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NFL Coaching & Front Office Changes for next season (1 Viewer)

Jim Schwartz to buffalo?
Confirmed as per Rotoworld:

Bills hired Jim Schwartz as defensive coordinator.
After his firing in Detroit, Schwartz was a rumored candidate to coordinate Marvin Lewis' defense in Cincinnati, but the Bengals stayed in-house with LBs coach Paul Guenther. Although 47-year-old Schwartz couldn't control his Lions teams, he was an effective defensive coordinator in Tennessee from 2001-2008 under Jeff Fisher. Schwartz has background in both 3-4 and 4-3 schemes dating back to the Titans and Ravens in the 1990s. The Bills have personnel fit for either kind of alignment. He's inheriting a very talented young group, and we like the hire for Buffalo. Losing Pettine was a big blow, but Schwartz softens it.

Related: Lions
 
Rotoworld:

The Dolphins held a second interview with VP Brian Gaine for their general-manager vacancy on Friday.
Gaine remains among the finalists for the GM job along with Titans VP Lake Dawson and Patriots director of player personnel Nick Caserio, who was also expected to interview on Friday. Dawson will receive his second interview on Saturday.

Source: Albert Breer on Twitter
ESPN's Ed Werder reports the Cowboys are discussing hiring ex-Lions OC Scott Linehan as their offensive play-caller.
The Cowboys currently have Bill Callahan under contract as their offensive coordinator, but it sounds like Linehan is a candidate to replace him or reduce his role. Linehan has spent the last five seasons coordinating Detroit's offense and was let go with coach Jim Schwartz this offseason. In addition to drawing interest from Dallas, he also interviewed with the Ravens earlier this week and is considered a finalist for Baltimore's offensive coordinator job.

Related: Cowboys

Source: Ed Werder on Twitter
ESPN's Adam Schefter reports "it is considered unlikely" that the Browns will hire Gary Kubiak as their offensive coordinator.
Kubiak is apparently leaning toward taking a year off, because offensive coordinator vacancies around the league are drying up fast. Cleveland just hired Mike Pettine as head coach on Thursday, so to expect a next-day coordinator hire would be unrealistic. NFL Network reported early Friday that the Browns have "interest" in Kubiak, but no interview has been scheduled yet.

Related: Browns

Source: Adam Schefter on Twitter
 
I always want to say sarcastically "nice job signing a GM so late."

Since teams have a personnel dept, is there any evidence of a team struggling at the draft because they signed a GM so late?

 
Rotoworld:

The Dolphins will host Patriots director of player personnel Nick Caserio for a second interview on Saturday.
The Dolphins just interviewed Caserio for a first time on Friday, but look to be attempting to expedite their GM search as the fanbase becomes restless. (The fanbase is always restless in Miami, but we digress.) Landing Caserio would be a coup for the Fins, so much so that our money is against perennial-whiffer Stephen Ross pulling it off. The finalists for the Dolphins' GM vacancy are Caserio, in-house option Brian Gaine, and Titans VP Lake Dawson.

Related: Patriots

Source: Tom Curran on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

NBC Washington reports the Dolphins have offered their general manager job to Patriots director of pro personnel Nick Caserio.
The Dolphins have yet to confirm the report. Caserio interviewed for the second time on Saturday and is now the leading candidate to replace Jeff Ireland. Brian Gaine, Titans VP Lake Dawson, and Bucs director of player personnel Dennis Hickey are also among the finalists for Miami's GM job.

Source: Dianna Marie Russini on Twitter
The Dolphins held a second interview with Bucs director of player personnel Dennis Hickey on Saturday.
Hickey remains in the mix for Miami's general-manager vacancy along with Brian Gaine, Titans VP Lake Dawson, and Patriots director of player personnel Nick Caserio. The Dolphins "hope" is to have a new GM by Monday.

Source: James Walker on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

NFL Network's Ian Rapoport reports the Browns are interested in Ravens LBs coach Don Martindale for their defensive coordinator vacancy.
The interest in Martindale is reportedly only there if the Bills deny the Browns' request to interview Buffalo's LBs coach Jim O'Neil for the DC job in Cleveland. Martindale has previous coordinating experience at the NFL level; he ran the Broncos defense in 2010. He just wrapped up his second season in Baltimore.

Related: Ravens

Source: Ian Rapoport on Twitter
Dolphins hired ex-Bucs director of player personnel Dennis Hickey as general manager.
Titans VP Lake Dawson turned down the job Sunday, joining Cleveland's Ray Farmer and New England's Nick Caserio as candidates who spurned the Dolphins. Hickey spent the past 18 seasons in Tampa Bay's front office and was never interviewed for the GM opening there. He has a background in college scouting and was promoted to director of player personnel in 2011. It's unclear how much power Hickey will have in Miami. The structure in South Beach is awfully confusing. Hickey, coach Joe Philbin, and executive Dawn Aponte all apparently will have an equal voice with owner Stephen Ross. Aponte is the team's contract negotiator and salary-cap guru. Hickey just gets the GM title. To be perfectly frank, we're not familiar enough with Hickey to evaluate this hire, good or bad. It's possible Ross will tie Hickey's fate to lame-duck coach Philbin's, and ax both after the season if Miami doesn't make playoffs.

Related: Buccaneers

Source: Miami Herald
NFL Network's Albert Breer passes along "word" that Cowboys OC Bill Callahan could resurface in Cleveland as Browns offensive coordinator if Dallas replaces him with Scott Linehan.
The Cowboys are known to have interest in former Lions OC Linehan, and there wouldn't be enough room in Big D for both of them behind offensive-minded head coach Jason Garrett. Callahan is one of the top offensive line coaches in football, but struggled as a 2013 playcaller and had his duties scaled back toward the end of the season. He'd be an underwhelming hire by the Browns.

Related: Browns

Source: Albert Breer on Twitter
The Ravens plan to name an offensive coordinator on Monday.
The decision is expected to come down to in-house candidate Jim Hostler and ex-Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan. We'd prefer Baltimore hired Shanahan based on previous success as an offensive playcaller, but Mike's son has something of a fiery, rock-the-boat reputation and obviously isn't as familiar with the Ravens' personnel as Hostler. Hostler is currently the team's receivers coach.

Related: Ravens

Source: Ian Rapoport on Twitter
The Miami Herald reports new Dolphins GM Dennis Hickey "was going to be fired" as Bucs director of player personnel, "probably after the draft."
The Buccaneers recently hired Jason Licht as GM, and he was going to get his own guys in Tampa Bay's front office. Still, it's a reminder of the dysfunctional situation in Miami. The Fins whiffed on virtually every "name" GM candidate owner Stephen Ross so much as considered. They wound up essentially doing Tampa Bay a favor by allowing the Bucs to get out of Hickey's guaranteed contract. We wouldn't be surprised if Hickey goes one-and-done in Miami.

