In addition to regular coverage of Washington Huskies football, I’d also like to bring you stories and conversations about other Pac-12 schools. Today, we take a look at the person who will call plays for Washington State’s offense in 2023: Ben Arbuckle, a native of Canadian, Texas, who, at age 27, is the youngest coordinator in the conference — and oversaw an offense at Western Kentucky last season that averaged 36.4 points per game and 6.7 yards per play, both top-15 nationally.
Washington State’s new offensive coordinator studied finance and economics at West Texas A&M, a Division II school where he also played quarterback. His first job out of college was at an oil and gas company. He hated it so much that he quit after a few months to become a quality control assistant at Houston Baptist, connected to then-offensive coordinator Zach Kittley by a mutual acquaintance.
That was in 2018.
Two years later, Ben Arbuckle was the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Seminole High School in Texas.
Two years after that, Arbuckle was calling plays for one of the top passing offenses in the country, and helping Western Kentucky quarterback Austin Reed become the answer to the trivia question: who was the only FBS quarterback with more total passing yards in 2022 than Michael Penix Jr.?¹
When WSU coach Jake Dickert hired Arbuckle, 27, in December, he was believed to be the youngest primary offensive coordinator in the Power 5. Arbuckle replaces Eric Morris, who left after one season to become head coach at North Texas. Like Morris, Arbuckle favors a version of the Air Raid offense, though their systems are different in certain ways.
I’ve been curious about Arbuckle’s background, offensive philosophy and rapid ascent to his current position. I caught up with him for a conversation about small-town living, his coaching influences, Cam Ward’s progression, WSU’s spring practices and what to expect from the Cougars’ offense this season.
Questions and responses have been lightly edited for length and clarity.
What’s the most important thing for people to know about Canadian, Texas?
There’s a few things. My hometown dominates small-school football in the state of Texas. That’s one. You’re either a cattle rancher, work in the oil field, or you work for the school district.
What did your parents do?
My dad worked in the oil field, and my mother was the high school counselor.
What was it that set you on the path to becoming a coach?
I’ve always admired the coaches that I had, whether it was in high school or college. Probably the biggest one was my head football coach from high school. His name was Chris Koetting. He actually just retired about a month ago. I know high-school and college coaching isn’t exactly the same, but how you can treat people and the impact you can have on kids’ lives I think translates really, really well. It didn’t matter who you were, he treated everyone with the same amount of respect. I always thought that was really, really cool. He was always there whenever I needed him. Just the impact he had on me daily always made me interested in coaching.
How did you get connected with Houston Baptist?
I was working my job there in Houston for an oil and gas company, and I had a buddy who was a GA at Arkansas State at the time. He’s actually the new safeties coach at Utah State, Ethan Morris. He said, “hey, there’s an unpaid job at Houston Baptist. I know you hate your job. You might look into it.” I looked up HBU, saw who their new offensive coordinator was. Kittley’s not a very common last name. I had a coach in high school, one of our position coaches. His name was Kolt Kittley. Turns out they’re first cousins. I sent Zach Kittley an email and called my old coach, and within 15 minutes of sending that email, Coach Kittley called me, and within that five-minute conversation, I was the new offensive quality-control coach at Houston Baptist.
What did you take away from your two years there?
The knowledge of football, of course, increased drastically. Coach Kittley’s one of the smartest, most innovative coaches I’ve ever been around. But the thing I learned most is that you can be a good person and be in this industry. You can always let people know that you value them, and you cherish their relationship, and those guys are going to work incredibly hard for you. I know I did every day for Coach Kittley. He made me feel every single day like I was important. It’s stuff like that that I don’t think gets talked about enough in this profession — how to treat people in order to get the most efficient work out of everyone.
What’s your favorite thing about calling plays?
Other than it’s really fun, my favorite thing about calling plays is that feeling whenever a play that you saw, that you thought would work on film from game planning, that you’ve repped all week in practice, that the guys mastered so well that it became second nature to them — is seeing that play get called live in a game and it comes into fruition. And watching a big, explosive play or a touchdown happen, and watching the kids get so excited, because all that hard work paid off. And the chess match back and forth between coaching staffs is fun.
What were your takeaways from the 2022 season at Western Kentucky?
A big year of growth for me. It was my first year ever calling plays. I had a really, really good boss, Coach (Tyson) Helton. He trusted me and let me run with it. He let me make the offense what I wanted to make it, and he believed in me the whole way. The takeaways were, one, we had a great group of kids. They were talented, sure, but they were a great group of kids that came to work every day. They’re the reason everything was awesome. Between them and the staff, it made me feel like I was in Year 5, with how smooth everything was. My assistant coaches were unbelievable workers and got the most out of the kids. I thought it was extremely efficient and extremely productive just because of those two things.
What were your early conversations like with Jake Dickert?
The first time they expressed interest was two days before our bowl game. I was sitting at breakfast and Coach Dickert called me. Looking back, this might not have been the best thing to say, but I was like, “hey Coach, I’m interested, but I’ve got a bowl game here in two days, and I’m trying to win. Can we pick this conversation up after?” Coach Dickert, being the awesome dude he is, he’s like, “absolutely, man, go get it done.” We had a really, really good bowl game, then me and Coach Dickert, we set up a Zoom. After that Zoom, he offered me the job. It was a no-brainer to take it.