft, but was released before the regular season. He then served on practice squads for the Buffalo Bills and Houston Texans. Following the 2009 season, he retired from his playing career due to a heart condition.

Early life and education

Marcus Freeman was born at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio. Freeman's mother, Chong Freeman, is from South Korea, and met his father, Michael Freeman, an African American, while he was serving in the U.S. Air Force and then moved to Ohio in 1976. He has an older brother, Michael Jr.

Freeman attended Wayne High School in Huber Heights, Ohio. He totaled 152 tackles, including 29 behind the line of scrimmage, and eight sacks as a junior. As a senior, he was rated as one of the top three overall prospects in Ohio and was named to the Parade All-American Team after being credited with 127 tackles, four sacks, three forced fumbles, and three fumble recoveries as a senior. Freeman was a four-year starter and a two-time first-team All-Ohio selection. He was also part of the track and field team, competing in the 4 × 100 metres relay and throwing the shot and discus. As a freshman, Freeman was part of the team that won the OHSAA track and field championship.

College playing career

2004 season

Freeman finished his freshman season in 2004 with four tackles (one solo) while playing in 13 games.

2005 season

Freeman was redshirted in 2005 after injuring his knee in the Buckeyes' first game against Miami (OH).

2006 season

During the 2006 season, Freeman made 71 tackles while playing in 13 games, 11 of which he started, and was second on the team with six pass break-ups and two interceptions.

2007 season

In 2007, Freeman was a second-year starting linebacker and a part of three special units. He was later named second-team All-Big Ten after he totaled 109 tackles, 9.5 tackles for loss, and five pass deflections.

2008 season

In 2008, Freeman started all 13 games for the Buckeyes, tallying 84 tackles (39 solo), 9.5 tackles for loss, four pass breakups, a fumble recovery, and 3.5 sacks. For his efforts, he was named to the All-Big Ten second team for a second straight year and was an Academic All-Big Ten selection. Following the season, Freeman declared for the 2009 NFL draft.

Freeman appeared in 51 games (37 starts) throughout his career. He started 26 games at weak-side linebacker and 11 games at strong-side linebacker and was a two-time Second-team All-Big Ten selection. He finished his career 19th on the school's all-time tackle list with 268 stops (140 solo) and was credited with 21.5 TFLs, 6.0 sacks, 15 PBUs, 2 forced fumbles and 1 fumble recovery.

College statistics

Professional playing career

Pre-draft

Chicago Bears (2009)

Freeman was drafted in the fifth round of the 2009 NFL draft by the Chicago Bears, and appeared in all four Bears preseason games. On September 4, he was waived.

Buffalo Bills (2009)

On September 22, Freeman signed onto the Buffalo Bills practice squad. The team released him on October 5.

Houston Texans (2009)

On November 4, Freeman signed with the Houston Texans practice squad, where he finished out the 2009 season.

Retirement

Before signing with the Indianapolis Colts, Freeman was diagnosed with an enlarged heart condition by a team physician in February 2010. He retired May 1.

Coaching career

Ohio State (2010)

Freeman served as a graduate assistant at Ohio State in 2010.

Kent State (2011–2012)

In January 2011, Freeman was hired as the linebackers coach for Kent State, a position he would hold until 2012.

Purdue (2013–2016)

On January 18, 2013, Freeman was hired as the linebackers coach for the Purdue Boilermakers. In 2016, Freeman was promoted to co-defensive coordinator. Freeman helped transform the linebackers group into a strength for the Boilermakers, coaching future NFL players Danny Ezechukwu and Ja'Whaun Bentley.

Cincinnati (2017–2020)

On December 13, 2016, Freeman joined the Cincinnati Bearcats football staff as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach. After being one of the first hires by Luke Fickell, Freeman transformed the Bearcats into one of the best defenses of the American Athletic Conference (AAC). In 2018, Freeman's defense led the AAC in rushing defense, scoring defense and total defense and ranked among the Top-15 in the NCAA FBS in all three categories. The next season, the Bearcats finished atop the 2019 AAC ranks in scoring defense for the second-straight season and ranked among the league's top three in rushing and total defense.

Prior to the end of the 2020 season, Freeman had declined a handful of positions to remain at Cincinnati including offers of returning to Ohio State as linebackers coach, linebackers coach for the Tennessee Titans, and defensive coordinator at Michigan State, among other offers. Freeman had been considered by a number of national outlets as one of the rising stars of the college coaching ranks.

Freeman was a finalist for the Broyles Award and named the 247Sports Defensive Coordinator of the Year during the 2020 season.

Notre Dame (2021–present)

On January 8, 2021, Freeman was hired as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Head coach Brian Kelly said Freeman was the top choice for the defensive coordinator position. Prior to this hiring, it was rumored that Freeman would join LSU in the same role.

2021 season

Following the 2021 regular season, Brian Kelly left Notre Dame to become the head coach for LSU. On December 3, 2021, Freeman was selected to replace him, becoming the 32nd head coach in program history. Freeman took control immediately, coaching the Irish in their Fiesta Bowl loss to No. 9 Oklahoma State.

2022 season

Freeman opened the 2022 season with losses to No. 2 Ohio State and Marshall, thus becoming first head coach in Notre Dame history to start his career with three losses.

He gained his first win the following week against the California Golden Bears. Freeman's Irish would go on to finish the regular season ranked 19th with a record of 8–4, including a win over No. 5 Clemson. They were awarded a berth in the Gator Bowl, where they defeated South Carolina 45–38.

2023 season

Analysts anticipated the 2023 season would be a step forward for Freeman's Fighting Irish. During the offseason, they secured the top-ranked quarterback in the transfer portal, Wake Forest's Sam Hartman, and they entered the season ranked 13th. After beginning the season 4–0 with comfortable wins over Navy, Tennessee State, North Carolina State, and Central Michigan, the Irish rose to 9th in the rankings. They fell at home the next week to Ohio State, 17–14, in a heartbreaking loss that saw Notre Dame with only 10 players on the field, instead of the usual 11, twice on Ohio State's game winning drive. They rebounded the next week with a thrilling win over No. 17 Duke, but then lost the following game to No. 25 Louisville. One week later, Irish enjoyed a season-defining 48–20 victory over No. 10 USC and Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Caleb Williams. Following a bye week, Freeman's Irish defeated Pittsburgh and fell to unranked Clemson before winning against Wake Forest and Stanford to finish the regular season 9–3. They faced No. 19 Oregon State in the Sun Bowl, winning 40–8 to conclude the season 10–3 and ranked 14th. The 2023 campaign was defined by strong performances from star running back Audric Estime, quarterback Sam Hartman, tight end Mitchell Evans, and safety Xavier Watts, but it was also marred by poor play at the wide receiver position, especially following early injuries to veteran receivers Jayden Thomas and Deion Colzie. Evans’ injury against Pittsburgh left the Irish without any reliable pass catchers, and the team struggled when unable to run the ball at will.

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Content sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0

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