Frontrunners to Win NFL Coach of the Year

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https://www.si.com/nfl/2018/11/30/nfl-coach-year-candidates-andy-reid-bill-obrien-matt-nagy

Frontrunners to Win NFL Coach of the Year
By CONOR ORR

On Thursday morning, I messaged editor Bette Marston and told her I was going to make today's Morning Huddle about handicapping the NFL’s coach of the year race. Then, I stepped away from the computer for a second and thought, How the hell am I going to do that? There’s a legit case to be made for almost one-third of the NFL’s coaches.

The fine folks at Touchdown Wire beat me to the punch with a post, but after taking in all the factors, I’ll give it a shot anyway. I’ve been criticized in the past for putting Bill Belichick too high on my list (or on my list at all) which is laughable considering the astounding consistency with which he operates. Would you put any money on the Saints, Chiefs or Rams winning 10 games three years from now without knowing what the team will look like? Would you do it with the Patriots?

Anyway, here goes nothing. Given that there’s still a good chunk of the regular season to go, separating them into tiers (with the frontrunners up top) makes a little more sense. Things can—and will—change.

TIER 1: Andy Reid, Bill O’Brien, Matt Nagy, Asshole Face

• Start by re-reading Jenny Vrentas’s profile of Reid from the future issue. To me, this best illustrates the traits we’re looking for in an NFL coach: Tactical genius, with a dialed-in understanding of people. He’s also gifting the NFL with one of the most high-octane offenses we’ve seen in decades with a quarterback in his first season as an NFL starter. His coaching tree is growing strong roots around the NFL, for the better.

• O’Brien might have my vote right now. The Texans have won eight straight after starting the season 0–3; just two percent of NFL teams who start the season 0–3 since 1980 make the playoffs, or five out of 173, according to the Chronicle. This is such a monumental lift to keep a locker room full of established stars together during an early-season stumble. Now, the Texans are playing smart, efficient football and could wind up as one of the top three seeds in the AFC.

• Nagy is this year’s rags-to-riches candidate; a coach who took a dead-in-the-water franchise from the year before and, with similar parts, molded it into a potential division winner. Khalil Mack helps, but Mitchell Trubisky is growing by leaps and bounds this year. That’s more than a year of maturation, that’s a coach who understands how to put his quarterback in the best spot.

• Payton continually reinvents his teams and, like Reid, should be applauded for the flexibility. Given Drew Brees’s seniority, I would give the edge slightly to Reid in terms of what is most impressive, though the Saints are more complete team. They are dominant in a way that makes it difficult to reason Payton out of the conversation.

TIER 2: Frank Reich, Anthony Lynn, Pete Carroll, Sean McVay

• This is the same offensive line that could not protect Andrew Luck and helped drive him to the brink of early retirement. Now with the addition of Quenton Nelson, he glides through games untouched. The Colts are winning games they shouldn’t. They’re making a star out of Eric Ebron. Reich was a hidden gem on Philly’s Super Bowl staff a year ago, and it’s not hard to see the hole he left behind and the massive boost he’s given the Colts.

• Lynn has the unfortunate distinction of coaching the NFL’s forgotten team, but the Chargers are playing some incredible football right now. This final stretch, which sees them get another crack at the Chiefs and also the first-place Steelers, surging Ravens and Broncos, could elevate his candidacy.

• While I’m hesitant to give Carroll a ton of credit for overcoming a roster overhaul that he himself helped orchestrate, it is impressive to see a coach revert back to a “competition” style roster-building philosophy with holdovers from a very different regime. Creating the Legion of Boom was not easy, and this surprising season is no light lift, either.

• What else can we say about McVay? His offense is spectacular. Les Snead is quick on the trigger when the roster looks soft in one place. The Rams are in an amazing position to win the Super Bowl this year. But … will voters who tend to get bored and follow the next story give him the nod twice in a row?

TIER 3: Bill Belichick, Mike Tomlin, Vance Joseph, Whoever wins the NFC East

• Tomlin is doing this in the middle of a personnel crisis that would have destroyed almost any other franchise.

