Middle Tennessee State University Athletics
Football
Mason, Derek

Derek Mason
- Title:
- Head Coach
- Email:
- Kim.Spurlock@mtsu.edu
- Phone:
- 615-898-2926
Updated January 2025
A veteran of 30 years of collegiate coaching experience, Derek Mason is in his second season as head coach of Middle Tennessee. Mason was hired to lead the Blue Raider program on Dec. 6, 2023 as MTSU’s 16th head coach all-time.
Mason, who spent the 2023 season working as an analyst for the SEC Network, had seven years experience as a head coach prior to being named the leader of the Blue Raiders. Prior to his television job, he coached in 2022 at Oklahoma State as the defensive coordinator and helped the Cowboys to a spot in the Guaranteed Rate Bowl.
Prior to his stint at Oklahoma State, Mason served as the defensive coordinator at Auburn for the 2021 season. The Mason-led Tigers improved by 14.5% in third down defense from 2020 to move up 84 places in the final FBS rankings. Auburn also improved from the previous season in tackles for loss by 1.4 per game (up 65 places), rushing defense by 35 yards per game (up 33 places), first downs allowed by three per game (up 32 places), fourth down defense by 10% (up 21 places), sacks by .33 per game (up 13 places), scoring defense by three points per game (up 11 places) and total defense by 32 yards per game (up two places).
From 2014-2020, Mason was the head coach at Vanderbilt where he became just the second coach in program history to lead a team to multiple bowl appearances. His 2018 team won six games and capped the regular season with a third straight victory over rival Tennessee and fifth in seven years. It also marked Vanderbilt’s second bowl appearance in three years under Mason.
Mason guided Vanderbilt to its eighth postseason appearance in 2016 and finished the regular season 6-6, including four wins over the final six games. The season featured marquee SEC victories over Georgia, Ole Miss and No. 24 Tennessee. Inside linebacker Zach Cunningham became Vanderbilt’s first consensus All-American in more than three decades, sweeping first-team honors.
The architect of Stanford’s vaunted 3-4 defense, Mason spent four seasons with the Cardinal and was elevated to defensive coordinator in 2011 after leading the program to a pair of Rose Bowl appearances and consecutive Pac-12 titles. Mason’s elite defensive units at Stanford ranked among the NCAA’s best in defensive efficiency for three consecutive seasons.
While facing seven ranked opponents in 2013, Stanford ranked third nationally in rushing defense (89.4 ypg), 10th in scoring defense (19.0 ppg) and 16th in total offense (343.1 ypg). The Cardinal was also one of only five teams to allow less than 100 rushing yards per game in 2013 and ranked fifth nationally with 44 sacks and seventh with 109 tackles for loss.
In 2012, Mason was a finalist for the Broyles Award, given annually to the nation’s top assistant coach, after directing a Stanford defense widely considered the program’s finest unit ever.
Mason’s leadership paved the way to a historic defensive output, breaking Stanford’s single-season record with 57 sacks and pacing the Pac-12 in scoring defense, total defense and rushing defense, and helped the Cardinal to an 11-2 season capped off with a Rose Bowl title. In 11 of 14 games, Stanford held its opponent to 20 or fewer points, including a 14-point effort in an overtime win at top-ranked Oregon, who led the FBS with a 54.8 scoring average. The 2012 Stanford defense held eight of 13 opponents under 100 yards rushing.
In 2011, Mason’s first year as co-defensive coordinator, his unit ranked either first or second in the Pac-12 in six defensive categories, including rushing defense, third-down conversion defense, scoring defense, total defense, sacks and opponent first downs.
Mason also helped develop an array of Stanford defensive standouts, including All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman, All-America defensive end Trent Murphy, All-America linebacker Shayne Skov and All-Pac-12 safety Ed Reynolds.
Prior to his arrival in Palo Alto, Mason served as an assistant defensive back coach for the Minnesota Vikings from 2007-09. He played a vital role in the team ranking sixth in total defense in 2008 and 2009 as the Vikings won NFC North titles each season. Mason was introduced to the NFL coaching circles through the Minority Fellowship program.