Related: Buccaneers

Source: Armando Salguero on Twitter
The Miami Herald's Adam Beasley has been "told" that "several" Dolphins players are privately expressing a desire that they "want out of this situation" following Sunday's hire of new GM Dennis Hickey.
Hickey, as noted previously, was on the outs in Tampa Bay's front office and is an obvious fallback hire after owner Stephen Ross whiffed on at least three preferred GM candidates. The situation in Miami has become toxic, with Hickey set to operate as a puppet below coach Joe Philbin, who maintains control of the 53-man roster. Ross needs to blow this thing up, but his hands are tied due to his commitment to Philbin. It's only January, and already looking as though the Dolphins are headed for another really long year.

Source: Adam Beasley on Twitter
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports the Browns are considering LSU OC Cam Cameron and ex-Titans OC Dowell Loggains for their offensive coordinator job.
Cameron doesn't have a strong reputation among NFL observers, but his LSU offense made a spectacular leap in 2013 as Cameron remade himself into a more aggressive offensive mind. Loggains was fired along with Mike Munchak in Tennessee. He had Jake Locker playing some of the best football of his playing career before 2013 injuries. Either would be a sensible hire in Cleveland.

Source: Mary Kay Cabot on Twitter
LSU OC Cam Cameron told the school that he is "not going anywhere" and plans on staying at LSU "for a long time."
Cameron was said to be on the Browns' OC radar, but it doesn't appear he has any interest in jumping back into the NFL after a successful 2013 campaign in college. The Browns are also eyeballing ex-Titans OC Dowell Loggains, either to replace Norv Turner as coordinator or coach their quarterbacks.

Source: Michael Bonnette on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

Gary Kubiak has reportedly emerged as the favorite for the Ravens' offensive coordinator job.

Per ESPN's Adam Schefter, the Ravens are trying to assemble a "star-studded" offensive coaching staff that includes Kubiak, Rick Dennison and Kyle Shanahan. That trio worked together in Houston from 2006 until Shanny left in 2010, producing rapid results. The Texans were 28th in offense in 2006, 14th in 2007, 3rd in 2008 and 4th in 2009. In-house wide receivers coach Jim Hostler is the other remaining known candidate besides Kubiak.

Related: Ravens

Source: Adam Schefter on Twitter
The Ravens have been in recent contact with ex-Texans OC Rick Dennison, ostensibly about their offensive coordinator vacancy.

They may also be eyeing Dennison as an offensive line coach, perhaps pairing him with OC candidate Kyle Shanahan. Shanahan and Dennison worked together in Houston. Per beat reporter Aaron Wilson, coach John Harbaugh holds Dennison in "high regard." The leading candidates for Baltimore's OC job remain Shanahan and WRs coach Jim Hostler, but Dennison may be a sleeper.


Source: Aaron Wilson on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

Browns hired Bills LBs coach Jim O'Neil as defensive coordinator.
As expected. The Bills granted the Browns permission to speak to O'Neil early Monday, and Cleveland announced the hiring this evening. O'Neil has one year of previous defensive coordinator experience -- 2005 at Towson University. He spent one year with the Bills after being on the Jets staff for four seasons with new Browns coach Mike Pettine. O'Neil actually played for Pettine's father in high school. Pettine will call defensive plays in 2014, while O'Neil gets a feel for the job. He will likely see an expanded role the following season.

Related: Bills
NFL.com's Ian Rapoport reports the Cowboys are "going to hire" ex-Lions OC Scott Linehan, and that he will call plays.
It's unclear what Linehan's official title will be, but it's irrelevant. He's kicking current OC Bill Callahan to the curb and doing what owner Jerry Jones no longer trusts Jason Garrett to do: Call plays. The situation is complicated by the fact that the Cowboys apparently have no plans to let Callahan out of his contract, instead preferring to keep him on as line coach. It adds another layer of dysfunction to a power structure Jones is determined to make more muddled every offseason. If/when Linehan is hired, he'll be sure to install the same pass-happy system that's enabled Matthew Stafford to rack up absurd pass-attempt totals.

Related: Cowboys

Source: Ian Rapoport on Twitter
 
I always want to say sarcastically "nice job signing a GM so late."

Since teams have a personnel dept, is there any evidence of a team struggling at the draft because they signed a GM so late?
Only practical example that comes to mind is the Rams after 2011 took a long time to hire Fisher and then they got Snead after that. Then they went into the draft, shipped off the #2 pick... and shipped off the pick they got, and cleared out half their roster within a couple of months. They hit the ground running, they had a plan, but I am assuming they also made good use of what player evaluators were in place before they got there.

 
Rotoworld:

Gary Kubiak has reportedly emerged as the favorite for the Ravens' offensive coordinator job.

Per ESPN's Adam Schefter, the Ravens are trying to assemble a "star-studded" offensive coaching staff that includes Kubiak, Rick Dennison and Kyle Shanahan. That trio worked together in Houston from 2006 until Shanny left in 2010, producing rapid results. The Texans were 28th in offense in 2006, 14th in 2007, 3rd in 2008 and 4th in 2009. In-house wide receivers coach Jim Hostler is the other remaining known candidate besides Kubiak.

Related: Ravens

Source: Adam Schefter on Twitter
The Ravens have been in recent contact with ex-Texans OC Rick Dennison, ostensibly about their offensive coordinator vacancy.

They may also be eyeing Dennison as an offensive line coach, perhaps pairing him with OC candidate Kyle Shanahan. Shanahan and Dennison worked together in Houston. Per beat reporter Aaron Wilson, coach John Harbaugh holds Dennison in "high regard." The leading candidates for Baltimore's OC job remain Shanahan and WRs coach Jim Hostler, but Dennison may be a sleeper.


Source: Aaron Wilson on Twitter
Interesting since they play the Texans twice each year and almost have a "we want the guy that led that offense" theory here.

Too early for research-have the Texans traditionally done well against the Ravens D? Why the love there?

 
Rotoworld:

ESPN Redskins blogger John Keim reports the Browns are "now talking to" ex-Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan regarding their offensive coordinator vacancy.

