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- Miami's firing of Flores was one of the more surprising head coach decisions following the 2021 National Football League season
I'm actually on the other side of this one. Its incredibly rare for a HC to retain his job after a 3 year stretch of not making the playoffs. Since 2000 only:
Ravens-John Harbaugh(who had already won a Super Bowl for his team)
Bears-Lovie Smith(who had gotten to the Super Bowl with his team)
Bengals-Marvin Lewis(Bengals had an exceptionally patient/lazy front office)
Browns-Romeo Crennel(I don't know. Maybe they thought that random Derek Anderson blowup year was for real? Even then, he only lasted 1 more season)
Cowboys-Jason Garrett(inexplicably loved by owner)
Texans-Dom Capers(expansion team, and only lasted a 4th season) Gary Kubiak(team was extra patient after Capers made little progress in his 4 years, exception that proves the rule perhaps?)
Rams-Jeff Fisher(lasted only 1 more year, and was universally panned for keeping him that long)
Saints-Jim Haslett(took team from 3-13 to playoffs in year 1, that likely bought him extra time) Sean Payton(won a ring before, and had a top-2 offense throughout)
Giants-Tom Coughlin(had won 2 rings, and that still only bought him a 4th year)
Jets-Rex Ryan(had back to back AFC championship game appearances, only lasted 1 extra year) Todd Bowles(got a 4th year, that nobody wanted)
Seahawks-Mike Holmgren(was a Super Bowl winning HC, and was also the GM)
Titans-Jeff Fisher(had gotten them to a Super Bowl previously)
So, 15 examples in 22 years. All but maybe 1-2 had better resumes than Flores. I won't speak to all the other things Flores alleges, but I don't think his firing was without just cause for on field performance. As long as he's not a distraction, its probably a good hire for the Steelers.