Before joining the Vikings, Mason tutored wide receivers at Ohio under Frank Solich, helping the Bobcats improve from 4-7 in 2005 to a 9-5 campaign and GMAC Bowl appearance the following year. Mason spent the 2004 season as wide receivers coach at New Mexico State, where the Aggies led the conference in passing.
During the 2002 campaign, Mason mentored receivers and assisted with special teams at Utah. The Utes featured the NFL Draft’s No. 1 overall pick in quarterback Alex Smith and wide receiver Paris Warren, an eventual seventh-round pick.
Mason’s move to Utah came after a three-year stint at Bucknell (1999-2001) in which he gained his first experience as a defensive assistant coach. At Bucknell, Mason served as defensive backs mentor for three straight winning Bison squads.
Mason’s first three collegiate positions came as an offensive assistant at Mesa (Ariz.) Community College in 1994, Weber State in 1995-96 and Idaho State in 1997-98.
As a player, Mason was a two-year starter and four-year letter winner at Northern Arizona. Mason earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from Northern Arizona in 1993. A native of Phoenix, Mason was a standout football player at Camelback High School.
Derek and his wife, LeighAnne, have two daughters, Makenzie and Sydney.
YEAR-BY-YEAR
1994: Mesa CC (AZ) – Wide Receivers
1995-96: Weber State – Wide Receivers
1997-98: Idaho State – Running Backs
1999-01: Bucknell – Defensive Backs
2002: Utah – Wide Receivers/Special Teams Assistant
2003: Saint Mary’s (Calif.) – Co-Defensive Coordinator/Assistant Head Coach
2004: New Mexico State – Wide Receivers
2005-06: Ohio – Wide Receivers
2007-09: Minnesota Vikings – Assistant Defensive Backs
2010-13: Stanford – Defensive Backs in 2010; Assoc. HC/Def. Coord. From 2011-13
2014-20: Vanderbilt – Head Coach
2021: Auburn – Defensive Coordinator
2022: Oklahoma State – Defensive Coordinator
2024-Present: Middle Tennessee – Head Coach
BOWL GAMES
2007: GMAC Bowl
2011: Orange Bowl
2012: Fiesta Bowl
2013: Rose Bowl
2014: Rose Bowl
2016: Independence Bowl
2018: Texas Bowl
2021: Birmingham Bowl
2022: Guaranteed Rate Bowl
PROMINENT PLAYERS COACHED
Henry Anderson, Patriots, Jets
Johnson Bademosi, Patriots, Texans
Khari Blasingame, Titans
Oren Burks, 49ers, Packers
Adam Butler, Patriots, Raiders
Alex Carter, Lions
Zach Cunningham, Texans, Titans and Eagles
Sione Fua, Browns
Derick Hall, Seahawks
Tre Herndon, Jaguars
Will Holden, Colts, Falcons
EKU Leota, Panthers
Blake Martinez, Giants, Packers
Matthew Masifilo, Buccaneers
Josh Mauro, Raiders, Cardinals
Zakoby McClain, Ravens
Roger McCreary, Titans
Andre Mintze, Broncos
Trent Murphy, Redskins and Bills
Dayo Odeyingbo, Colts
Owen Pappoe, Cardinals
David Parry, Colts, Vikings
Jared Pinkney, Rams
Spencer Pulley, Giants, Chargers
Ed Reynolds, Eagles and Browns
Jordan Richards, Ravens, Patriots
Trent Sherfield, Cardinals, Dolphins
Richard Sherman, Seahawks, 49ers and Buccaneers
Shayne Skov, 49ers, Buccaneers, Saints
Justin Skule, 49ers
Tyler Steen, Eagles
Jason Taylor II, Rams
Michael Thomas, Bengals, Dolphins
Keshawn Vaughn, Buccaneers
Stephen Weatherly, Panthers, Broncos
Joejuan Williams, Patriots
Colby Wooden, Packers
Chandler Wooten, Panthers, Cardinals
A veteran of 30 years of collegiate coaching experience, Derek Mason is in his second season as head coach of Middle Tennessee. Mason was hired to lead the Blue Raider program on Dec. 6, 2023 as MTSU’s 16th head coach all-time.