It's the first we've seen Shanahan linked to the Browns, though the Cleveland Plain Dealer also wondered if Shanahan was a candidate for the OC job Tuesday morning. Shanahan's star has faded a bit over the past calendar year, but he's still viewed as a bright, young mind. If the Browns were to peg Shanahan as offensive boss, it would be tremendous news for Josh Gordon. Andre Johnson and Pierre Garcon were target monsters under Shanahan in the past.

Related: Browns

Source: John Keim on Twitter
The Cleveland Plain Dealer mentions Bears QBs coach Matt Cavanuagh as a potential candidate to fill the Browns' offensive coordinator vacancy.

The paper is simply throwing names against the wall, but Cavanaugh stood out. He and coach Mike Pettine have a connection that runs deep. Cavanaugh helped Pettine land his first NFL job with the Ravens in the early-2000s. Cavanaugh was Baltimore's OC from 1999-2004. Pettine and Cavanaugh then worked together with the Jets. Cavanaugh just wrapped up his first season as Bears QBs coach and got a combined big year out of Jay Cutler and Josh McCown.

Related: Bears

Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
 
Rotoworld:

ESPN's Chris Mortensen reports the Browns will interview ex-Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan for their offensive coordinator vacancy Wednesday.

Mortensen's colleague, John Keim, first mentioned the Shanahan-Cleveland connection earlier on Tuesday. Out of all the names connected to the Browns OC opening -- and there haven't been many -- Shanahan or ex-Titans OC Dowell Loggains would be the most intriguing hires. Being that it's so late in the process, Cleveland is unlikely to land any top assistants from other coaching staffs.

Related: Browns

Source: Chris Mortensen on Twitter
NFL Network's Albert Breer reports the Browns have "shown some interest" in Raiders QBs coach John DeFelippo regarding their offensive coordinator vacancy.

DeFelippo, 35, has been the quarterbacks coach in Oakland the past two seasons. He also coach the Raiders quarterbacks from 2007-2008. In between, DeFelippo coached QBs with the Jets (2009) and at San Jose State (2010-2011). It would be a definite out-of-the-box hire for the Browns. We'd like to see Cleveland bring in a more experienced offensive mind, considering Mike Pettine is a first-time head coach and has a defensive background.

Related: Raiders

Source: Albert Breer on Twitter
 
msommer said:
Do the Ravens really play the Texans twice a year? One is in AFC North, the other in AFC South...
Not enough coffee yet at that point, sorry.

Any thoughts on them being so interested in the Texans O?

 
Rotoworld:

Cowboys demoted DC Monte Kiffin to assistant head coach.
DL coach Rod Marinelli has been promoted to defensive coordinator. The move comes eight days after Cowboys owner Jerry Jones insisted "nothing has changed" with his coordinators. Now, both have been demoted. Kiffin is one of the most respected defensive minds in the history of the modern game, but it was clear the league had passed him by last season. A wave of injuries made matters worse, but Kiffin's unit simply didn't compete, allowing 280 more yards than any other defense in football. It's a sad end to Kiffin's coordinating career, but doesn't tarnish what he accomplished in Tampa Bay. It's definitely the right move for the Cowboys.
Speaking Tuesday, Broncos OC Adam Gase told reports "it just wasn't the right time" for him to become a head coach.
Gase said he wanted to focus on the Super Bowl, and has put all head coaching opportunities on the "backburner." Gase did hint he may have jumped if a better opportunity than the Browns or Vikings had been on the table. With every head coaching job sewn up already, Gase will certainly be back with the Broncos in 2014, but another successful season should give the talented OC his pick of the head coaching litter next offseason.

Related: Browns

Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
A source tells ESPN's Ed Werder the Cowboys are refusing to let OL coach Bill Callahan out of the final year of his contract because he's a "potential interim head coach" if Jason Garrett is fired mid-season.
In other words, the Cowboys are (allegedly) creating instability in anticipation of future instability. Even for owner/GM Jerry Jones, that would be a new one. If the source's report is true, it's less clear than ever why 'ol Jer continues to stick with Garrett. Jones has no faith in Garrett's ability to oversee the offense, while Garrett's in-game decision making remained amongst the worst in the league in 2013.

Source: Ed Werder on Twitter
ESPN Dallas reports Cowboys OC Bill Callahan "isn't happy" with Scott Linehan's impending hire, and is "thinking about his future."
Linehan is being hired to replace Callahan, but the Cowboys have no intention of letting Callahan out of the final year of his contract. Callahan is a highly-respected line coach, but it would be unusual to force a demoted assistant to serve out his deal if he desired to leave. That's apparently want Callahan wants to do. It's yet another sideshow for an organization that specializes in them.

Source: ESPN Dallas
New Dolphins GM Dennis Hickey insists the team's power structure is "completely clear," and that he'll "be in charge" of the 53-man roster.
That's not the belief in league circles, but it's Hickey's story, and he's sticking to it. Miami's Plan Z, Hickey will obviously have significant influence over the 53-man roster, but it's widely believed the buck stops at coach Joe Philbin. It's a baffling arrangement considering Philbin has excelled at very little during his two years as head coach. Perhaps the Dolphins have lucked into a great hire with Hickey, but more than likely, their current arrangement assures another 2-3 years of unnecessary mediocrity.

Source: Dolphins on Twitter
 
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- The Tennessee Titans have hired Mike Sullivan as assistant offensive line coach.

The Titans announced the hiring Tuesday.

Sullivan has coached in the NFL for 11 seasons and coached the offensive line in Cleveland in 2013 where the Browns had two Pro Bowl picks in tackle Joe Thomas and center Alex Mack. He also coached the line for San Diego between 2009 and 2012. Sullivan had two other stints with Cleveland between 2007 and 2009 coaching the offensive line and 2001-2004 as an assistant offensive line coach.

He played in college at Miami and played 48 NFL games with Tampa Bay before going into coaching in 1997. He also coached the offensive line at Western Michigan.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/28/3898912/titans-hire-sullivan-as-assistant.html#storylink=cpy

 
STL beat reporter tweeted this morning that DC Tim Walton will not be retained after just one year.

People may recall that Gregg Williams was supposed to be the DC in 2012, but was caught up in the bountygate scandal. His son was the defacto DC (or an assistant to Fisher?), but was let go after that season.

No announcement about a replacement yet, some have speculated Williams as he is available. The timing is odd, perhaps Fisher could have gotten Schwartz if this had been done earlier, given their connection?

The hand writing was somewhat on the wall, with STL getting off to a terrible 1-3 start, ten yard off coverages by the CBs and Fisher reportedly taking a bigger role in the defense at the end of the season. I thought Walton would be more vulnerable than the OC Schottenheimer, but figured he was in the clear at this point, after virtually the entire league was done playing musical chairs with their coaching staffs.

