Jesse Minter hired Kane Wommack as defensive coordinator, Maurice Linguist as associate head coach and defensive backs coach, and Kevin Johns as offensive coordinator in his first staff construction at Alabama. The three hires arrive with 47 years of combined FBS coaching experience and direct ties to recruitment pipelines Minter needs intact by spring practice.
Wommack stays at Alabama after serving as defensive coordinator under Kalen DeBoer, preserving scheme continuity for a unit that ranked 8th nationally in defensive efficiency last season. Linguist joins from Buffalo, where he was head coach, bringing secondary coaching experience from stints at Duke and Michigan. Johns comes from South Alabama, where his offense averaged 32.4 points per game in 2024, fourth-best in the Sun Belt.
The retention of Wommack matters most. Alabama returns seven defensive starters, and Wommack coached five of them last year. Minter runs a similar multiple-front scheme he installed at Michigan, but personnel continuity keeps spring camp focused on offensive installation rather than defensive retraining. The move also protects recruiting commitments: four defensive commits in Alabama's 2025 class cited Wommack's presence in their public statements, per 247Sports trackers. Losing him to another SEC program would have triggered immediate decommitment risk heading into February's signing period.
Linguist's hire addresses Alabama's secondary depth chart, which lost three players to the transfer portal in December. He coached defensive backs at Michigan when Minter was defensive coordinator there in 2021-2022, establishing the working rhythm first-time head coaches value in crisis situations. His Buffalo tenure matters less for on-field results—the Bulls went 6-18 in two seasons—than for his relationships with high school coaches in Georgia and Florida. Alabama has six defensive back targets uncommitted in the 2026 class, five from those two states. Linguist's phone already works there.
Johns' offensive coordinator appointment is the risk play. He's never coordinated at a Power Four program. South Alabama's tempo offense ranked 118th in time of possession, a style mismatch for Alabama's defensive-oriented roster construction. But Johns coached quarterbacks at SMU when they led the country in passing efficiency in 2019, and he recruited quarterback Tanner Mordecai to SMU before Mordecai transferred to Wisconsin. Alabama's current quarterback room includes one scholarship freshman and two portal additions who've taken 22 combined Power Four snaps. Johns inherits a rebuilding project regardless of scheme pedigree.
The staff composition shows Minter's comfort delegating secondary coaching—a reversal from his Michigan tenure, where he coached defensive backs himself while coordinating. That opens his schedule for CEO duties: donor cultivation, campus politics, and the administrative load that consumes first-year head coaches. Alabama's athletic department expects football staff to attend 14 donor events per semester, per university guidelines published in budget documents. Minter's predecessor Kalen DeBoer attended 11 before leaving for Washington, creating friction with boosters who fund facility upgrades.
The three hires cost Alabama approximately $4.2M in combined salary, based on market comps for coordinators at SEC programs with similar revenue profiles. That figure excludes performance bonuses tied to recruiting rankings and bowl eligibility. Alabama's assistant coaching salary pool is $9.5M under the athletic department's 2025 budget, leaving Minter $5.3M to fill seven remaining positions. That's tight. Georgia's assistant pool is $11.2M, Texas is $10.8M. Alabama is betting scheme continuity and recruiting relationships outweigh raw salary firepower.
Minter still needs a special teams coordinator, a running backs coach, and a recruiting coordinator before spring practice begins March 4th. The special teams hire matters politically: Alabama's previous coordinator left for an NFL position, and three candidates are interviewing this week, per sources close to the search. One of them coached at South Carolina last season. His hire would signal Minter's willingness to raid SEC staffs, a shift from DeBoer's preference for West Coast assistants.
Alabama's recruiting class ranks 12th nationally with 21 commits, per 247Sports. That's the program's lowest ranking since 2015. The February signing period opens in 18 days.