Mason, who spent the 2023 season working as an analyst for the SEC Network, had seven years experience as a head coach prior to being named the leader of the Blue Raiders. Prior to his television job, he coached in 2022 at Oklahoma State as the defensive coordinator and helped the Cowboys to a spot in the Guaranteed Rate Bowl.
Prior to his stint at Oklahoma State, Mason served as the defensive coordinator at Auburn for the 2021 season. The Mason-led Tigers improved by 14.5% in third down defense from 2020 to move up 84 places in the final FBS rankings. Auburn also improved from the previous season in tackles for loss by 1.4 per game (up 65 places), rushing defense by 35 yards per game (up 33 places), first downs allowed by three per game (up 32 places), fourth down defense by 10% (up 21 places), sacks by .33 per game (up 13 places), scoring defense by three points per game (up 11 places) and total defense by 32 yards per game (up two places).
From 2014-2020, Mason was the head coach at Vanderbilt where he became just the second coach in program history to lead a team to multiple bowl appearances. His 2018 team won six games and capped the regular season with a third straight victory over rival Tennessee and fifth in seven years. It also marked Vanderbilt’s second bowl appearance in three years under Mason.
Mason guided Vanderbilt to its eighth postseason appearance in 2016 and finished the regular season 6-6, including four wins over the final six games. The season featured marquee SEC victories over Georgia, Ole Miss and No. 24 Tennessee. Inside linebacker Zach Cunningham became Vanderbilt’s first consensus All-American in more than three decades, sweeping first-team honors.
The architect of Stanford’s vaunted 3-4 defense, Mason spent four seasons with the Cardinal and was elevated to defensive coordinator in 2011 after leading the program to a pair of Rose Bowl appearances and consecutive Pac-12 titles. Mason’s elite defensive units at Stanford ranked among the NCAA’s best in defensive efficiency for three consecutive seasons.
While facing seven ranked opponents in 2013, Stanford ranked third nationally in rushing defense (89.4 ypg), 10th in scoring defense (19.0 ppg) and 16th in total offense (343.1 ypg). The Cardinal was also one of only five teams to allow less than 100 rushing yards per game in 2013 and ranked fifth nationally with 44 sacks and seventh with 109 tackles for loss.
In 2012, Mason was a finalist for the Broyles Award, given annually to the nation’s top assistant coach, after directing a Stanford defense widely considered the program’s finest unit ever.
Mason’s leadership paved the way to a historic defensive output, breaking Stanford’s single-season record with 57 sacks and pacing the Pac-12 in scoring defense, total defense and rushing defense, and helped the Cardinal to an 11-2 season capped off with a Rose Bowl title. In 11 of 14 games, Stanford held its opponent to 20 or fewer points, including a 14-point effort in an overtime win at top-ranked Oregon, who led the FBS with a 54.8 scoring average. The 2012 Stanford defense held eight of 13 opponents under 100 yards rushing.
In 2011, Mason’s first year as co-defensive coordinator, his unit ranked either first or second in the Pac-12 in six defensive categories, including rushing defense, third-down conversion defense, scoring defense, total defense, sacks and opponent first downs.
Mason also helped develop an array of Stanford defensive standouts, including All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman, All-America defensive end Trent Murphy, All-America linebacker Shayne Skov and All-Pac-12 safety Ed Reynolds.
Prior to his arrival in Palo Alto, Mason served as an assistant defensive back coach for the Minnesota Vikings from 2007-09. He played a vital role in the team ranking sixth in total defense in 2008 and 2009 as the Vikings won NFC North titles each season. Mason was introduced to the NFL coaching circles through the Minority Fellowship program.
