Penn State's Bill O'Brien, in first year on job, named Big Ten coach of year

The Associated Press
November 28, 2012 at 1:18PM

PARK RIDGE, Ill. - Penn State head coach Bill O'Brien on Tuesday was named the Big Ten's coach of the year, earning allocates from fellow coaches and the sportswriters reporting on the conference.

O'Brien, then the New England Patriots' offensive coordinator, was hired earlier this year to replace Hall of Fame head coach Joe Paterno, who was fired last year in the aftermath of child sex abuse charges against now imprisoned assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.

O'Brien led the Nittany Lions to an 8-4 record, going 6-2 in conference play. His eight wins are the most by a first-year Penn State coach. Six Penn State players obtained first-team All-Big Ten status under his coaching.

"This is a fantastic honor; it's very humbling," O'Brien said in a statement. "Any time you are named coach of the year, it has a lot to do with two groups of people — it's your coaching staff and obviously your players."

In addition to coach of the year honors, the Big Ten on Tuesday named Ohio State quarterback Braxton Miller offensive player of the year and his Buckeye teammate, John Simon, defensive player of the year.

Miller, who averaged 275 yards in total offense per game, rushed for 1,271 yards this season, ranking him second in that category in conference record books.

"I'm grateful for this moment and this honor," Miller said. "And I am very thankful for the coaches we have and for their working so hard with us."

Simon started 37 consecutive games for the Buckeyes before a knee injury sidelined him for the final game of the season, a 26-21 win over Michigan.

ADVERTISEMENT

The defensive end called his honor a team award, crediting the play of his defensive teammates.

"I praise those guys for helping me get this and that is what it is all about," he said.

Penn State defensive end Deion Barnes was named the conference's freshman player of the year. A redshirt freshman, Barnes led the Nittany Lions with six sacks. He was tied for fourth in the conference with three forced fumbles.

"It feels good," Barnes said of the honor. "But I am looking forward to next season. I need to play better than I did this year."

about the writer

about the writer

More from Sports

See More
card image
Carlos Gonzalez/The Minnesota Star Tribune

Anthony Edwards hit the go-ahead basket with 16.8 seconds left and the Wolves won after trailing by as many as 19 points.

card image
card image