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Tyler Osborne finished his first season as Stanford’s The Krishnamurthi Wide Receivers Coach and Assistant Quarterbacks Coach in 2023 following three seasons at Sacramento State as the wide receivers coach. Osborne was named to the AFCA 35 Under 35 Leadership Institute in December 2022. In August of 2023, Osborne was named to 247Sports 2023 30 Under 30 class, recognizing college football’s best coaches and personnel under the age of 30 each year. Later in August of 2023, Osborne was ranked as the top recruiter in the Pac-12, per 247Sports.

The Stanford wide receivers saw a noticeable jump in year one with Osborne on staff. The group was led by redshirt freshman breakout receiver Elic Ayomanor, who recorded 62 receptions for 1,013 yards and six touchdowns. Ayomanor's receiving yards ranked seventh in the Pac-12 and were the eighth-most in a single season in Stanford history. He also set the single-game program record for receiving yards in a game with 294 at Colorado. This led to Ayomanor receiving All-Pac-12 honorable mention honors, as well as being named Freshman First Team All-America (PFF) and the 2023 recipient of the Jon Cornish Trophy, given annually to the best college football player from Canada.

Also under Osborne's watch was the emergence of true freshman wide receiver Tiger Bachmeier, who led the Pac-12 in receptions and receiving yards by a true freshman. Bachmeier ranked seventh and ninth in the NCAA in both categories, respectively.

Big plays were a theme of the Stanford offense all season long, as the team doubled its amount of 40+-yard passing plays from the 2022 season, and the team's most since 2019. Five of the team's 11 passing touchdowns went for 40 yards are more.

In 2022, Osborne coached wide receiver Pierre Williams to his third straight Big Sky Conference first team honors. Williams led all Hornet wide receivers with 47 catches for 723 yards and nine touchdowns. 

Osborne was Sacramento State’s wide receivers coach under Taylor from 2019-22, helping the program to a 30-8 record in three seasons, with three Big Sky championships, three Top-10 finishes and a 23-1 mark in conference action.

Osborne coached a group of receivers in 2019 that combined with Hornet quarterbacks to set the school record for passing yards in a single season (3,832). The group was led by Pierre Williams, who earned first team all-Big Sky honors as a sophomore. Williams had a team-high 931 receiving yards on 54 catches. Nine different wide receivers caught passes during the year and the group combined for 18 touchdown receptions.

Williams was again named to the all-Big Sky first team in 2021 after catching 50 passes for 764 yards and three touchdowns. The freshmen trio of Chris Miller, Jared Gipson and Devin Gandy all saw significant action in their collegiate debut season combining for 59 receptions for 1,003 yards and five TDs.

Osborne previously served as a graduate assistant coach at Washington in 2017 and 2018. In that role, he worked closely with the Husky wide receivers and was part of a staff which won 10 games both years. The 2017 team played in the Fiesta Bowl while the 2018 team won the Pac-12 title and moved on to the Rose Bowl. In his final year, Osborne helped coach a pair of receivers who had at least 55 catches and nearly 600 receiving yards during the year. He also coached Dante Pettis in 2017 before he was selected 44th overall by the San Francisco 49ers in the NFL Draft.

Osborne came to Washington after spending five years at Oregon. He was an undergraduate assistant coach for four years before serving as offensive analyst, focusing on quarterbacks, in 2016. As an undergrad, Osborne spent his first season directly under Chip Kelly and assisted him in coaching the slot receivers. The next four seasons he assisted coaching the Ducks’ quarterbacks. During that time, he helped coach Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota, Vernon Adams and Justin Herbert.

During his time on the Oregon staff, the Ducks went to a CFP national championship game, a Rose Bowl, a Fiesta Bowl and two Alamo Bowls.

Osborne is the son of longtime college football coach Tom Osborne, a former Washington State wide receiver who spent 36 seasons coaching at Washington State, Portland State, Boise State,a Arizona State and Oregon. The elder Osborne was known mostly as the Ducks’ tight ends and special teams coach for 16 seasons over two stretches.

He attended Sheldon High in Eugene, Ore., where he played football and baseball. A wide receiver, quarterback and defensive back on the football team, he helped Sheldon to the state title game in 2011.

Osborne earned a degree in finance and sports business from Oregon in 2016. He completed his master’s degree in intercollegiate athletics leadership at Washington in June of 2018.