* edit/add - PFT on Walton being fired.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/report-tim-walton-out-as-rams-defensive-coordinator/

PFT reporting that Mort confirming STL expected to hire Williams. That would be a big upgrade.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/rams-make-quick-hire-bring-gregg-williams-back/

 
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STL beat reporter tweeted this morning that DC Tim Walton will not be retained after just one year.

People may recall that Gregg Williams was supposed to be the DC in 2012, but was caught up in the bountygate scandal. His son was the defacto DC (or an assistant to Fisher?), but was let go after that season.

No announcement about a replacement yet, some have speculated Williams as he is available. The timing is odd, perhaps Fisher could have gotten Schwartz if this had been done earlier, given their connection?

The hand writing was somewhat on the wall, with STL getting off to a terrible 1-3 start, ten yard off coverages by the CBs and Fisher reportedly taking a bigger role in the defense at the end of the season. I thought Walton would be more vulnerable than the OC Schottenheimer, but figured he was in the clear at this point, after virtually the entire league was done playing musical chairs with their coaching staffs.

* edit/add - PFT on Walton being fired.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/report-tim-walton-out-as-rams-defensive-coordinator/

PFT reporting that Mort confirming STL expected to hire Williams. That would be a big upgrade.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/rams-make-quick-hire-bring-gregg-williams-back/
Interesting since Schwartz was available (til recently) that he wanted Williams.

 
Rotoworld:

The Dolphins and assistant GM Brian Gaine have mutually agreed to part ways.

Gaine had been with the Dolphins since the 2008 season but was rightfully unhappy that he was passed over for the team's general manager job last weekend. There were reports that the Dolphins felt Gaine was too closely connected to ex-GM Jeff Ireland. Many around the NFL believe Gaine has a bright future. Hiring GM Dennis Hickey over Gaine may prove to be yet another blunder by the Dolphins. Ex-Bucs GM Mark Dominik, Hickey's old boss, is reportedly in the mix to replace Gaine as Miami's assistant general manager.


Source: Miami Herald
 
STL beat reporter tweeted this morning that DC Tim Walton will not be retained after just one year.

People may recall that Gregg Williams was supposed to be the DC in 2012, but was caught up in the bountygate scandal. His son was the defacto DC (or an assistant to Fisher?), but was let go after that season.

No announcement about a replacement yet, some have speculated Williams as he is available. The timing is odd, perhaps Fisher could have gotten Schwartz if this had been done earlier, given their connection?

The hand writing was somewhat on the wall, with STL getting off to a terrible 1-3 start, ten yard off coverages by the CBs and Fisher reportedly taking a bigger role in the defense at the end of the season. I thought Walton would be more vulnerable than the OC Schottenheimer, but figured he was in the clear at this point, after virtually the entire league was done playing musical chairs with their coaching staffs.

* edit/add - PFT on Walton being fired.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/report-tim-walton-out-as-rams-defensive-coordinator/

PFT reporting that Mort confirming STL expected to hire Williams. That would be a big upgrade.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/rams-make-quick-hire-bring-gregg-williams-back/
Interesting since Schwartz was available (til recently) that he wanted Williams.
Agreed, Bri.

I think the timing caught everybody off guard. As far as I know, there were no recent hints from the usual suspects, such as Wagoner, Thomas, Miklasz, Burwell.

I think it is a good sign that Fisher is capable of admitting he made a mistake. Now lets see if he can fire or restructure Finnegan (he has to?).

The defensive stats were off. They were about 13th in points allowed and 15th in yards allowed, but tied 31st and dead last in completion percentage and Y/A allowed, respectively.

Per Schwartz, it is possible Fisher just liked Williams better straight up? His son was fired (who reportedly lacked personal skills), but looks that wasn't an issue. Below is a good article on his scheme, recommended. The main holes on the defense are FS (Clinton-Dix or Pryor?), and another CB to upgrade starter/nickel/depth (Dennard or Martin?). Maybe LB if Dunbar moves on in free agency, but he was a part time player and played about half the time, so not as big a priority. With the higher first round pick, I'm hoping for WR Watkins or LT Robinson (both if that were somehow possible), and than possibly one of the DBs with the other first round pick at 1.13, or possibly after a trade down?

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1794097-the-insiders-guide-to-a-gregg-williams-defense#articles/1794097-the-insiders-guide-to-a-gregg-williams-defense

 
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Rotoworld:

Ravens promoted Steve Spagnuolo to defensive backs coach and assistant head coach.
Spganuolo was hired as a senior defensive assistant prior to the 2013 season. He gets a bump up for 2014 and will see an increased role when it comes to game planning. Spags has a boatload of experience as a defensive backs coach. He and coach John Harbaugh are close friends from their Eagles days.
Bills hired ex-Ravens WRs coach Jim Hostler as a senior offensive assistant.
Hostler has been in the news lately; he was a finalist for the Ravens offensive coordinator job before being passed over in favor of Gary Kubiak. The Bills lost WRs coach Ike Hilliard to the Redskins, so it's likely Hostler will handle those duties in addition to his increased role. Hostler has coordinating experience; he "led" the 49ers' No. 32 offense in 2007 under then-coach Mike Nolan.

Related: Ravens
 
Rotoworld:

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports new Browns assistant Dowell Loggains will serve as "at least" quarterbacks coach, and could still be "in the mix" for the vacant offensive coordinator position.
Loggains served as the Titans' offensive coordinator for the last five games of 2012 and all of 2013. The Browns have also interviewed former Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan and Raiders quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo.

Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
The Cleveland Plain Dealer and Akron Beacon-Journal report new Browns offensive assistant Dowell Loggains is expected to serve as quarterbacks coach.
NFL.com's Ian Rapoport reported Loggains will either serve as QBs coach or offensive coordinator. It appeared Loggains would be coordinator after the Browns moved on from Kyle Shanahan, but that's apparently not the case. Raiders QBs coach John DeFelippo is the only other known candidate to replace Norv Turner.

Source: Mary Kay Cabot on Twitter
NFL.com's Ian Rapoport reports the Browns appear to have "moved on" from ex-Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan in their coordinator search.
The Browns added ex-Titans OC Dowell Loggains to their staff Thursday, though it's yet to be determined if he'll serve as coordinator or quarterbacks coach. The fact that Cleveland is moving on from Shanahan is a strong sign Loggains will be the offensive overseer. Shanahan has now struck out on each of Cleveland, Baltimore and Miami's coordinator jobs. The humbled former wiz kid may have to latch on as someone's QBs coach to rebuild his reputation.