Before joining the Vikings, Mason tutored wide receivers at Ohio under Frank Solich, helping the Bobcats improve from 4-7 in 2005 to a 9-5 campaign and GMAC Bowl appearance the following year. Mason spent the 2004 season as wide receivers coach at New Mexico State, where the Aggies led the conference in passing.
During the 2002 campaign, Mason mentored receivers and assisted with special teams at Utah. The Utes featured the NFL Draft’s No. 1 overall pick in quarterback Alex Smith and wide receiver Paris Warren, an eventual seventh-round pick.
Mason’s move to Utah came after a three-year stint at Bucknell (1999-2001) in which he gained his first experience as a defensive assistant coach. At Bucknell, Mason served as defensive backs mentor for three straight winning Bison squads.
Mason’s first three collegiate positions came as an offensive assistant at Mesa (Ariz.) Community College in 1994, Weber State in 1995-96 and Idaho State in 1997-98.
As a player, Mason was a two-year starter and four-year letter winner at Northern Arizona. Mason earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from Northern Arizona in 1993. A native of Phoenix, Mason was a standout football player at Camelback High School.
Derek and his wife, LeighAnne, have two daughters, Makenzie and Sydney.
YEAR-BY-YEAR
1994: Mesa CC (AZ) – Wide Receivers
1995-96: Weber State – Wide Receivers
1997-98: Idaho State – Running Backs
1999-01: Bucknell – Defensive Backs
2002: Utah – Wide Receivers/Special Teams Assistant
2003: Saint Mary’s (Calif.) – Co-Defensive Coordinator/Assistant Head Coach
2004: New Mexico State – Wide Receivers
2005-06: Ohio – Wide Receivers
2007-09: Minnesota Vikings – Assistant Defensive Backs
2010-13: Stanford – Defensive Backs in 2010; Assoc. HC/Def. Coord. From 2011-13
2014-20: Vanderbilt – Head Coach
2021: Auburn – Defensive Coordinator
2022: Oklahoma State – Defensive Coordinator
2024-Present: Middle Tennessee – Head Coach
BOWL GAMES
2007: GMAC Bowl
2011: Orange Bowl
2012: Fiesta Bowl
2013: Rose Bowl
2014: Rose Bowl
2016: Independence Bowl
2018: Texas Bowl
2021: Birmingham Bowl
2022: Guaranteed Rate Bowl
PROMINENT PLAYERS COACHED
Henry Anderson, Patriots, Jets
Johnson Bademosi, Patriots, Texans
Khari Blasingame, Titans
Oren Burks, 49ers, Packers
Adam Butler, Patriots, Raiders
Alex Carter, Lions
Zach Cunningham, Texans, Titans and Eagles
Sione Fua, Browns
Derick Hall, Seahawks
Tre Herndon, Jaguars
Will Holden, Colts, Falcons
EKU Leota, Panthers
Blake Martinez, Giants, Packers
Matthew Masifilo, Buccaneers
Josh Mauro, Raiders, Cardinals
Zakoby McClain, Ravens
Roger McCreary, Titans
Andre Mintze, Broncos
Trent Murphy, Redskins and Bills
Dayo Odeyingbo, Colts
Owen Pappoe, Cardinals
David Parry, Colts, Vikings
Jared Pinkney, Rams
Spencer Pulley, Giants, Chargers
Ed Reynolds, Eagles and Browns
Jordan Richards, Ravens, Patriots
Trent Sherfield, Cardinals, Dolphins
Richard Sherman, Seahawks, 49ers and Buccaneers
Shayne Skov, 49ers, Buccaneers, Saints
Justin Skule, 49ers
Tyler Steen, Eagles
Jason Taylor II, Rams
Michael Thomas, Bengals, Dolphins
Keshawn Vaughn, Buccaneers
Stephen Weatherly, Panthers, Broncos
Joejuan Williams, Patriots
Colby Wooden, Packers
Chandler Wooten, Panthers, Cardinals