1. This Board Rocks has been moved to a new domain: CarolinaPanthersForum.com

    All member accounts remain the same.

    Most of the content is here, as well. Except that the Preps Forum has been split off to its own board at: http://www.prepsforum.com

    Welcome to the new Carolina Panthers Forum!

    Dismiss Notice

Coordinator Primed to be head coaches

Discussion in 'Carolina Panthers' started by Ipimpcrazydave, Dec 30, 2008.

  1. Ipimpcrazydave

    Ipimpcrazydave Full Access Member

    Posts:
    826
    Likes Received:
    0
    Joined:
    Jan 16, 2004
    Look who's number 5...

    http://www.profootballweekly.com/PFW/The+Way+We+Hear+It/WWHI/2008/wwhi122908.htm

    Assisted giving

    Spagnuolo tops list of hot head-coaching candidates among league assistants

    By Dan Arkush
    Dec. 29, 2008

    Updated at 6:10 p.m. EST Monday, Dec. 29

    They call it Black Monday — the day after the regular season ends, when fallen victims start dotting the head-coaching landscape. And this season is no exception, with three head coaches getting axed Monday.


    Steve Spagnuolo (left)
    and Leslie Frazier

    With the coaching carousel already spinning, the time seems right to take a look at the top NFL assistant coaches likely to be considered for this year’s head-coach vacancies, especially considering the smashing success former assistant coaches Mike Smith (Atlanta), John Harbaugh (Baltimore) and Tony Sparano (Miami) have enjoyed in their maiden voyages as head coaches, each of them deserving legitimate consideration for NFL Coach of the Year honors.
    What follows is a rundown of the five assistant coaches who we hear could be the hottest commodities in this year’s head-coach marketplace, complete with comments from league insiders:

    1. Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo

    The 49-year-old Spagnuolo burst onto the head-coaching radar screen big-time last season following his defense’s impressive performance on the road to a Super Bowl title. The showing by the defense was culminated by its eye-opening effort against New England’s record-breaking offense, which couldn’t have served as a better audition for a head-coaching job.

    But after being interviewed by Redskins owner Daniel Snyder for the job that was eventually given to former Seahawks assistant coach Jim Zorn, Spagnuolo was rewarded with a $2 million-a-year contract that makes him one of the league’s highest-paid assistants.

    There is a school of thought that the Giants could try to convince Spagnuolo to become the team’s “head coach in waiting.” But with current head coach Tom Coughlin still having three years left on his contract, and Spagnuolo staring age 50 squarely in the face, we hear he’s more likely to graduate into the head-coaching ranks now.

    “Spags is a players’ coach,” a league insider told PFW. “He comes from the proven (Eagles defensive coordinator) Jimmy Johnson, pressure-driven, intensive philosophy. He gets the most out of his players. He understands personnel and how to maximize it. He’s very professional, hardworking and diligent.

    “He’s got an undeniable passion for the game. He found a way to beat the unbeatable Patriots. He’s with the reigning Super Bowl champs and has a legitimate chance to repeat. There’s little not to like, and he’s an even better person than he is a coach.”

    2. Vikings assistant head coach/defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier

    Considered by most insiders to be the top minority head-coaching candidate, Frazier has earned strong reviews for the job he’s done this season in his second year as the Vikings’ defensive coordinator, overseeing a unit ranked first against the run and sixth overall. He was interviewed by Bill Parcells for the Dolphins’ opening last season and has an impressive winning pedigree.

    Prior to joining the Vikings, Frazier served under Tony Dungy in Indianapolis, receiving a Super Bowl ring as a going-away gift. He also won a Super Bowl ring as a player (1985 Bears), and in his 10 seasons as an NFL coach, he has suffered a losing season only once — his first season with the Eagles in 1999.

    “Leslie Frazier is very much like Tony Dungy in his demeanor and knowledge of the game,” said a veteran league executive. “(Frazier) has a very good understanding of the game and people.

    “He knows what buttons to push to get people to play, but he also has a calming demeanor to get his point across without raising his voice. And he’s a great teacher.”

    3. Ravens defensive coordinator Rex Ryan

    The son of former NFL head coach and assistant coach Buddy Ryan and brother of Raiders defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, Baltimore’s defensive mastermind has coaching in his blood.

    In Rex Ryan’s 10 years with the Ravens, the last four as the team’s D-coordinator, Baltimore’s defensive units have been frequently among the league’s highest-ranked. Considered a master at disguising coverages and making defensive adjustments, Ryan interviewed for openings in Atlanta, Baltimore and Miami last offseason.

    “Rex Ryan gets great players to play great all the time,” a league executive said. “They don’t let up. To beat that ‘D,’ you have to beat them.”

    4. Titans defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz

    Schwartz has earned his spurs, first entering the league as a scout with the Browns in 1993 under Bill Belichick. Completing his 10th season on head coach Jeff Fisher’s staff, he’s been Tennessee’s D-coordinator since 2001 and has consistently assembled units that are strong against the run and in third-down situations, although he has had a strong core group to work with, as is the case for Ryan in Baltimore.

    Schwartz may be the most qualified assistant in terms of pure brainpower, but he has a tendency to come across as overly arrogant — a quality that should be very interesting to monitor in the coming days and weeks.