Related: Browns

Source: Ian Rapoport on Twitter
Ravens promoted Steve Spagnuolo to defensive backs coach and assistant head coach.
Spagnuolo was hired as a senior defensive assistant prior to the 2013 season. He gets a bump up for 2014 and will see an increased role when it comes to game planning. Spags has a boatload of experience as a defensive backs coach. He and coach John Harbaugh are close friends from their Eagles days.
 
STL beat reporter tweeted this morning that DC Tim Walton will not be retained after just one year.

People may recall that Gregg Williams was supposed to be the DC in 2012, but was caught up in the bountygate scandal. His son was the defacto DC (or an assistant to Fisher?), but was let go after that season.

No announcement about a replacement yet, some have speculated Williams as he is available. The timing is odd, perhaps Fisher could have gotten Schwartz if this had been done earlier, given their connection?

The hand writing was somewhat on the wall, with STL getting off to a terrible 1-3 start, ten yard off coverages by the CBs and Fisher reportedly taking a bigger role in the defense at the end of the season. I thought Walton would be more vulnerable than the OC Schottenheimer, but figured he was in the clear at this point, after virtually the entire league was done playing musical chairs with their coaching staffs.

* edit/add - PFT on Walton being fired.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/report-tim-walton-out-as-rams-defensive-coordinator/

PFT reporting that Mort confirming STL expected to hire Williams. That would be a big upgrade.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/01/29/rams-make-quick-hire-bring-gregg-williams-back/
Interesting since Schwartz was available (til recently) that he wanted Williams.
Agreed, Bri.

I think the timing caught everybody off guard. As far as I know, there were no recent hints from the usual suspects, such as Wagoner, Thomas, Miklasz, Burwell.

I think it is a good sign that Fisher is capable of admitting he made a mistake. Now lets see if he can fire or restructure Finnegan (he has to?).

The defensive stats were off. They were about 13th in points allowed and 15th in yards allowed, but tied 31st and dead last in completion percentage and Y/A allowed, respectively.

Per Schwartz, it is possible Fisher just liked Williams better straight up? His son was fired (who reportedly lacked personal skills), but looks that wasn't an issue. Below is a good article on his scheme, recommended. The main holes on the defense are FS (Clinton-Dix or Pryor?), and another CB to upgrade starter/nickel/depth (Dennard or Martin?). Maybe LB if Dunbar moves on in free agency, but he was a part time player and played about half the time, so not as big a priority. With the higher first round pick, I'm hoping for WR Watkins or LT Robinson (both if that were somehow possible), and than possibly one of the DBs with the other first round pick at 1.13, or possibly after a trade down?

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1794097-the-insiders-guide-to-a-gregg-williams-defense#articles/1794097-the-insiders-guide-to-a-gregg-williams-defense
I'm afraid Finnegan is too small to be so mouthy and his career wouldn't end well with a lost step. I don't doubt he is going to recognize his drop in play and try to come back from it and return to form, but I doubt he's still got it. Those types that lose "it" fast is exactly how he looked this past season IMO. I wonder if he's done with the Rams, cut by some team that signs him, and retires.

Now that David Stewart is rumored to be released, I expect him to be a Ram. http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/4912/examining-barksdales-future-at-right-tackle?ex_cid=espnapi_public That article suggest some OL uncertainty even with the current RT.

The Titans owner's new rule to release players that aren't worth what they make is great for football fans that see overpaid guys that are obvious, but when it's good players like Stewart it's very interesting.

Williams seems to have coached several Ds that always had to overcome a deficiency. I don't think we've seen him coach a well stocked D since the Redskins. It seems so different when he's compensating or masking a weakness than when he's actually got a good D.

He always leaves one CB alone, like totally alone who cares if two WRs are on his side he's still alone. (Yes Peyton picked up on this) The Rams have two good young CBs but is one good enough to handle that?

Verner is the top CB free agent and will probably get huge offers.

Michael Griffin is an awesome safety. If not for playing behind two legends in Ed Reed and Troy much of his career, he'd probably have plenty of pro bowls and all-pros. How does one understand the owner's sentiment and gauge Griffin's salary? Michael Griffin is set to make 8 mil per for the next few years. Williams and Fisher would each do a cartwheel if they could somehow get Griffin. Griffin is a guy that you'd swear is literally everywhere, could cover Vernon Davis and also give Russell Wilson many sleepless nights.

I don't know that a team should tie up so much money in a DB though. With a good young team, I think they should try and make it a well stacked defense and not spend so much on one spot. That article seems to suggest a truckload of $ needed for the OL too.

 
Rotoworld:

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports ex-Redskins OC Kyle Shanahan is "still very much in the mix" for the Browns offensive coordinator vacancy.
The Browns hired ex-Titans OC Dowell Loggains on Thursday, which led some to believe Shanahan was in the rearview, but Loggains is expected to serve as quarterbacks coach. He could also take on OC duties if the Browns can't find someone to fill that role, but for now it appears Cleveland is still in search mode. We'd expect a resolution within the next week.

Related: Browns

Source: Mary Kay Cabot on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

FOX Sports' Alex Marvez reports the Browns have hired Kyle Shanahan as offensive coordinator.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer and Akron Beacon Journal both reported early Saturday morning that Shanahan was very much still in the mix to be the offensive overseer for the Browns, after some guessed Shanahan was out of the running Thursday. Shanahan gets away from his father and will run the show on the offensive side of the ball for the Browns. First on his to-do list: find a quarterback. Shanahan's hire is a positive sign for Josh Gordon, however. In Shanahan's previous stops with the Texans and Redskins, Andre Johnson and Pierre Garcon dominated targets at X receiver.

Related: Browns

Source: Alex Marvez on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

FOX Sports' Alex Marvez reports the Browns have hired Kyle Shanahan as offensive coordinator.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer and Akron Beacon Journal both reported early Saturday morning that Shanahan was very much still in the mix to be the offensive overseer for the Browns, after some guessed Shanahan was out of the running Thursday. Shanahan gets away from his father and will run the show on the offensive side of the ball for the Browns. First on his to-do list: find a quarterback. Shanahan's hire is a positive sign for Josh Gordon, however. In Shanahan's previous stops with the Texans and Redskins, Andre Johnson and Pierre Garcon dominated targets at X receiver.

