George Godsey, a former Georgia Tech quarterback and alumnus who has spent the past 15 seasons as an ultra-successful assistant coach in the National Football League, returned to The Flats as the Yellow Jackets’ offensive coordinator in 2026.
Godsey most recently served as the Baltimore Ravens’ tight ends coach since 2022, helping lead the Ravens to three playoff berths, two AFC North Division titles and an AFC Championship Game appearance in four seasons.
His NFL coaching experience includes two seasons as offensive coordinator of the Houston Texans (2015-16) and one as co-offensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins (2021). He also served as the Texans’ primary play-caller in 2014.
He began his NFL coaching career with the New England Patriots, as an offensive assistant (2011) and tight ends coach (2012-13). Following his three seasons in New England, Godsey went to Houston, where he was quarterbacks coach in 2014 before becoming the Texans’ OC in 2015 and ’16. After his three seasons in Houston, he spent two seasons with the Detroit Lions (2017 – defensive assistant and special projects, 2018 – quarterbacks coach) and three with the Dolphins (2019-20 – tight ends coach, 2021 – co-OC and TE coach).
In all, Godsey helped lead his teams to 12 winning records, eight playoff appearances and seven division championships in his 15 seasons as an NFL coach.
He owns seven seasons of coaching experience at the collegiate level, all at UCF (2004-10). During his time at UCF, the Knights won two conference championships and three division titles and played in four bowl games.
A Tampa, Fla. native, Godsey enrolled at Georgia Tech in 1997 and was a four-year letterwinner (1998-2001), two-year starter at quarterback (2000-01), second-team all-ACC selection as a junior (2000) and team captain as a senior (2001) for the Yellow Jackets. He holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in industrial and systems engineering from Georgia Tech (2001 and 2002, respectively).
| THE GEORGE GODSEY FILE | ||
| PERSONAL | ||
| Hometown | Tampa, Fla. | |
| Alma Mater | Georgia Tech, 2001 (B.S. – industrial and systems engineering) and 2002 (M.S. – industrial and systems engineering) | |
| PLAYING EXPERIENCE | ||
| 1997-2001 | Georgia Tech (QB) | |
| 2003 | Tampa Bay Storm (Arena Football League – QB) | |
| COACHING EXPERIENCE | ||
| 2003 | The Lovett School | Quarterbacks |
| 2004 | UCF | Graduate assistant |
| 2005-08 | UCF | Quarterbacks |
| 2009-10 | UCF | Running backs |
| 2011 | New England Patriots | Offensive assistant |
| 2012-13 | New England Patriots | Tight ends |
| 2014 | Houston Texans | Quarterbacks |
| 2015-16 | Houston Texans | Offensive coordinator & quarterbacks |
| 2017 | Detroit Lions | Defensive assistant & special projects |
| 2018 | Detroit Lions | Quarterbacks |
| 2019-20 | Miami Dolphins | Tight ends |
| 2021 | Miami Dolphins | Co-offensive coordinator/tight ends |
| 2022-25 | Baltimore Ravens | Tight ends |
| 2026 | Georgia Tech | Offensive coordinator |
| CAREER HIGHLIGHTS | ||
| 1997 | Georgia Tech | Carquest Bowl champion, No. 25 final national ranking |
| 1998 | Georgia Tech | ACC champion, Gator Bowl champion, No. 9 final national ranking |
| 1999 | Georgia Tech | Gator Bowl, No. 20 final national ranking |
| 2000 | Georgia Tech | Second-team all-ACC, Peach Bowl, No. 17 final national ranking |
| 2001 | Georgia Tech | Seattle Bowl champion, No. 24 final national ranking |
| 2003 | Tampa Bay Storm | ArenaBowl XVII champion |
| 2005 | UCF | Conference USA East Division champion, Hawai’i Bowl |
| 2007 | UCF | Conference USA champion, Liberty Bowl |
| 2009 | UCF | St. Petersburg Bowl |
| 2010 | UCF | Conference USA champion, Liberty Bowl champion, No. 20 final national ranking |
| 2011 | New England Patriots | AFC East Division champion, NFL Playoffs, AFC Champion, Super Bowl XLVI |
| 2012 | New England Patriots | AFC East Division champion, NFL Playoffs, AFC Championship Game |
| 2013 | New England Patriots | AFC East Division champion, NFL Playoffs, AFC Championship Game |
| 2015 | Houston Texans | AFC South Division champion, NFL Playoffs |
| 2016 | Houston Texans | AFC South Division champion, NFL Playoffs |
| 2022 | Baltimore Ravens | NFL Playoffs |
| 2023 | Baltimore Ravens | AFC North Division champion, NFL Playoffs, AFC Championship Game |
| 2024 | Baltimore Ravens | AFC North Division champion, NFL Playoffs |
FULL BIOGRAPHY
George Godsey, a former Georgia Tech quarterback and alumnus who has spent the past 15 seasons as an ultra-successful assistant coach in the National Football League, returned to The Flats as the Yellow Jackets’ offensive coordinator in 2026.
