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For the first time since he came to Florida State as offensive coordinator in 2007, Jimbo Fisher is not the sole play-caller when the Seminoles are on offense.

Although he never announced the change publicly, Fisher has actually been sharing play-calling duties with co-offensive coordinator Randy Sanders for much of this season. Fisher confirmed the development after an inquiry by Warchant.com.

In some games, Sanders has called all of the plays for several consecutive drives with Fisher only taking over in certain situations. In others, Sanders has called some drives but Fisher has handled the majority. They each called plays in Saturday's 34-17 victory against N.C. State.

"Randy and I have a lot of the same philosophies. He's a heck of a coach and has done a great job with our quarterbacks," Fisher told Warchant. "There's times that he will call the game and he's been calling different plays. And there's times that I still interject and talk and we communicate all the time. And we do game plans together and all that stuff. But I feel very comfortable at times with him doing it.

"Sometimes I will do it, if there's key situations -- a lot of those two-minute things and different times."

Sanders does have plenty of experience as a play-caller, having served as offensive coordinator at Tennessee from 1998-2005 and at Kentucky from 2009-12. Coincidentally, his first time calling plays on the college level came in the 1999 Fiesta Bowl, when he helped the Volunteers knock off Florida State for the 1998 national championship.

Fisher hired Sanders in January 2013 after former offensive coordinator James Coley left for the opportunity to call plays at the University of Miami. While Sanders and receivers coach Lawrence Dawsey share the title of offensive coordinator at FSU, Fisher had retained all play-calling responsibilities until this season.

"It's great to have him here," Fisher said of Sanders. "He's got so much experience and been in so many different venues in what he's done. I have such great appreciation for what kind of football coach he is."

Fisher, who has called all of his teams' offensive plays since Nick Saban hired him at LSU in 2000, has said previously that he planned to turn over play-calling to one of his assistant coaches at some point. He just didn't know when.

The idea behind the switch, Fisher said, is it gives him additional time to help with other areas of the team. And as Sanders assumes more control of the offense, Fisher will have more freedom to work on other projects, such as focusing on recruiting during the season and assisting Seminole Boosters with fundraising efforts.

"It's huge," Fisher said. "Because as a head coach, you are pulled in a lot of different directions - with the defense, with special teams or other parts of your team and different positions, even on offense. It just frees you up to do a lot more things."