Related: Browns

Source: Alex Marvez on Twitter
(last part of that post, roto's) I never understood why people draw conclusions like that. I'd rather go out on a limb and guess Shanahan's O includes many targets for Gordon

 
Bri said:
Faust said:
Rotoworld:

FOX Sports' Alex Marvez reports the Browns have hired Kyle Shanahan as offensive coordinator.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer and Akron Beacon Journal both reported early Saturday morning that Shanahan was very much still in the mix to be the offensive overseer for the Browns, after some guessed Shanahan was out of the running Thursday. Shanahan gets away from his father and will run the show on the offensive side of the ball for the Browns. First on his to-do list: find a quarterback. Shanahan's hire is a positive sign for Josh Gordon, however. In Shanahan's previous stops with the Texans and Redskins, Andre Johnson and Pierre Garcon dominated targets at X receiver.

Related: Browns

Source: Alex Marvez on Twitter
(last part of that post, roto's) I never understood why people draw conclusions like that. I'd rather go out on a limb and guess Shanahan's O includes many targets for Gordon
huh? isn't that what it says?

 
Rotoworld:

Seahawks DC Dan Quinn said he "certainly" would've been interested in the Browns' head coaching job.

Hey, the Browns finally found a hot name that wants their job! "It's a big-time place," Quinn said. Cleveland chose not to wait until the Seahawks' Super Bowl run was over to make their move, instead settling for Bills DC Mike Pettine as their fourth head coach since 2010. Much like Gus Bradley before him, Quinn is going to ride the Legion of Boom and this dominant Seahawks unit into a head coaching position sooner rather than later. 2013 marked his first year as a coordinator at any level.

Related: Browns

Source: Mary Kay Cabot on Twitter
 
Rotoworld:

The Texans will not hire an offensive coordinator.

In his first year as an NFL head coach, Bill O'Brien will be pulling double duty. We don't think the results will suffer. O'Brien did not employ an offensive coordinator while at Penn State for the past two seasons and dealt with heavy scholarship sanctions, yet still had the Big 10's No. 4 offense in 2013. He'll work on an offense that is just one season removed from a top-seven ranking and let Romeo Crennel handle the defense.


Source: ESPN.com
 
Rotoworld:

The Texans will not hire an offensive coordinator.

In his first year as an NFL head coach, Bill O'Brien will be pulling double duty. We don't think the results will suffer. O'Brien did not employ an offensive coordinator while at Penn State for the past two seasons and dealt with heavy scholarship sanctions, yet still had the Big 10's No. 4 offense in 2013. He'll work on an offense that is just one season removed from a top-seven ranking and let Romeo Crennel handle the defense.


Source: ESPN.com
This seems like a really bad idea

 
Rotoworld:

Speaking about his plans for the Vikings' 2014 offense, new OC Norv Turner said "balance is the most critical thing."

"It's all about balance," Turner said. "We need to be good at all things." Turner was once among the league's best in running a balanced offense, but got pass happy near the end of his run in San Diego. His 2013 Browns offense was inexplicably the most pass heavy in the league, but that was largely a result of the Browns' total lack of talent at running back. That won't be an issue in Minnesota, but quarterback will. Regardless of who's under center, expect Norval to pound away with Adrian Peterson.


Source: Vikings on Twitter
 
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/nfl/news/20140206/gregg-williams-ray-horton-nfl-coordinator-hires/#ixzz2saCbH4RI

Who are the NFL's 10 best coordinator/play-caller hires of 2014?

Don Banks

You might have noticed, but there are no slow-paced years on the NFL's coaching carousel any more. No pendulum swings to the calmer side of the hiring/firing cycle. Every year spawns a furious reshuffling of staffs, and nowhere is the turnover more consistently active than at the coordinator level.

By my count there will be 10 new defensive coordinators at work in 2014, and 13 new offensive coordinators, or coaches charged with the duty of being their team's play-caller, as in the case of new Dallas passing game coordinator Scott Linehan and Houston's first-year head coach Bill O'Brien, who will serve as his own OC this season, as he did at Penn State.

That means the new blood extends far beyond the league's seven new head coaching hires. Roughly half the league (15 teams) will have at least one new coordinator this year, and eight teams will have two new coordinators and/or play-callers. Change can be good, but not all good. Here are the NFL's 10 best coordinator/play-caller hires of 2014, as the league's long offseason gets underway for all 32 teams:

1. Gregg Williams, St. Louis, defensive coordinator -- Obviously Williams nearly ruined his career and once-stellar reputation for coaching defense with that frequent-maimer rewards program (we're not using the B word) he ran for his players in New Orleans from 2009-11. But after a year of penance out of the game and a strong season of career rehab work in Tennessee, where he assisted Titans defensive coordinator Jerry Gray, Williams was a shrewd hire by Rams head coach Jeff Fisher, who clearly is under pressure to win more than seven games and get St. Louis over the hump next season, his third on the job.

In the heavyweight division known as the NFC West, where the defenses in Seattle, San Francisco and Arizona aren't messing around, last-place St. Louis has to make sure it can hold its own. The Rams have loads of talent in the defensive front seven, but everyone in the division does. All four teams in the NFC West finished in the top nine against the run, and top 13 in scoring defense. All but the Rams were in the top 14 in pass defense as well. Williams and his aggressive, edgy coaching mindset will be a nice fit with the physical style of play in the division, but he certainly knows where the line is drawn post-New Orleans. Some of Fisher's best defenses in Tennessee were with Williams as his coordinator, and both men see the potential for a renewal of that success.

2-3. Rod Marinelli, Dallas, defensive coordinator, and Scott Linehan, Dallas, passing game coordinator and play-caller -- I'm lumping the Cowboys' two moves together because it's such a strange brew that Dallas is concocting with its coaching staff. On one hand, I consider Marinelli and Linehan to be clear-cut upgrades from Monte Kiffin, who was bumped up to more of an oversight role as assistant head coach/defense, and Bill Callahan, who will keep the offensive coordinator/offensive line coach title, but no longer call plays. But on the other hand, embattled head coach Jason Garrett now has three former NFL head coaches on staff (Marinelli, Linehan and Callahan), all of whom could be candidates to replace him on an interim basis at any downtrending moment in 2014. That's so Dallas.

But elevating Marinelli from defensive line coach to coordinator was absolutely the right call. Under Kiffin, Dallas switched to a 4-3 defense in 2013 and finished last in the NFL in defense, surrendering the most yards in franchise history (6,645, third most in league history), the second-most points in Dallas history (432) and a whopping 388 first downs, second-most in league history. Yes, there were injuries to work around on defense, but Kiffin did little to stop the bleeding.

Marinelli did better work in Chicago from 2010-12 than most remember, with the Bears scoring the most defensive touchdowns (13) and forcing the most fumbles (59) in the league in that span, with the third-most interceptions (65) and fourth-fewest points allowed (904). With just a little more defense, the 2013 Cowboys would have won the weak NFC East and returned to the playoffs for the first time since 2009.

