Sources: Mario Cristobal leaving Oregon Ducks football program for Miami Hurricanes coaching job

ByADAM RITTENBERG AND CHRIS LOW
December 6, 2021, 11:59 AM

Mario Cristobal is heading home to the U.

Cristobal is leaving  Oregon to become Miami's head football coach, sources told ESPN. 

Sources told ESPN that Cristobal's contract at Miami will be in the range of $8 million annually and that Miami also plans to pay his $9 million buyout at Oregon.

Oregon acknowledged in a statement that Cristobal had informed the university he had accepted the head-coaching position at another school, but it did not disclose the name of that university. 

"We appreciate all of Mario's accomplishments and hard work here at Oregon, and we wish him and his family all the best in their next chapter," athletic director Rob Mullens said in a statement. "The University of Oregon is a prestigious academic institution with a football program that is well-positioned for continued success in the future, and the search is underway to find another excellent football coach to lead and support our student-athletes moving forward."

Oregon said an interim coach would be named "as soon as possible."

Cristobal informed Ducks players of his decision at a team meeting Monday in Eugene. Just before the Oregon meeting, Miami announced the firing of coach Manny Diaz and a forthcoming hire of Diaz's replacement. Cristobal is a Miami native, was a Hurricanes offensive lineman for two national championship teams, and a Miami assistant from 2004 to 2006.

Miami has aggressively pursued Cristobal for several weeks to replace Diaz, and it ramped up its efforts late last week. Oregon presented Cristobal with an enhanced contract offer to remain, which the coach acknowledged after Friday night's loss to Utah in the Pac-12 championship game in Las Vegas. But Cristobal did not immediately accept Oregon's offer, which The Oregonian reported was then withdrawn.

Miami's next step is hiring an athletic director, and the school continues to target Clemson's Dan Radakovich for the position. Sources close to the situation expect Radakovich to meet with Cristobal before any decision is made, and an athletic director hire isn't expected at Miami until midweek at the earliest. Radakovich, who has led Clemson's athletic department for the past nine years, earned his business degree at Miami and began his career there in athletics administration in 1983.

Cristobal, 51, went 35-13 at Oregon with two Pac-12 championships, a Rose Bowl win two years ago and three Pac-12 North titles. He joined the Ducks staff in 2017 as co-offensive coordinator and offensive line coach, then was promoted to head coach when Willie Taggart departed for Florida State. Cristobal served as Florida International's coach from 2007 to 2012, going 27-47 overall.

Oregon assistants have been out recruiting for the team but are being informed of Cristobal's decision. Cristobal spent Sunday recruiting for Oregon and appeared briefly on a videoconference for the team's Valero Alamo Bowl matchup against Oklahoma.

The Ducks lost a commitment in the 2022 class from ESPN 300 quarterback Tanner Bailey after news broke that Cristobal was leaving.

Bailey is a 6-foot-1, 190-pound quarterback from Gordo High School in Gordo, Alabama. He's the No. 139 recruit in the country and the No. 6 pocket passer overall. Bailey stayed committed to the Ducks after offensive coordinator Joe Moorhead left to take the Akron job, but opened up his recruitment once Cristobal was gone.

"I didn't see the Coach Cristobal thing happening, I don't think any of the recruits did, either. I think the coaches were confident he would stay, but I think at the end of the day, we all know Coach Cristobal and his situation," Bailey said. "He's a great husband, dad, coach, mentor, so everyone has a ton of respect for him. I think that decision is best for him being an alumni, his family's down there, his wife's family is down there. So, I think that's the best choice for him and we totally understand it and respect it."

Bailey said he wouldn't rule out signing in the early signing period, but it would likely be difficult to make another commitment before Dec. 15.

ESPN's Tom VanHaaren contributed to this report.

Sponsored Content by Taboola