The University of Alabama at Birmingham Athletics
Football

Joe Craddock
- Title:
- Tight Ends
- Phone:
- 975-9536
Joe Craddock was named tight ends coach on January 16, 2020, and is in his second season with the Blazers. Craddock is a local native of Chelsea, Ala., and has had coaching stints at Clemson (2012-14), SMU (2015-17) and Arkansas (2018-19).
In his first season with the Blazers, Craddock helped the Green and Gold secure its second C-USA championship in the last three years. Led by tight ends Hayden Pittman and Gerrit Prince, the tight ends group accounted for five of the Blazers’ 14 receiving touchdowns including two multi-touchdown games for Prince.
Tight end Hayden Pittman was the team’s third leading receiver with 19 catches for 227 yards and a touchdown in 2020. His touchdown came in the Conference USA Championship game at Marshall which sparked UAB’s 22-13 victory.
Pittman enters the 2021 season with a reception in 25-straight games.
Prince’s four receiving touchdowns were the most on the team and he finished the year with nine receptions for 102 yards.
Prior to joining UAB, Craddock spent the previous two years as the offensive coordinator at Arkansas. In his first season with the Razorbacks, he engineered one of the most productive tight end units in the nation as they ranked second nationally in tight end touchdowns and fourth in tight end first downs.
Prior to Arkansas, Craddock became the youngest offensive coordinator in the country at the time, joining SMU in 2015 and leading the Mustangs’ offense for three years.
With the Mustangs, Craddock guided quarterback Ben Hicks to numerous SMU passing records, including career passing yards (9,081), TD passes (71), TDs responsible for (74), completions (718) and 300-yard games (12).
Over his three seasons with the Mustangs, Craddock’s offense produced a 3,000-yard passer (Ben Hicks, 2017), two 1,000-yard rushers (Xavier Jones, 2017; Braeden West, 2016) and two 1,000-yard receivers (Courtland Sutton, 2017 and 2016; Trey Quinn, 2017).
During the 2017 regular season, Craddock’s unit ranked No. 8 in the FBS in scoring offense (40.2 points), No. 13 in total offense (493.8 yards) and No. 16 in passing yards (308 yards). SMU was one of just two teams in the country that featured a 3,000-yard passer, 1,000-yard rusher and multiple 1,000-yard receivers in All-Americans Sutton and Quinn.
For his efforts, Craddock was named a nominee for the Broyles Award, which is annually presented to the nation’s top assistant coach.
Before his time in Dallas, Craddock coached at Clemson for three seasons as an offensive graduate assistant (2013-14) and a player development coach (2012).
During his time at Clemson, Craddock assisted in the development of current NFL star Deshaun Watson. In 2014, the Tigers’ averaged 448.2 yards of total offense per game, ranked No. 21 in scoring offense (35.4) and was one of just 14 teams in the FBS to average both 200 yards rushing and passing per game.
Craddock played quarterback at Middle Tennessee from 2004-08. Upon graduating with a degree in liberal arts, he spent two years playing professionally in the Italian Football League from 2009-10. While playing for the Parma Panthers, Craddock guided his team to the Superbowl Italiano, defeating the Catania Elephants 56-26 in the championship game.
Prior to his collegiate coaching career, Craddock was the offensive coordinator at his alma mater, Briarwood Christian, from 2010-11. Briarwood went 25-4 during Craddock’s tenure and finished as the state runner-up in 2010.
Craddock and his wife, Abby, have a daughter Charlie Kathryn, and a son Joe Cain.
In his first season with the Blazers, Craddock helped the Green and Gold secure its second C-USA championship in the last three years. Led by tight ends Hayden Pittman and Gerrit Prince, the tight ends group accounted for five of the Blazers’ 14 receiving touchdowns including two multi-touchdown games for Prince.
Tight end Hayden Pittman was the team’s third leading receiver with 19 catches for 227 yards and a touchdown in 2020. His touchdown came in the Conference USA Championship game at Marshall which sparked UAB’s 22-13 victory.
Pittman enters the 2021 season with a reception in 25-straight games.
Prince’s four receiving touchdowns were the most on the team and he finished the year with nine receptions for 102 yards.
Prior to joining UAB, Craddock spent the previous two years as the offensive coordinator at Arkansas. In his first season with the Razorbacks, he engineered one of the most productive tight end units in the nation as they ranked second nationally in tight end touchdowns and fourth in tight end first downs.
Prior to Arkansas, Craddock became the youngest offensive coordinator in the country at the time, joining SMU in 2015 and leading the Mustangs’ offense for three years.
With the Mustangs, Craddock guided quarterback Ben Hicks to numerous SMU passing records, including career passing yards (9,081), TD passes (71), TDs responsible for (74), completions (718) and 300-yard games (12).
Over his three seasons with the Mustangs, Craddock’s offense produced a 3,000-yard passer (Ben Hicks, 2017), two 1,000-yard rushers (Xavier Jones, 2017; Braeden West, 2016) and two 1,000-yard receivers (Courtland Sutton, 2017 and 2016; Trey Quinn, 2017).
During the 2017 regular season, Craddock’s unit ranked No. 8 in the FBS in scoring offense (40.2 points), No. 13 in total offense (493.8 yards) and No. 16 in passing yards (308 yards). SMU was one of just two teams in the country that featured a 3,000-yard passer, 1,000-yard rusher and multiple 1,000-yard receivers in All-Americans Sutton and Quinn.
For his efforts, Craddock was named a nominee for the Broyles Award, which is annually presented to the nation’s top assistant coach.
Before his time in Dallas, Craddock coached at Clemson for three seasons as an offensive graduate assistant (2013-14) and a player development coach (2012).
During his time at Clemson, Craddock assisted in the development of current NFL star Deshaun Watson. In 2014, the Tigers’ averaged 448.2 yards of total offense per game, ranked No. 21 in scoring offense (35.4) and was one of just 14 teams in the FBS to average both 200 yards rushing and passing per game.
Craddock played quarterback at Middle Tennessee from 2004-08. Upon graduating with a degree in liberal arts, he spent two years playing professionally in the Italian Football League from 2009-10. While playing for the Parma Panthers, Craddock guided his team to the Superbowl Italiano, defeating the Catania Elephants 56-26 in the championship game.
Prior to his collegiate coaching career, Craddock was the offensive coordinator at his alma mater, Briarwood Christian, from 2010-11. Briarwood went 25-4 during Craddock’s tenure and finished as the state runner-up in 2010.
Craddock and his wife, Abby, have a daughter Charlie Kathryn, and a son Joe Cain.