    “I wish there was more consistency from Jim Schwartz,” said one veteran league source. “Would you have said he were a hot candidate last year? … He’s very, very smart, but he’s always the smartest guy in the room.

    “You have to know what you’re getting and be able to manage him.”

    It’s also worth noting that a few league observers believe Titans offensive coordinator Mike Heimerdinger could get some feelers after the job he did this year with a rejuvenated Kerry Collins under center.

    5. Panthers offensive coordinator Jeff Davidson

    In Davidson’s first year as Carolina’s offensive coordinator last season, the Panthers’ offense hit the skids after QB Jake Delhomme was lost for season in Week Three.

    With Delhomme healthy in Davidson’s second season as the coordinator, Carolina’s offense has become one of the most potent and balanced the league has to offer, with the one-two punch of DeAngelo Williams and first-round rookie Jonathan Stewart running rampant behind an underrated O-line that has allowed only 20 sacks, and Steve Smith providing an explosive aerial complement.

    “In some ways he has been a bit handcuffed by the (head coach John) Fox philosophy,” a league expert said of Davidson. “He comes from the Belichick/Parcells coaching tree, and he could be this year’s Mike Smith flying under the radar and knock off an owner’s socks in the interview process.”

    Added another source: “Davidson doesn’t come across like a great communicator. But the same could have been said about Smith last year.”



    Just missing our top-five list is 32-year-old Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, who has earned kudos for the job he did bringing QB Matt Cassel along this season in place of the injured Tom Brady. Finishing his eighth season with the Pats, McDaniel has been rumored to be part of a potential package deal with Cassel for a team looking for both a new head coach and a quarterback.

    “Josh McDaniels has a good deck to work with,” a league exec said. “I thought, more than anything, it was Tom Brady calling the offense in the past. I was not a big fan. … But look at what Cassel has done this year, and it’s difficult to argue with the results.”

    Yet, the way we hear it, there are some league observers who believe McDaniels could become the latest in a long line of Belichick understudies (Charlie Weis, Romeo Crennel, Eric Mangini) who have left a lot to be desired as head coaches — should he even want to pursue such an opportunity.

    “I’m still not convinced he’s going anywhere, regardless of what happens to (Patriots VP of player personnel Scott) Pioli,” said one league source. “I think Josh knows he’s not ready.”
     
  2. PantherPaul

    PantherPaul Nap Enthusiasts

    Posts:
    59,970
    Likes Received:
    2,769
    Joined:
    Jan 7, 2003
    Location:
    Close to the glow
    :77321_bs:

    Josh McDaniel's needs to be 1 or 2
     
  3. presidence99

    presidence99 es lo que hay.

    Posts:
    16,447
    Likes Received:
    2,670
    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2007
    Because the last pats assistants to leave have done so well, right?
     
  4. PantherPaul

    PantherPaul Nap Enthusiasts

    Posts:
    59,970
    Likes Received:
    2,769
    Joined:
    Jan 7, 2003
    Location:
    Close to the glow
    Watch him surface in Cleveland
     
  5. presidence99

    presidence99 es lo que hay.

    Posts:
    16,447
    Likes Received:
    2,670
    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2007
    Not really answering my question.
     
  6. 49erpi

    49erpi Full Access Member

    Posts:
    11,980
    Likes Received:
    1
    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2003

    Mangini, Crennel gone and if Weis had a reasonable buyout he would be gone also. Brady made all of them and Belichick look good but we found out this year Belichick doesn't need Brady to succeed.

    He should be coach of the year with the loss of Brady and all the other injuries on defense but that will never happen.
     
  7. magnus

    magnus Chump-proof

    Posts:
    53,697
    Likes Received:
    2
    Joined:
    Feb 5, 2002
    Location:
    anywhere I lay my head I'm gonna call my home
    those Pats coaches are still solid coaches. They just didn't make good head coaches. I don't think McDaniels or Davidson necessarily would, either, not because of their background, just because I don't know how they'll project. Neither have been coaching at a high level for that long, but the NFL tends to fall in love with young coaches as if you're going to get a Cowher every time (and that said coach would stay ten years longer than Cowher did).

    This is how it goes. Pro assistants get mention based on their units having good years. Former head coaches get mention because they have experience. College coaches get experience if they look like they could project (Urban Meyer, for instance, is getting mention but would be awful).

    I think it's curious they say Davidson isn't a good communicator, since that's one thing he stressed over the two years he's been here. He's helped put guys like McCoy in positions of supposed equality and gets input from all around, so maybe it's a matter of context, or maybe he's setting out to do that and failing. I've really seen no evidence one way or the other.
     
  8. Shrapnel

    Shrapnel Stinky

    Age:
    62
    Posts:
    13,934
    Likes Received:
    2
    Joined:
    Jan 13, 2003
    Location:
    East Bugtussel
    You want to have Brady's baby, don't you?
     
  9. PantherPaul

    PantherPaul Nap Enthusiasts

    Posts:
    59,970
    Likes Received:
    2,769
    Joined:
    Jan 7, 2003
    Location:
    Close to the glow
    I'd like to climb up in his future baby mama's incubation chamber
    [​IMG]
     
  10. stratocatter

    stratocatter Full Access Member

    Posts:
    11,383
    Likes Received:
    0
    Joined:
    Dec 20, 2003
    We should start a rumor that McCoy is the real reason for the success of the offense.
     

Share This Page