Godsey most recently served as the Baltimore Ravens’ tight ends coach since 2022, helping lead the Ravens to three playoff berths, two AFC North Division titles and an AFC Championship Game appearance in four seasons. The Ravens ranked among the NFL’s top offenses each of the last three seasons, including leading the league in total offense in 2024 and ranking in the top five in scoring in 2023 and ’24. Godsey’s tight ends accounted for 4,994 receiving yards and 50 touchdown receptions over his four seasons in Baltimore.
His NFL coaching experience includes two seasons as offensive coordinator of the Houston Texans (2015-16) and one as co-offensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins (2021). He also served as the Texans’ primary play-caller in 2014. Despite having to use eight different starting quarterbacks, the Texans had three-straight winning records and won two AFC South Division championships during Godsey’s three seasons in Houston.
He began his NFL coaching career with the New England Patriots, as an offensive assistant (2011) and tight ends coach (2012-13). In his three seasons in New England, the Patriots won three AFC East championships, made three AFC Championship Game appearances and won the 2011 AFC title to advance to Super Bowl XLVI.
Following his three seasons in New England, Godsey went to Houston, where he was quarterbacks coach in 2014 before becoming the Texans’ OC in 2015 and ’16. After his three seasons in Houston, he spent two seasons with the Detroit Lions (2017 – defensive assistant and special projects, 2018 – quarterbacks coach) and three with the Dolphins (2019-20 – tight ends coach, 2021 – co-OC and TE coach).
In all, Godsey helped lead his teams to 12 winning records, eight playoff appearances and seven division championships in his 15 seasons as an NFL coach. Notable players that he coached include Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski, Arian Foster, DeAndre Hopkins, Andre Johnson, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Matthew Stafford, Tua Tagovailoa, Jaylen Waddle, Patrick Ricard and Mark Andrews.
He owns seven seasons of coaching experience at the collegiate level, all at UCF, where he coached under legendary Georgia Tech head coach George O’Leary and together with Key from 2004-10. Godsey went to UCF as a graduate assistant in ‘04, then coached quarterbacks from 2005-08 and running backs from 2009-10. During his time at UCF, the Knights won two conference championships and three division titles and played in four bowl games. In addition to O’Leary and Key, Godsey was also on UCF’s staff with current Georgia Tech special teams coordinator Tim Salem, who was the Knights’ offensive coordinator from 2004-08 and special teams coordinator from 2009-11.
Godsey began his coaching career with a season as QB coach at The Lovett School in Atlanta in 2003.
A Tampa, Fla. native, Godsey enrolled at Georgia Tech in 1997 and was a four-year letterwinner (1998-2001), two-year starter at quarterback (2000-01), second-team all-ACC selection as a junior (2000) and team captain as a senior (2001) for the Yellow Jackets. He threw for 6,137 yards and 41 touchdowns as a Jacket and his name is a fixture across Georgia Tech’s record book, including as the program’s all-time leader in single-season (3,085 in 2001) and single-game (486 vs. Virginia in 2001) passing yards. Tech earned bowl berths and top-25 finishes in each of his five seasons on The Flats, and was inducted into the Georgia Tech Sports Hall of Fame in 2012.
He played one season (2003) professionally for his hometown Tampa Bay Storm in the Arena Football League, and helped the Storm win its fifth AFL championship in ArenaBowl XVII.
Godsey holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in industrial and systems engineering from Georgia Tech (2001 and 2002, respectively). His brothers, Greg and Gary, also played college football at Air Force and Notre Dame, respectively.