Linehan becomes the Cowboys' third play-caller in three years, but he's done quality work in the offensive coordinator role in both Minnesota and Detroit in his coaching career, and has shown skill and imagination in putting together game plans built around the passing game. Tony Romo and Co. should love his play-calling approach, and after working with Calvin Johnson with the Lions, Linehan will know how to feature Dez Bryant on gameday. Under the play-calling of both Garrett and Callahan, the Cowboys were explosive but far too inconsistent.

4. Ray Horton, Tennessee, defensive coordinator -- Horton's one season spent as Cleveland's defensive coordinator probably didn't enhance his resume, but when has that ever been the case for anyone spending time with the perpetually struggling Browns? Cleveland's defense started far stronger than it finished last year, but the Browns still finished ninth in the league in yards allowed, after being 23rd in that category in 2012.

New Titans head coach Ken Whisenhunt knows what he's getting in Horton, having had him on staff as defensive coordinator for his final two years in Arizona in 2011-12. The Cardinals defense took significant steps toward improvement both years, finishing 12th in yards allowed, ranking second-best in the league on third downs, first in passer rating (71.2), second in interceptions (22) and fifth in takeaways (33) all in 2012.

Horton coaches an aggressive, player-friendly style of defense, and his expertise in the defensive backfield almost always translates into better pass defense and increased emphasis on takeaways by his team.

5. Ben McAdoo, New York Giants, offensive coordinator -- The Giants aren't known for risk-taking or trend-setting outside-the-box thinking as an organization, but I like the chance they're taking on McAdoo, the 36-year-old first-time coordinator who replaces the retired Kevin Gilbride. Under Gilbride, New York's offense last season was predictable and stale, and McAdoo's fresh perspective should inject some much-needed life into the attack. After 10 years of the Tom Coughlin era, the offense is in desperate need of a makeover.

McAdoo is a former Green Bay quarterbacks coach and his main priority is obvious: restoring Eli Manning's faltering game to its Super Bowl-winning level. Manning threw a league- and career-high 27 interceptions last season, and forced way too many throws that ended up costing the offensively-challenged Giants. McAdoo comes with a seal of approval from Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, and is steeped in the West Coast-based offense of Green Bay head coach Mike McCarthy, with whom he has spent the past nine seasons in both San Francisco and Green Bay. Likened to a young Andy Reid, McAdoo will have Manning getting the ball out quickly and accurately in an attempt to hit receivers in stride and allow them to gain significant chunks of yardage after the catch.

It should be a new and exciting way of doing business for a Giants offense that finally ran out of gas in 2013.

6. Norv Turner, Minnesota, offensive coordinator -- I have little doubt new Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer and his new defensive coordinator, George Edwards, will vastly improve the performance of a Minnesota defense that surrendered a league-worst 30 points per game in 2013. But the problem that hasn't gone away for the Vikings since Brett Favre retired has been Minnesota's lack of upper-tier quarterbacking, and how one-dimensional that has made the offense, led by the incomparable Adrian Peterson and the running game.

The Vikings almost assuredly will draft a new franchise quarterback with their No. 8 overall pick, and having an ultra-experienced offensive coach like Turner on hand to help him transition to the NFL at least gives Zimmer and staff a chance to succeed early. Turner will not forget about Peterson, but he'll be more focused on getting the ball downfield in the passing game than recent Vikings offensive coordinators. He couldn't make much of Brandon Weeden in Cleveland last year, but Turner did get decent play and production from the likes of journeymen such as Brian Hoyer and Jason Campbell. That's worth instant respect right there.

7. Jeff Tedford, Tampa Bay, offensive coordinator -- Tedford's lack of NFL track record and his mixed record of producing NFL-ready quarterbacks while serving as head coach at Cal (you say Aaron Rodgers, I say Kyle Boller) scares some, and that's understandable. But he has a pretty extensive record of being able to identify and utilize offensive talent, both at the college level and in the CFL (where he played and coached), and I don't see his lack of play-calling experience in the NFL portending another Jeff Jagodzinski-like flameout.

In his college coaching years, Tedford put the likes of Rodgers, Trent Dilfer, Akili Smith and Boller in position to succeed in his offense, earning them first-round draft status in the NFL. Two of those guys did win Super Bowls, so .500 is not the worst batting average you could have in that regard. The Bucs need some juice on offense, where they finished last overall in the league, and it's all the more imperative that they build on the very solid first-year success of third-round quarterback Mike Glennon. Getting production from passers is Tedford's forte. With head coach Lovie Smith known for his defensive acumen, the Bucs have taken a calculated risk -- but a smart one -- that Tedford's ready for his new role.

8. Jim Schwartz, Buffalo, defensive coordinator -- Losing first-year defensive coordinator Mike Pettine to the Cleveland, where he'll be head coach, was a blow to the Buffalo defense, which played pretty stout ball for the ex-Jets assistant in 2013. The Bills had four Pro Bowl players on defense -- Mario Williams, Kyle Williams, Jarius Byrd, Marcell Dareus -- and the runner-up in the league's Defensive Rookie of the Year race, linebacker Kiko Alonso. Williams especially blossomed under Pettine, with 13 sacks, helping Buffalo get some return on its investment in the 2012 free-agent defensive end.

But before his Detroit head coaching tenure unraveled after five eventful seasons, Schwartz was considered one of the brightest and most resourceful defensive coordinators in the league under Jeff Fisher in Tennessee, and he always had the knack for getting his guys motivated and playing hard. Even Albert Haynesworth in a non-contract year. Bottom line? The Bills could have done a whole lot worse than Schwartz, who should be quite motivated himself, eager as you would think he is to do standout work in Buffalo and perhaps earn a second head-coaching opportunity.

9. Gary Kubiak, Baltimore, offensive coordinator -- Kubiak is one of four 2013 head coaches who have rotated back into assistant roles this year, joining Schwartz, new Tampa Bay defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier and new Pittsburgh offensive line coach Mike Munchak. The good news for the ex-Texans head coach? He has a low bar of expectation set for him in Baltimore, after the Ravens offense disintegrated last season, finishing 29th in yards, averaging only 3.1 rushing yards per carry (the NFL's lowest since 2007) and scoring 20 points per game.

Kubiak couldn't fix Matt Schaub and his pick-six throwing ways last season in Houston, but he has more to work with in Joe Flacco. The former Super Bowl MVP tossed a career-high 22 interceptions in 2013, but he's not an inaccurate passer. Last year's woes were mainly the result of his shoddy pass protection, the lack of a running game and the loss of Anquan Boldin and Dennis Pitta as reliable receiving options.

