MANHATTAN (KSNT) – K-State welcomed a man familiar with Big 12 football to its staff shortly after the 2023 season wrapped up.

The Wildcats hired Matt Wells, former Texas Tech head coach and more recently an offensive analyst for Oklahoma, as their new co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.

Wells, who also carries the title of ‘Associate Head Coach’ for K-State football, sat down for a one-on-one interview which aired on K-Nation.

He’s working closely alongside offensive coordinator Conor Riley, who was promoted to that role while continuing his duties as offensive line coach. Wells says he had great respect for Riley, even before coming to Manhattan, from seeing how well his offensive linemen have always played together.

“He’s way more than an O-line coach,” Wells said. “He is a guy that understands the passing game, he understands leverage, he understands numbers in the run game as well as in the passing game… Extremely smart, extremely bright. I just think the friendship is there, too. That’s growing. That takes time… it’s going well.”

Wells’ top-priority, for now, is likely the development of rising sophomore quarterback Avery Johnson. Click here for more on how the ‘Cats plan to keep Johnson healthy.

“His desire to be great,” Well said, when asked what he’s learned about the Wildcat quarterback in the few short months since arriving in Manhattan. “Some people say [they want to be great] and they don’t embody it. From early in the morning to late at night and every day… just hungry. Wants to be coached, has taken an iPad full of notes over the last two months…”

Wells says from a performance/ physical standpoint, Johnson’s arm accuracy is the next thing that stands out after his most obvious and glaring trait: His speed.

K-Nation also had offensive coordinator Conor Riley on the show, click here for that interview from January.

Wells come to Manhattan with a unique point of view given his past, having previously been a head coach in the league and competing against the Wildcats. He hopes to provide value for that reason, but doesn’t plan to try and take over and do everything how his program in Lubbock them.

He says the last two years, in an off-field role with the Sooners, helped him make the adjustment away from running his own program.

“It probably wouldn’t have been real smooth if it had happened two years ago,” Wells said regarding his transition back to being an assistant. “More than anything, just having perspective. Having perspective of what Conor [Riley] is going through as the chair at the end of the table in the offensive staff room and having the final say in plays being run and schemed. Having perspective of what Coach Klieman goes through on a daily basis… Hopefully I can be the best assistant they’ve ever had in both of those roles because I have been in those chairs and in that seat.”

Wells comes to Manhattan with a goal to contribute without overstepping any bounds.

“Certainly nothing ‘I did this’ or ‘I did that,'” he said. “Certainly there is a time when the questions are asked and you can offer an opinion or an insight that maybe is helpful for our program but certainly a lot more, I’m here to help. I’m here to serve. I’m here to serve Avery [Johnson] and the rest of the quarterback room and I’m here to serve these coaches.”

Click here for more K-Nation content. Watch Sunday’s full episode here.