2021 NFL coaching changes: Detroit Lions

Detroit hired Dan Campbell to replace Matt Patricia. What does it mean for fantasy football?

There’s a great amount of real estate to cover with the Detroit Lions hiring a new head coach and coordinators for both sides of the ball. This offseason also will introduce massive changes at quarterback and wide receiver, in all likelihood.

Former Lions tight end Dan Campbell was hired away from the New Orleans Saints to replace Matt Patricia as the newest head coach of this long-standing franchise. Campbell brought former Saints defensive backs coach Aaron Glenn to the Motor City as the incoming defensive coordinator, and recently dismissed Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn will pilot the offense.

Campbell played in the NFL from 1999 until the 2009 season, operating mostly as a blocker. He laced up his cleats for the New York Giants (1999-2002), Dallas Cowboys (2003-05) and, as mentioned, Detroit (2006-08), appearing in only three games. Campbell signed with the Saints in ’09 but tore a knee ligament and missed the entire season.

As a coach, he entered the league’s intern program and was hired by the Miami Dolphins in 2011. The following year, Campbell was promoted to coach his former playing position. In 2015, he was named interim head coach after Joe Philbin was fired prior to the team’s fifth game. Campbell would win five of his 12 contests.

The next season, he’d be reunited in New Orleans with Sean Payton for the fourth time. Payton was his offensive coordinator in New York for a few seasons and also an assistant in Dallas. The injury-ruined 2009 season as a player found the pair together for the third time, and Payton has been Campbell’s boss since 2016 (assistant head coach/tight ends coach).

Coaching tendencies

Dan Campbell

We’ve already beaten the Payton connection to death, so there’s no need to go into great detail there. Campbell was fortunate enough to learn from one of the best coaching minds the game has seen, but we’ve also witnessed plenty of examples of that not working out for a first-time head coach (ahem, Patricia).

Philbin helped orchestrate the Green Bay Packers offense under Mike McCarthy from 2007-11 and again in 2018 — the year he’d replace McCarthy. While Philbin was not a great head coach in his own right, that’s not to say Campbell didn’t learn something from him in South Beach. The offensive designs were modified West Coast offenses, or the same base system Payton has polished to a brilliant luster with the Saints.

Despite being known for his no-nonsense approach, Campbell brings a player-friendly blend of leadership to the Lions. One of the chief issues with Patricia, aside from the lack of wins, was his inability to connect with players due to the implementation of a stringent, Bill Belichickian culture, minus the street cred. As a former NFL player for a decade, the blue-collar Campbell is said to know which buttons to press and when, as well as recognizing the appropriate time to be “one of the guys.”

We could deep dive that side of things until Lions actually win a game, but the point of its inclusion is that fantasy footballers shouldn’t have to worry about Campbell alienating his players or pushing them to the point of wanting out.

Expect a tough, disciplined approach from Campbell. Look for an offense that wants to be physical for a change, and count on his players being motivated to run through a brick wall for the guy.

Aaron Glenn

A former cornerback, Glenn has two coaching stops and as many job titles as a coach in his seven years on the sidelines. He was an assistant defensive backs coach for Cleveland from 2014-15 before joining the Saints as a full-fledged DBs coach until this season. He was a heck of a football player in his day, and the Saints have been one of the best secondaries in football under his leadership, but Detroit has major holes to fill.

Successful fantasy defenses almost always start and end with a pass rush. Detroit’s was second-to-last in 2020 (24 sacks) and only ninth from the bottom in 2019 (28). Merely one of the past five seasons has produced more than 35 sacks, and Detroit has managed exactly seven interceptions in three straight campaigns after generating 19 in 2017 alone.

The likelihood of Detroit turning around from being among the weakest fantasy defenses for years running to a consistently useful commodity is practically zero. The reasoning mainly comes down to a lack of personnel and also a first-time defensive coordinator in Glenn. Unless this unit drastically upgrades its personnel via free agency and the draft, it’s tough to even see them being a streaming unit more than a few times all season in 2021.