For years Kubiak was a successful offensive coordinator in Denver under Mike Shanahan. After Houston hired Kubiak, his Texans ranked in the top 10 offensively in six of his eight seasons with the franchise, showing the ability to both throw and run their way to victory. If Kubiak helped the likes of Brian Griese, Jake Plummer and Schaub lead playoff teams, he should be able to get Flacco's issues corrected and help return Baltimore to playoff contention in the AFC North.

10. Romeo Crennel, Houston, defensive coordinator -- New Texans head coach Bill O'Brien will intently focus on his team's offense, serving as his own offensive coordinator and play-caller, at least in his first season in Houston. Love that call, because O'Brien knows his stuff and will resurrect a Texans offense that went off the rails last season, providing the draft brings a starting quarterback to build around.

But that's why Houston desperately needed an old hand to run the defense, and there aren't many men in the NFL with more coaching experience than Crennel, who's been everywhere and done everything. The Texans could have retained Wade Phillips, but with O'Brien understandably opting for a clean break from the past, Crennel was a no-brainer.

Crennel's two head coaching stints, in Cleveland and Kansas City, didn't work out. But no one ever accused him of not knowing how to get the best out of the guys on his side of the ball. Players love playing for him, he invariably finds out how to put them in the best possible position to succeed, and he and O'Brien both bring toughness and their experience in teaching things the Patriot Way to Houston. Abundant playmaking talent is already on the Texans' roster, and Phillips showed how much could be done with it in a 3-4 defensive formation. Crennel will make for a seamless transition.

 
Rotoworld:

The Texans will not hire an offensive coordinator.

In his first year as an NFL head coach, Bill O'Brien will be pulling double duty. We don't think the results will suffer. O'Brien did not employ an offensive coordinator while at Penn State for the past two seasons and dealt with heavy scholarship sanctions, yet still had the Big 10's No. 4 offense in 2013. He'll work on an offense that is just one season removed from a top-seven ranking and let Romeo Crennel handle the defense.

Source: ESPN.com
This seems like a really bad idea
usually is.
 
Rotoworld:

Browns OC Kyle Shanahan explained how he envisions developing and utilizing a rookie quarterback.
"Any time you bring a rookie in and you start him right away, you have to find out what they do well," Shanahan said. "You have to make sure you put them in a situation to be successful." Shanahan was brought to Cleveland both because of his success with a young quarterback (Robert Griffin III) and his ability adapt to different quarterback styles. His versatility affords the Browns several options as they attempt to address their quarterback woes.

Source: The News-Herald
 
Rotoworld:

New Lions OC Joe Lombardi will be the team's offensive playcaller.
New head coach Jim Caldwell is an offensive mind, but will take more of an overseer's approach. Formerly the Saints' quarterbacks coach, Lombardi learned under Sean Payton and will keep Detroit's pass-first mentality intact, which is good news for Matthew Stafford and Calvin Johnson. "The playbook that we're starting from is the Saints' playbook," confirmed Lombardi. We wouldn't be surprised to see more of a true timeshare in the backfield, with Joique Bell handling increased carries and Reggie Bush filling a Sprolesian role.

Related: Joique Bell, Reggie Bush, Calvin Johnson, Matthew Stafford

Source: ESPN.com
 
Rotoworld:

The Texans will not hire an offensive coordinator.

In his first year as an NFL head coach, Bill O'Brien will be pulling double duty. We don't think the results will suffer. O'Brien did not employ an offensive coordinator while at Penn State for the past two seasons and dealt with heavy scholarship sanctions, yet still had the Big 10's No. 4 offense in 2013. He'll work on an offense that is just one season removed from a top-seven ranking and let Romeo Crennel handle the defense.

Source: ESPN.com
This seems like a really bad idea
usually is.
He could be waiting for someone he expects to be available next year without changing things after 1 year. My only guess. Either that, or he is a control freak.

 
Rotoworld:

Ravens hired ex-NFL receiver Bobby Engram as WRs coach.
Engram, 41, played 14 seasons in the league with the Bears, Seahawks, and Chiefs, catching 650 passes for 7,751 yards and 35 touchdowns. He coached the Pittsburgh Panthers receivers the past two seasons and is well-versed in the West Coast offense that new Ravens OC Gary Kubiak brings with him to Baltimore.

Source: Baltimore Sun
 
Sigmond Bloom and Cecil Lammey go over all of the coaching hires and give their takes on what sort of fantasy impact each hire might entail.

=========

Feb 6 2014
2014 Volume#11a - 2014 Coaching Carousel (#2080)
In This Episode: Cecil Lammey and Sigmund Bloom go around the NFL and talk about the new head coaches, coordinators and position coaches. Topics Include - is Jim Caldwell the right coach to bring the best out of QB Matthew Stafford, why the Buccaneers could show interest in QB Derek Carr, how does Jay Gruden work with Robert Griffin III, plus more!

 
Rotoworld:

Colts hired ex-Browns HC Rob Chudzinski as special assistant to the head coach.
Chudzinski and coach Chuck Pagano have a history together; they both worked on the same staff at the University of Miami in the late 1990s and then with the Browns in 2004. Chudzinski has a bright offensive mind, and this could be a way of putting OC Pep Hamilton on notice. Chudzinski has always favored a downfield, aerial attack, which is in stark contrast to Hamilton's run-heavy tendencies. Chudzinski has a tight-end background. His hire would seem to be good news for Dwayne Allen and Coby Fleener. Chud also gets reunited with Trent Richardson.

Related: Browns
 
Rotoworld:

Lions hired Jim Bob Cooter as quarterbacks coach.

Matthew Stafford said he didn't want or need a tutor to work on his mechanics. He now has three coaches with strong backgrounds in coaching up quarterbacks. Head coach Jim Caldwell helped develop Peyton Manning in Indy, offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi was Drew Brees' position coach in New Orleans and Cooter spent last year with Manning in Denver. We're fully expecting Stafford's completion percentage to rise and his interceptions to drop under the new regime.


Source: detroitlions.com
 
Rotoworld:

Texans hired Brian Gaine to be their director of pro personnel.
Gaine served the last two seasons as the assistant GM in Miami and was a finalist in the Dolphins' GM search. Gaine lost out to Dennis Hickey, however, and left Miami shortly after. Gaine is replacing Brian Gardner, who was fired after the 2013 season.

Source: houstontexans.com
 

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