Georgia Southern hasn’t been too bad since Clay Helton became the Eagles’ head coach.
The Eagles went 6-6 during each of his first two regular seasons there and reached a bowl game in both of those years. They were close to reaching the Sun Belt Championship in 2024, Helton’s third season, as the Eagles went 8-5 overall and 6-2 in conference play. They ended the season with a loss to Sam Houston in the New Orleans Bowl.
Here’s more info about Helton.
What’s Georgia Southern Head Coach Clay Helton’s Salary?
Clay Helton agreed to a contract extension this offseason that gives him approximately a $1 million raise per year after he made $805,000 in 2024, according to ESPN. This new deal ends after the 2029 season.
Helton signed a five-year deal in 2022 that had a base salary of $700,000 in Year 1, and that was going to increase by $50,000 each year.
Clay Helton’s Coaching History
Years | Team | Position |
2022-present | Georgia Southern | HC |
2016-21 | USC | HC |
2013-15 | USC | OC/QBs/Interim HC |
2012 | USC | QBs/Pass Game Coordinator |
2010-11 | USC | QBs |
2007-09 | Memphis | OC/QBs |
2003-06 | Memphis | WRs |
2000-02 | Memphis | RBs |
1997-99 | Houston | RBs |
1996 | Duke | RBs |
1995 | Duke | GA |
What’s Georgia Southern Head Coach Clay Helton’s Record?
Clay Helton is 66-43 in the FBS as a head coach. He’s 20-19 at Georgia Southern in the past three seasons with three bowl appearances.
As the head coach at USC, Helton went 46-24. Helton is 2-6 overall in bowl games.
How Old Is Georgia Southern Head Coach Clay Helton?
Clay Helton is 52 years old.
Georgia Southern Head Coach Clay Helton’s Background
Helton has a good amount of experience coaching on the offensive side of the ball.
He began his career as a graduate assistant at Duke in 1995 before coaching running backs there the following year. He kept working with RBs at Houston (1997-99) and Memphis (2000-02). He then coached wide receivers at Memphis from 2003-06 before becoming the team’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach from 2007-09.
He then moved on to USC, where he coached quarterbacks from 2010-12 and became the team’s passing game coordinator in 2012. He was the team’s OC and QBs coach from 2013-15 and served as an interim head coach twice during that stretch.
He was USC’s head coach from 2016-21. The beginning of his tenure there was fairly successful, as he led the team to a Rose Bowl win in 2016 and an appearance in the Cotton Bowl in 2017. While with the Trojans, he also coached standout players like Amon-Ra St. Brown, Alijah-Vera Tucker, Sam Darnold, and Adoreé Jackson.