Stanford football head coach Jim Harbaugh announced yesterday five assistant coaches and the head strength and conditioning coach that will join his staff next season.

Lance Anderson will take over as defensive line coach; Andy Buh will be the linebackers coach; Tim Drevno, the tight end coach; David Shaw, offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach; Willie Tagart, running backs coach and Shannon Turley, the strength coach.

Shaw was a four-year letter winner as a receiver at Stanford, making 57 catches for 664 yards and five touchdowns. Before becoming Harbaugh’s passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach at USD in 2006, Shaw coached with the Eagles in 1997, the Raiders from 1998 to 2001 and the Ravens from 2002 to 2005.

Anderson graduated from Idaho State in 1996 and served under Harbaugh as the defensive line coach at the University of San Diego in 2005 and 2006. He has 10 years of coaching experience at Utah State, St. Mary’s College, Bucknell, Idaho State and the Regional Football League’s Mobile Admirals.

Buh was a graduate assistant at Fresno State last year and the linebackers coach at San Diego State from 2002 to 2005. A graduate of Nevada in 1996, Buh coached at his alma mater for three years before becoming an administrative assistant at California for two seasons.

Drevno graduated from Cal State Fullerton in 1992 and has 14 years of college coaching experience. Most recently, he served as the offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at USD over the past four seasons. Drevno also coached running backs and tight ends at Montana State for five seasons (1993-1998).

Taggart has coached at Western Kentucky University since 1999 after having graduated from the same school one year earlier. He served as quarterbacks coach from 2000 to 2006 and co-offensive coordinator in 2001 and 2002. With 3,997 yards, Taggart is the top rushing quarterback in Division I-AA history.

Turley was Director of Athletic Performance at USD last season. Since graduating from Virginia Tech in 2000, he has worked in strength and conditioning for five years at Missouri and one year in minor-league baseball.