• Belichick is doing this with, yes, a great quarterback, but one who is not 100% healthy. New coordinators (again), Josh Gordon as his most dependable wideout and a roster of parts that seem to be breaking down around Tom Brady.

• The Broncos have a chance to make the playoffs, which would represent an incredible turnaround. Vance Joseph has been getting heat from management all season and finds ways to respond. Their running game is special. If they sneak into the postseason, don’t rule it out.

• If Doug Pederson’s Eagles somehow make a run, I would find his candidacy to have merit. It is incredibly difficult to coach a team that just won the Super Bowl, especially without a ton of roster turnover. The Eagles have been mostly unlucky in 2018, with injuries ravaging an otherwise talented roster.
 

Liberator

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Mcvay won't win because no one will win this two years in a row, but he should be in tier 1 at least lol.
 

yrba1

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I'd give it to Nagy if we don't win the Super Bowl, McVay deserves it if we win it all.
 

Picked4td

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The awards are handed out before the super bowl so winning it wouldn’t matter.

My vote is for Nagy. I always considered this award to be for the coach leads his team to more success than roster would indicate or the coach of the team with the biggest turn around. If it was simply the best coach, Belicheat would win it almost every year. So I’m fine with mcVay not being in contention
 

FarNorth

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The awards are handed out before the super bowl so winning it wouldn’t matter.

My vote is for Nagy. I always considered this award to be for the coach leads his team to more success than roster would indicate or the coach of the team with the biggest turn around. If it was simply the best coach, Belicheat would win it almost every year. So I’m fine with mcVay not being in contention[/QUOT

Guess deserving it is not sufficient reason to give it to McVay two years in a row ?
 

Picked4td

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Guess deserving it is not sufficient reason to give it to McVay two years in a row ?

It depends how you look at the award. Like I said, I dont look at it as best coach, otherwise Belicheat would have won almost every year, and Andy Reid would have won more than once. Its similar to MVP award in the NBA. if it went to the best player each year, Lebron would win every single time, but thats not how it works.

As I said in my original post, "I always considered this award to be for the coach leads his team to more success than roster would indicate or the coach of the team with the biggest turn around." and to me, so far this year that is Nagy.
 

-X-

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No Gregg Williams?
What if the Browns win out?
 

Picked4td

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No Gregg Williams?
What if the Browns win out?

award tends to favor winning teams though. in fact, jimmy johnson in 1990 is the coach to ever win with losing record (7-9) and the worst record since than has been 10-6 and browns winning out would be 9-6-1. so id say odds arent in their favor, but maybe taking over midseason would be enough to trump history?
 

Mackeyser

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If we curbstomp the Bears and finish 15-1, I think McVay has to be a top contender.
 

Merlin

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Well at the almost 2 year point for Coach it looks like he's going to be that guy who could win it every year. Which means he is going to have a lot of seasons where he gets overlooked, starting with this one most likely.
 

Farr Be It

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Well at the almost 2 year point for Coach it looks like he's going to be that guy who could win it every year. Which means he is going to have a lot of seasons where he gets overlooked, starting with this one most likely.
Exactly. How is it that Payton is mentioned as top tier, yet McVay is almost an afterthought?

If we are using last years finish as a baseline, the Aints nearly went to the Super Bowl, and are pretty much the same team. Very impressive. But how is their year more impressive than the step up that McVay and the Rams have clearly taken?

Total disrespectful move on the part of the writer.

I love the fact that the juggernaut was silenced the other night on the national stage.

Wait, we played recently on the national stage, too. I’ll have to go back and look. I forget how that worked out for Coach of the Year Sean McVay, and the Rams.
 

Merlin

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Exactly. How is it that Payton is mentioned as top tier, yet McVay is almost an afterthought?

You know what's cool though? If you were to have a head coach draft McVay would go 1 overall, every time, no matter how you scramble up the teams. Belichick is the greatest ever, but he's in that twilight of his career. McVay is the guy every team wants and is seeking right now.