Mort & Schefter: The guys next in line for NFL head coaching jobs

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Robocop

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- food for thought. don't think I've seen it posted


Mort & Schefter: The guys next in line for NFL head coaching jobs

12/3/2015 - NFL
i

Detroit defensive coordinator Teryl Austin and Carolina offensive coordinator Mike Shula are both hot names. USA TODAY Sports, AP Photo

The holiday season coincides with the NFL's firing season and teams' shopping season.

Going back to the turn of the century, NFL teams have fired an average of 6.9 head coaches per season. In each of the past three years, they have fired seven. The number figures to be right in that range, give or take two or three, which means teams will be scrambling to hire the best coaches and minds out there.

Based on multiple conversations with people around the league, here is a list of 10 alphabetized names likely to be on the shopping lists of any team in the market for a new head coach this winter.

Lions defensive coordinator Teryl Austin
During the past three weeks, he has helped shut down the Eagles', Raiders' and Packers' offenses. Austin interviewed well last year, especially in Chicago, where he was a finalist for the Bears' job. Austin's time appears to be coming.

Bears offensive coordinator Adam Gase
A finalist with San Francisco last year, Gase could turn out to be a candidate there or in other places again. Gase has helped elevate Jay Cutler's play, and he did the same in Denver with Peyton Manning, who helped make Gase into the top coordinator he is today.

Steelers offensive coordinator Todd Haley
Arizona advanced to the Super Bowl when Haley was its offensive coordinator and he took the Chiefs to the playoffs in one season as the head coach in Kansas City. Haley can fiery but as his success with Pittsburgh has proven, he also can be effective.

Bengals offensive coordinator Hue Jackson
Coordinating one of football's top offenses this season, USC recently called to interview him but was denied permission. NFL teams will not be denied permission to interview him for a head coaching job and Jackson has experience there from his time with Oakland, where his Raider teams were some of the more respectable in recent memory.

Bills assistant head coach Anthony Lynn
The Jets really liked Lynn when they interviewed him for their head coaching job last year. Lynn has worked under Bill Parcells and Rex Ryan, with Todd Bowles and Todd Haley, and their influences have rubbed off on him. With the right offensive coordinator, Lynn could be an ideal leader.

Brock Osweiler's emergence has been a relief and a revelation for Denver, but it also creates a fascinating dynamic in regards to three contracts.

Osweiler's contract expires after this season, as does Von Miller's. The Broncos have only one franchise tag. If neither player is re-signed before teams can use their franchise tag, then one of those players is going to hit the free-agent market, free to leave Denver. At this point, Denver cannot afford to let Osweiler test the market when there are so many teams -- Cleveland, St. Louis, Houston, San Francisco, the New York Jets, to name some -- that have significant quarterback needs.

Then again, Miller is the most important player on one of the NFL's top defenses, the first player opposing coaches highlight when they discuss what they must do to slow down Denver's defense. Edge rushers in this league are as difficult to find as starting quarterbacks. And that's the position that Denver finds itself in, staring straight at the possibility that two players in two of the most important positions are on expiring contracts.

As if that weren't enough, the Broncos also will have to deal with the contractual status of Peyton Manning, who is under contract to Denver next season. Handling the contract of an all-time great, as Denver learned last offseason when it restructured Manning's deal, is sensitive and delicate.

However it is done and whenever it is done, the Broncos have three significant unsettled contractual situations that will need to be addressed, each with enormous ramifications. Interestingly, each one of those three contracts impacts the other two. And all three will be in the headlines for weeks to come. Very quietly and very quickly, without many realizing it, Osweiler's play through two games could impact the futures of three key Broncos.

London falling
Let the Colts, Jaguars, Bengals, Redskins, Rams and one more NFC East to be determined be warned. The jobs of their head coaches and/or general managers could be in grave danger next season.

As the NFL announced last week, each of those teams will play in the NFL's 2016 International Series games in London in October. But since the NFL started its International Series and trips to London, the results have been near disastrous for the men leading those teams. There have been 12 NFL International Series games in London and, so far, the losing coach in six of them was fired during or after that season. This season alone, the Dolphins head coach Joe Philbin was fired after they returned home from London and a 27-14 loss to the New York Jets.

Later, the Lions fired general manager Martin Mayhew and president Tom Lewand just days after they returned home from London and a 45-10 loss against the Chiefs.

