DAVE ARANDA: FAILING NAVY PHYSICAL TURNED REDLANDS PRODUCT INTO COACHING WIZARD

Dave Aranda, a 1995 Redlands High School graduate, made his way to San Bernardino Valley, California Lutheran University-Thousand Oaks, Texas Tech (Lubbock), Hawaii, Houston, Southern Utah, Utah State and Wisconsin before landing a role as defensive coordinator at Louisiana State University. Now Aranda is head coach at Baylor University, 12-2 after winning the Sugar Bowl in his second full season.

At the time of this chat, August 2019, Dave Aranda was just starting his final season as an assistant coach at Louisiana State University. By season’s end, his name was on the minds of a few handfuls of major university programs who were in search of a new coach. Aranda eventually landed at Baylor.

BATON ROUGE, La. — Injury-prone, poor grades and not blessed with a gift for classroom activities wasn’t exactly a glorified pathway into a record-setting pay-day at Louisiana State University for football coach Dave Aranda.

After graduating Redlands High School in 1995, the devoted Los Angeles Rams’ fan had a different plan in mind.

“I enlisted in the Navy,” said Aranda, born in September 1976,  “after high school, but they wouldn’t take me. I couldn’t pass the physical.”

All those high school shoulder injuries had worked against him.

Fast forward over a quarter-century. He’s now head coach at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. When highly-successful Bears’ coach Matt Rhule landed an NFL head coaching job at Carolina, Aranda won the open position at Baylor.

Even as an assistant, Aranda was considered one of college football’s most well-known coaches. He was defensive coordinator and associate head coach to an LSU squad — head coach, former USC man Ed Orgeron — that’s located in the heart of football country.

That “heart” would be the Southeastern Conference. It’s the same SEC that houses such perennial powerhouses as Ole Miss, Georgia, Auburn, Florida and, of course, Alabama, to take on those LSU Tigers. A former Terrier player, not to mention a one time junior varsity coach, was on hand in that SEC.

“No doubt about it,” said Aranda on Aug. 1, 2019 which was LSU’s first official day of training camp. “I would not be here if I didn’t get hurt playing in high school.”

All of which led to failing that Navy physical. It could be one of the most off-the-charts stories in a rise to prominence in, well, ever.

Forget, at least for a minute, that Aranda has game-planned against a pair of Heisman Trophy winners, Louisville QB Lamar Jackson and Alabama RB Derrick Henry, or such bluntly-talented receivers as LSU’s Odell Beckham, Jr., USC’s JuJu Smith-Schuster and Alabama’s Amari Cooper.

For the record, Aranda was defensive coordinator at Wisconsin when the Badgers took on Beckham’s Tigers’ squad in 2015. That was one season before LSU snatched Aranda away from leading a nation’s top 10 Wisconsin defense.

Lots of college programs “snatched” him up — beginning with California Lutheran University-Thousand Oaks (where he was roommates with onetime Texas coach Tom Herman), then Texas Tech, followed by Southern Utah, Houston, Hawaii and Utah State before he followed Aggies’ coach Gary Anderson to Wisconsin.

“I didn’t play (football) at Cal Lu,” said Aranda, reflecting on his injury-prone shoulder.

How he worked his way up the ladder in the Kingsmen’s coaching system, though — first as a water boy and film guy as a freshman, coaching one outside linebacker during his sophomore year, jetting up to coaching two guys as a junior.

“I was pretty involved in my senior year,” he said.

ARANDA’S FIRST BIG BREAK

A funny thing happened, though, between 1999 and 2000. He was set to take on more responsibility under then-Kingsmen coach Sean Squires.

In a summer prior to its 2000 season, he spent a week-long trip to Lubbock — Texas Tech country — alongside another Cal Lu assistant, Cory Undlin, which turned into an invitation. The Cal Lu coaching combo was there to peer into a major college program in hopes of gleaning some better understanding to take on the likes of Whittier, Occidental and the University of Redlands.

Said Aranda: “We were ready to leave and they called me in. They told me they didn’t have a graduate assistant. Asked if I wanted that position.”

Aranda took the opening at Lubbock. Mike Leach, perhaps one of the most innovative play-callers in the country, was Red Raiders’ head coach. Under Leach’s watch, Aranda was part of two bowl-winning outcomes over three seasons.

Undlin, incidentally, wound up on the Philadelphia Eagles’ coaching staff, first went back to Cal Lutheran. Aranda’s Red Raiders, meanwhile, had some well-trained players.

“Our quarterback,” said Aranda, “was Kliff Kingsbury (eventual head coach for the Arizona Cardinals). Wes Welker (now-retired New England Patriots) was one of our receivers.”