Anthony Lynn

Campbell will call the shots overall, but from a fantasy football perspective, Lynn is the more important character of this ensemble. Lynn entered the coaching world back in 2000 following his retirement as a player. He worked his way up the ranks mostly as a running backs coach, his former position. Lynn was the assistant head coach of the New York Jets under Rex Ryan and followed him to Buffalo. From 2009-13, while with the Jets, Lynn’s backfield generated an NFL-best 137 rushing yards per game.

In Buffalo, Lynn was named interim offensive coordinator after Greg Roman was fired in September of 2016. The Bills would finish second in rushing attempts, first in yardage, first in rushing touchdowns, first in yards per attempt and last in passing attempts. He would parlay that success into the head job with the Chargers from 2017 until his recent firing.

The Bolts didn’t resemble the rushing powerhouse Lynn oversaw in Buffalo for that partial season, nor did the play selection skew so heavily in favor of the ground game. Keep in mind, “balanced” in today’s NFL means a team is throwing it roughly two-thirds of the time, compared to the 50.93-49.07 percent run-first ratio in ’16. The highest percentage of rushing vs. passing plays in LA during his tenure was 43.8 percent in 2018.

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Now, we could get into myriad reasons why the Chargers passed so much more — and it’s not necessarily a bad thing that they did — but Lynn wasn’t the full-time playcaller during his four years. He had two legitimate offensive coordinators in Ken Whisenhunt and Shane Steichen. The Bolts shocked the league with the 2020 play of rookie quarterback phenom Justin Herbert, and the defense struggled in the past couple of years, primarily due to injuries. Nevertheless, Austin Ekeler was a top-five PPR back in 2019, and Melvin Gordon was No. 8 overall among RBs in 2018 while playing just 12 games. He was the fifth-best rusher the year before, so we have plenty of positives, even with the team not running with the same frequency.

Lynn’s success with running backs is remarkable. In four of the seasons with the Jets, his backs produced personal highs in rushing yardage. In New York, he was a frequent user of two-back sets. The resume of productive RBs under his tutelage is extensive. Jamal Lewis enjoyed a resurgence with the Cleveland Browns. Dallas RBs Marion Barber III and Julius Jones combined for more than 1,500 rushing yards in consecutive seasons. Jacksonville’s Fred Taylor’s personal-high 1,572 yards and two of the four best rushing yardage seasons in Jaguars history came while Lynn was guiding him.

No matter how good the system may be, it all comes down to having the right people to do the job on the field.

Personnel changes

Here’s were the rubber meets the road for Detroit. Quarterback Matthew Stafford will be traded away, barring some unexpected twist to the developing plot. The Lions’ top-three wideouts — Kenny Golladay, Marvin Jones and Danny Amendola — are set to become unrestricted free agents in March. Running back Adrian Peterson has been an effective role player, but he, too, is a free agent. Kicker Matt Prater also is available to sign elsewhere.

Make no mistake about it, this will be among the youngest teams, at least on offense, in the NFL in 2021. In all probability, the starting quarterback will be a rookie. The youngest of those impending free agents is the 28-year-old Golladay.

All of this change will, in theory, offer increased chances for young talents, like RB D’Andre Swift, wide receiver Quintez Cephus and tight end T.J. Hockenson.

The offensive line has a couple of blue-chip pieces to build around, but otherwise, the cupboard projects to be awfully barren in Motown.

Fantasy football takeaway

There’s hardly anything to say of substance without knowing the quarterback and his primary weapons. As for the few names mentioned above, Swift is the best bet to lead this offense from a fantasy perspective. The to-be second-year back is dynamic and explosive, offering help as a dual-threat weapon. Lynn loves himself some ground game, which helps Swift’s chances, so long as there’s room to roam. The Lions may give Kerryon Johnson a real shot at pairing with Swift, but another veteran addition, like Peterson, isn’t out of the question.

Next up in terms of helping gamers would be Hockenson, especially if he has a rookie quarterback throwing his way. Tight ends tend to be BFFs for inexperienced passers. Hockenson already mostly broke out in 2020, so there’s not going to be much in the way of draft value, unless gamers perceive a QB change as being a major blow to his outlook.

Cephus is an intriguing option as a late-round flier. He brings a 6-foot-1, 202-pound frame to the mix and has enough separation ability to get deep, despite not being a burner. He’s a classic example of a wideout who plays faster than he times.