And it's not accidental that these firings have come after overseas trips. The NFL typically schedules bye weeks for teams that return home from London. Idle weeks are ideal times for unhappy teams to take action. But the rash of firings on teams that have traveled to and played in London is surprising.

And it should be a warning to the Colts, Jaguars, Bengals, Redskins, and Rams, each of whom it was announced last week will be taking their turn in the league's International Series.
 

jrry32

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:yess: And zampese

Eh. Zampese has been an assistant coach for a long time. Who knows how good he is or isn't. But I know what Hue is. The guy took Derrius Heyward-Bey, Jason Campbell, and Darren McFadden in 2011 and made them look like quality NFL players. Those are three huge first round busts that he managed to make great use of.
 

Mackeyser

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I especially like that Jackson has previous HC experience. That time in Oakland has to have been invaluable.
 

den-the-coach

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Four Candidates That Could Potentially Replace Jeff Fisher In 2016

The term coined "Fisherball" meaning howNFLteams play underJeff Fisher, does not work. This was on full display this afternoon as theSt. Louis Ramsfell to theArizona Cardinals27-3 at home. The Rams sit at 4-8 and are coming off of five straight losses. This obviously means that no matter what they do, even if they win every game left on their schedule, the best they can finish is 8-8 and the team will once again not finish over .500. Since Fisher took over the team in 2012, the Rams have failed to even reach the .500 mark in each of his four years.

This is Fisher's 21st season as a head coach in the NFL. In those 21 seasons, Fisher's teams have failed to achieve more than eight wins and make the playoffs in 15 of those years. Fisher's style of play and coaching which includes building a stout defense and horrific offense clearly doesn't work in St. Louis. Plain and simple, it's time for Fisher to go. He has had time to build his team into a playoff contender and has failed to do so and he has received more than enough chances. Here are a couple coaching candidates who could replace him.


4. Jim Schwartz, currently not coaching anywhere
Schwartz isn't currently coaching. He was most recently theDetroit Lionshead coach from 2009-2013 and then theBuffalo Billsdefensive coordinator in 2014. He took a job in 2015 with the NFL's officiating department to provide a coaches perspective on officiating decisions. Schwartz took over directly after the Lions had the infamous 0-16 season. After a couple years of rebuilding, Schwartz took the Lions to 2-14, 6-10, and then 10-6 in 2011 and reached the playoffs. Schwartz has solid experience when it comes to rebuilding a team. The Rams need rebuilding, primarily on offense and Schwartz has the potential to get the job done. Schwartz's teams also have had reparation of being tough so some toughness on the offensive side of the ball would definitely be good for the Rams.

3. Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M University Head Coach
Sumlin has turned Texas A&M from an averageBig 12team into an every year contender in theSEC. He was able to deal withJohnny Manzieland all of the media and critics that came with him. Sumlin hasn't expressed interest in coaching in the NFL nor has he said he doesn't want to. But the big factor is that Sumlin received a six-year contract extension back in the winter of 2013. In Sumlin's eight years of coaching at the collegiate level, his teams have finished over .500 in seven of those seasons. Luring him away from the Aggies sure would be difficult but Sumlin is likely on the Rams and other teams' head coaching wish lists.

2. Hue Jackson, Cincinnati Bengals Offensive Coordinator
Jackson is currently the offensive coordinator for the Cincinnati Bengals, who's offense is flourishing. It does help when you haveAndy Daltonin his prime along withA.J. Green,Tyler Eifert,Jeremy Hill.and company but Jackson is still a great play caller and comes up with great schemes. Jackson is an offensive minded coach, as he has been coaching in the NFL since 2001. He was always an offensive position coach and/or offensive coordinator. As aforementioned, Jackson is an offensive minded coach which is something the Rams are in desperate need of. Jackson only had one head coach gig in his long career which came with the Oakland Raiders in 2011. The Raiders went 8-8 and Jackson was fired because a new GM was brought in and he cleared house. Jackson should be high on the Rams list this winter.