Throw in Sonny Dykes and Art Briles, two other well-known coaches in the college football ranks, plus Greg McMackin and Ron Harris. Aranda was, thus, solidly surrounded by coaching talent and opportunity.

By 2003, Aranda’s Texas Tech GA days were over. It was off to a bunch of new digs — Cedar City, Utah; Honolulu; Houston; back Utah, in way-north Logan; Madison, Wis.; eventually, LSU’s home city, Baton Rouge.

His digs by 2020 was Baylor, down Waco, Texas, a head coaching spot he took while basking in the championship glow of LSU’s national championship victory over Clemson in January 2020. Wins came over fourth-ranked Oklahoma and highly-ranked Georgia in its two previous games.

That Redlands-based Navy recruiting office, located over by the old Mervyn’s department store, has long since spun around Aranda’s mind.

“I think I spent a year talking to that recruiting guy,” he said. And it hit hard he couldn’t pass that Navy physical. “If I’d have passed that physical, I’d have never gone to college.”

REDLANDS’ COACHING FELLOWSHIP

Aranda, who had a perfectly healthy sophomore season as a Redlands High linebacker in 1992, hit nothing but turbulence over his next two seasons. At least four shoulder surgeries killed off his playing time.

In fact, Terrier head coach Jim Walker and top assistant Miguel Olmedo shifted him from linebacker, where his contributions were best felt, to the offensive line — perhaps because there wasn’t as much contact.

“It didn’t matter,” said Aranda. “I wore a harness when I played. Every now and then, the shoulder would slip out. I’d have to put it back in.”

Olmedo raved about his prize player, Aranda, who was reduced to about 50 percent able-bodied. “Most guys wouldn’t even try to play,” said Olmedo. “He was just this quiet guy that kept on trying, no matter how badly it hurt.”

It was Walker and Olmedo that put Aranda up to attending classes at San Bernardino Valley College, got him that department store job, plus coaching Redlands’ JV squad alongside the likes of now-deceased assistants, Mike Mauger and Sam Richey.

By 1996, Aranda was off to Thousand Oaks – a home base for the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys for pre-season workouts.

“The fellowship I had with those guys,” said Aranda, referring to Mauger, Richey, Walker, Olmedo and veteran line coach George Tesla, “taught me for the first time that I could make sure football didn’t end after (playing in) high school. We were so tight. I’ll never forget going to scout games for the Varsity.”

It’s unknown who paid that gas bill driving from Redlands to Poway, California. Aranda just didn’t say. It’s the home of onetime Univ. San Diego coach Bill Williams, who was running coaching clinics.

“I was helping him make the videos, doing the (demonstrations),” said Aranda. “That guy had stacks of video from the floor to the ceiling.”

RAMS DAYS COME FULL CIRCLE

All of which played into those little-boy days growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area community of Union City, 1980s, 30 minutes south of Oakland. It’s where Aranda’s family lived during his elementary school days.

His NFL rooting interests centered around the Los Angeles Rams, then coached by fabled former USC coach John Robinson. When the Rams played San Francisco, Aranda suffered through the 49ers’ domination.

“They had Jerry Rice, Roger Craig, Joe Montana, Bubba Paris, Guy McIntyre,” he said, rattling off a string of the 49ers’ best players. “We had (Rams’ QB) Jim Everett.”

Aranda described himself as “Super Fan.”

“Rice would run routes all over the field,” he said, “and catch a pass in front of the Rams’ defenders, then run around them for a touchdown. It made me sick.”

Even then, he was diagnosing defensive schemes to try and slow up that so-called West Coast offense.

“Jimmy Johnson showed up (as head coach) in Dallas and started those attacking defenses,” he said. Aranda hadn’t yet started cracking into high school defensive schemes.

Skip to nearly two decades into the 2000s. By 2018, Aranda had signed the richest-ever assistant coach’s contract in history at LSU — $10 million over four years — making him, perhaps, one of the best-suited coaches to try and crack those opposition offensive attacks.

“Things have changed so much,” he said, “in the sport since those 49er days when Joe Montana was throwing to Jerry Rice.”

As for Robinson, consider this:

“I just left him about 30 minutes ago,” said Aranda during that Aug. 1, 2019 chat. “I’m telling you, he loves football so much. (Robinson) moved his family from San Diego to Baton Rouge. He’s in his 80s. He’s been here for about a week. He’s helping us coach here.”

Aranda, that bad shoulder still killing him, can’t even throw a football during those LSU linebacker drills.

“It’s okay,” he said. “I usually have a GA do it.”

HEAD COACHING RECORD

2020 – 2-7, 2-7

2021 – 12-2, 7-2  (won Sugar Bowl)

2022 – 6-7, 4-5

2023 – 3-9, 2-7

2024 – 8-4, 6-3

Totals – 31-29, 21-24

 

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