Expect the Lions to look extremely different in 2020, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing after all of this time of substandard play. We’ll provide a comprehensive update as the roster begins to take shape over the coming months.

Ravens hire D’Anton Lynn as defensive backs coach

The Baltimore Ravens have filled their final coaching vacancy, hiring D’Anton Lynn as their new defensive backs coach.

The Baltimore Ravens have been busy the past few days filling coaching vacancies. On Sunday, the Ravens added a new name to the list, hiring D’Anton Lynn to be the new defensive backs coach.

This is the third position coach Baltimore has had to hire early this offseason. The Ravens brought in Rob Ryan as the inside linebackers coach and Anthony Weaver as the defensive line coach last week, filling vacancies left by Mike Macdonald and Joe Cullen respectively. Lynn will take over for Jesse Minter, who is set to become Vanderbilt’s new defensive coordinator.

Lynn spent the last three years on the Houston Texans’ staff, joining in 2018 as the assistant defensive backs coach before being promoted to oversee the entire secondary in 2020. During his time in Houston, Lynn’s pass defenses have ranked 28th, 29th, and 24th in passing yards allowed.

The 31-year-old is the son of former Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn, who is now the Detroit Lions’ new offensive coordinator. Detroit is one of Baltimore’s opponents next season, meaning we’ll get a father vs. son head-to-head matchup.

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Report: Detroit Lions to hire Anthony Lynn as offensive coordinator

ESPN’s Dan Graziano is reporting the Detroit Lions will be hiring former Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn as offensive coordinator.

ESPN’s Dan Graziano is reporting the Detroit Lions will be hiring former Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn as their next offensive coordinator.

Multiple reporters have backed up Graziano’s claim, including his colleague at ESPN Adam Schefter, who noted that “Lynn had OC options, but wanted to work with Lions’ HC Dan Campbell and DC Aaron Glenn, who played for the Cowboys at the time Lynn coached in Dallas”.

Like Campbell and Glenn, Lynn is a former NFL player. He played running back for the New York Giants in 1992, Denver Broncos in 1993, San Francisco 49ers in 1995-6, and back to Denver in 1997-9, where he won two Super Bowls with the Broncos in 1997-8.

Lynn retired in 2000 due to a neck injury and took a job with Denver as a special teams assistant. Two years later the Jacksonville Jaguars hired him as their running backs coach. He would coach running backs for the 12 years in the NFL, spending time with the Cleveland Browns, Cowboys — where he met Campbell and Glenn — and New York Jets. In 2013-4, in addition to his running backs coaching duties with the Jets, Lynn was also promoted to assistant head coach.

In 2015 he was hired by the Buffalo Bills as their assistant head coach/running backs coach. In 2016, he started the year in the same role but just two weeks into the season he was promoted to offensive coordinator after Greg Roman was fired. Before the season was over, he would once again be promoted, this time to interim head coach after then-coach Rex Ryan was fired in December.

Following the season, Lynn had head coaching interviews with the Miami Dolphins, New York Jets, and San Francisco 49ers, but accepted the Chargers job. He held the position for four seasons before being fired earlier this month.

As a coordinator in Buffalo, Lynn’s offense led the league in rushing yards with 2,630 yards and rushing touchdowns with 29 on the season. As a team, they averaged 5.3 yards per carry. LeSean McCoy led the team with 1,267 rushing yards and 13 touchdowns, with Mike Gillislee rushing for 577 yards and eight touchdowns as a backup.

“I want to play smart, physical football,” Lynn said of his approach to the Bills offense. “I want to be explosive down the field. Right now, I just want to stay on the damn field. We’re going to play a little bit faster and see if we can put a little pressure on the defense. Just execute.”

That sounds an awful lot like what Campbell said at his press conference last Thursday.

But before you fall into the “he’s too old school” trap, it’s important to look at how he adjusted his offense when he took over the Chargers.

In Lynn’s very first season with the Chargers (2017), they led the league in passing yards. In 2018, they finished tenth, 2019 and 2020 both saw sixth-place finishes, and this past season they accomplished this feat with a rookie quarterback (Justin Herbert) under center.