1. Josh McDaniels, New England Patriots Offensive Coordinator
McDaniels should easily be #1 on the Rams list on their head coaching hunt this upcoming offseason. McDaniels is an offensive minded genius. He does get to work with the likes ofTom Brady,Rob Gronkowski,Julian Edleman,etc. which would be hard to take him away from. The good thing though, is McDaniels has coached in St. Louis before! McDaniels was the Rams offensive coordinator in 2011. The Rams did go 2-14 that year butSam Bradfordwas injured (as usual) andKellen Clemenswas the main quarterback that season. McDaniels didn't have much to work with other thanBrandon Lloydand an old, beat upSteven Jacksonwho was nearing the end of his career. The other main thing is that McDaniels was given no say in player personnel decisions during his short one year tenure in St. Louis. The Rams had McDaniels under contract for the 2012 but allowed him to leave after head coachSteve Spagnuolowas fired. By hiring McDaniels this offseason and giving him full power over offensive player personnel decisions, McDaniels could turn this Rams team around and finally get them going in the right direction.

http://www.vavel.com/en-us/nfl/5762...-potentially-replace-jeff-fisher-in-2016.html
 

jrry32

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Four Candidates That Could Potentially Replace Jeff Fisher In 2016

The term coined "Fisherball" meaning howNFLteams play underJeff Fisher, does not work. This was on full display this afternoon as theSt. Louis Ramsfell to theArizona Cardinals27-3 at home. The Rams sit at 4-8 and are coming off of five straight losses. This obviously means that no matter what they do, even if they win every game left on their schedule, the best they can finish is 8-8 and the team will once again not finish over .500. Since Fisher took over the team in 2012, the Rams have failed to even reach the .500 mark in each of his four years.

This is Fisher's 21st season as a head coach in the NFL. In those 21 seasons, Fisher's teams have failed to achieve more than eight wins and make the playoffs in 15 of those years. Fisher's style of play and coaching which includes building a stout defense and horrific offense clearly doesn't work in St. Louis. Plain and simple, it's time for Fisher to go. He has had time to build his team into a playoff contender and has failed to do so and he has received more than enough chances. Here are a couple coaching candidates who could replace him.


4. Jim Schwartz, currently not coaching anywhere
Schwartz isn't currently coaching. He was most recently theDetroit Lionshead coach from 2009-2013 and then theBuffalo Billsdefensive coordinator in 2014. He took a job in 2015 with the NFL's officiating department to provide a coaches perspective on officiating decisions. Schwartz took over directly after the Lions had the infamous 0-16 season. After a couple years of rebuilding, Schwartz took the Lions to 2-14, 6-10, and then 10-6 in 2011 and reached the playoffs. Schwartz has solid experience when it comes to rebuilding a team. The Rams need rebuilding, primarily on offense and Schwartz has the potential to get the job done. Schwartz's teams also have had reparation of being tough so some toughness on the offensive side of the ball would definitely be good for the Rams.

3. Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M University Head Coach
Sumlin has turned Texas A&M from an averageBig 12team into an every year contender in theSEC. He was able to deal withJohnny Manzieland all of the media and critics that came with him. Sumlin hasn't expressed interest in coaching in the NFL nor has he said he doesn't want to. But the big factor is that Sumlin received a six-year contract extension back in the winter of 2013. In Sumlin's eight years of coaching at the collegiate level, his teams have finished over .500 in seven of those seasons. Luring him away from the Aggies sure would be difficult but Sumlin is likely on the Rams and other teams' head coaching wish lists.

2. Hue Jackson, Cincinnati Bengals Offensive Coordinator
Jackson is currently the offensive coordinator for the Cincinnati Bengals, who's offense is flourishing. It does help when you haveAndy Daltonin his prime along withA.J. Green,Tyler Eifert,Jeremy Hill.and company but Jackson is still a great play caller and comes up with great schemes. Jackson is an offensive minded coach, as he has been coaching in the NFL since 2001. He was always an offensive position coach and/or offensive coordinator. As aforementioned, Jackson is an offensive minded coach which is something the Rams are in desperate need of. Jackson only had one head coach gig in his long career which came with the Oakland Raiders in 2011. The Raiders went 8-8 and Jackson was fired because a new GM was brought in and he cleared house. Jackson should be high on the Rams list this winter.

1. Josh McDaniels, New England Patriots Offensive Coordinator
McDaniels should easily be #1 on the Rams list on their head coaching hunt this upcoming offseason. McDaniels is an offensive minded genius. He does get to work with the likes ofTom Brady,Rob Gronkowski,Julian Edleman,etc. which would be hard to take him away from. The good thing though, is McDaniels has coached in St. Louis before! McDaniels was the Rams offensive coordinator in 2011. The Rams did go 2-14 that year butSam Bradfordwas injured (as usual) andKellen Clemenswas the main quarterback that season. McDaniels didn't have much to work with other thanBrandon Lloydand an old, beat upSteven Jacksonwho was nearing the end of his career. The other main thing is that McDaniels was given no say in player personnel decisions during his short one year tenure in St. Louis. The Rams had McDaniels under contract for the 2012 but allowed him to leave after head coachSteve Spagnuolowas fired. By hiring McDaniels this offseason and giving him full power over offensive player personnel decisions, McDaniels could turn this Rams team around and finally get them going in the right direction.

http://www.vavel.com/en-us/nfl/5762...-potentially-replace-jeff-fisher-in-2016.html

What is this excrement? Den, I'm sorry for being so brash if you agree with it. Not trying to be insulting. But this is total shit.

Josh McDaniels? There is zero fucking chance that is going to happen. Anyone who thinks that's a good move needs to be committed.

Kevin Sumlin? GTFO. He runs an Air Raid offense, just ran his starting QB off (Kyle Allen is transferring) and went 8-4 this year. Plus, his teams play terrible defenses. Zero chances.

Jim Schwartz? Why would we hire Jeff Fisher's protege? He has the exact same coaching style as HC as Jeff Fisher.

These are horrid recommendations. (n)
(Except for Hue)
 

den-the-coach

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What is this excrement? Den, I'm sorry for being so brash if you agree with it. Not trying to be insulting. But this is total crap.

Josh McDaniels? There is zero freaking chance that is going to happen. Anyone who thinks that's a good move needs to be committed.

Kevin Sumlin? GTFO. He runs an Air Raid offense, just ran his starting QB off (Kyle Allen is transferring) and went 8-4 this year. Plus, his teams play terrible defenses. Zero chances.

Jim Schwartz? Why would we hire Jeff Fisher's protege? He has the exact same coaching style as HC as Jeff Fisher.

These are horrid recommendations. (n)
(Except for Hue)

Just an article I reviewed when googling...If the Rams do indeed relieve Jeff Fisher of his duties, I do believe they will interview McDaniels though....Kroenke embraced the Patriot Paradigm is one reason and he coached in Denver so Kroenke knows of him plus although it was not good, he was the offensive coordinator for one year.

Hey in the end, Hue Jackson is the perfect guy for the Rams, level headed, offensive background and should have the ability to put together a quality coaching staff. Hopefully the Rams agree with you and me because I really believe like you Jackson would be a great fit.
 

jrry32

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Just an article I reviewed when googling...If the Rams do indeed relieve Jeff Fisher of his duties, I do believe they will interview McDaniels though....Kroenke embraced the Patriot Paradigm is one reason and he coached in Denver so Kroenke knows of him plus although it was not good, he was the offensive coordinator for one year.

Hey in the end, Hue Jackson is the perfect guy for the Rams, level headed, offensive background and should have the ability to put together a quality coaching staff. Hopefully the Rams agree with you and me because I really believe like you Jackson would be a great fit.

There's no way they'll interview McGenious after that shit show in 2011. No way. It would be like the Rams interviewing Scott Linehan for a job.

I just want a great coach. I don't care if he's offensive-minded or defensive-minded. But I definitely have the most confidence in Hue Jackson.
 

den-the-coach

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There's no way they'll interview McGenious after that crap show in 2011. No way. It would be like the Rams interviewing Scott Linehan for a job.

I just want a great coach. I don't care if he's offensive-minded or defensive-minded. But I definitely have the most confidence in Hue Jackson.

Hope you're right...I want the Rams to go offensive minded and would even embrace David Shaw from the college ranks, but I don't believe he wants to leave Palo Alto. My short list would be:

  1. Hue Jackson
  2. Adam Gase
  3. Jim Mora
I know you like Ben McAdoo, however, I would interview at least one defensive coach and I might just interview Schwartz to lay the foundation for him to be the defensive coordinator.
 

thirteen28

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Hue Jackson or Adam Gase.

Eh. Zampese has been an assistant coach for a long time. Who knows how good he is or isn't. But I know what Hue is. The guy took Derrius Heyward-Bey, Jason Campbell, and Darren McFadden in 2011 and made them look like quality NFL players. Those are three huge first round busts that he managed to make great use of.

Don't let that fool you - he might be following in his old man's footsteps. Ernie Zampese was a highly-regarded OC in the 80's and 90's (for very good reason). He was offered multiple opportunities to interview for HC jobs but turned down every one of them, opting to remain an OC instead. He didn't want the headaches that come with being a HC, and felt he was most effective as a coordinator. So his son Ken might be thinking along those lines. I'd have no problem with him coming in as an OC if Jackson became the HC.