To recap for clarity: in the last five years, Lynn went from coordinating the best rushing offense in the league one season, to coaching the best passing offense in the league the next. Then, he was able to maintain a top-10 finish each year, despite having a rookie quarterback this past season.

Lynn is capable of adapting his scheme to fit the personnel.

Things will be a little harder for Lynn now that quarterback Matthew Stafford and the Lions have decided to part ways, and if the Lions plan on looking to the draft for his replacement, they’ll need a veteran quarterback to step in.

Last season, when the Chargers were going through an almost identical situation after Philip Rivers left LA, Lynn turned back to his quarterback during his Buffalo days, Tyrod Taylor, to help him stabilize the position.

Campbell will surely turn to Lynn for advice on how to handle the quarterback position and with Taylor once again a potential unrestricted free agent, it’s fair to speculate that the Lions may try an repeat the Chargers’ plan of action by bringing in the veteran and looking to the draft for longevity at the position.

Former Chargers HC Anthony Lynn hired as Lions’ offensive coordinator

Anthony Lynn has a new gig.

The Chargers parted ways with Anthony Lynn earlier this month. Lynn, however, will have a new job starting this upcoming season.

Lynn is set to become the Lions’ new offensive coordinator, according to multiple reports.

New Lions head coach Dan Campbell and defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn played for the Cowboys when Lynn was there as a running backs coach.

Lynn was also a candidate for the Seahawks’ offensive coordinator vacancy.

Lynn spent the past four seasons as Los Angeles’ head coach, where he went 33-31. Before his time with the Bolts, Lynn served as the Bills’ offensive coordinator in 2006.

Lynn’s coaching career in the NFL has primarily consisted of coaching running backs.

Kirby Wilson is the latest name to emerge in Seahawks OC search

Las Vegas Raiders running backs coach Kirby Wilson is the latest name to appear in the Seattle Seahawks’ offensive coordinator search.

Reporters have connected the Seattle Seahawks to a number of viable candidates to be their offensive coordinator next season in the wake of Brian Schottenheimer’s firing.

The names that have floated around include Mike Kafka, Doug Pederson, Anthony Lynn, and surprisingly, Adam Gase. However, they just keep coming, and the latest arrival on the scene is Las Vegas Raiders running backs coach Kirby Wilson.

Wilson has a history with Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll, having served under him during his time with the New England Patriots and USC. He has also had an extensive resume at the professional level since his time with Carroll, working as a running backs coach for several teams from 2002 to 2020.

Wilson could rejoin forces with Carroll in 2021, but like with the other coaches before him, nothing is set in stone yet.

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Report: Falcons ‘may hire’ Dean Pees as defensive coordinator

The Atlanta Falcons officially introduced Arthur Smith as the team’s new head coach on Saturday.

The Atlanta Falcons officially introduced Arthur Smith as the team’s new head coach on Saturday. With the attention now shifting to Smith’s coordinator choices, two names have surfaced as potential candidates. Dave Ragone, the Chicago Bears passing game coordinator, was mentioned as a possible offensive coordinator choice for Atlanta.

According to a report by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Falcons “may hire” former Titans defensive coordinator Dean Pees for the same position in Atlanta.

Pees was the defensive coordinator for the Baltimore Ravens for six seasons (2012-2017), before holding the same position with the Titans from 2018-2019.

After a one-year retirement in 2020, the 71-year-old Pees could reunite with Smith and bring a veteran set of eyes to the Falcons coaching staff.

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Potential OC options Titans could consider to replace Arthur Smith

A look at some potential options to replace Arthur Smith in Tennessee.

The Tennessee Titans will be in the market for their third offensive coordinator since 2018 after Arthur Smith was hired by the Atlanta Falcons to become their next head coach on Friday.

Despite not having a long history of offensive success, the Titans keep getting their offensive coordinators poached. First it was Matt LaFleur in 2019 when he was hired by the Green Bay Packers, and now Smith.

And so the process begins all over again.

The Titans will certainly do their due diligence and look outside the organization, but we know head coach Mike Vrabel likes familiarity, so don’t be surprised if the new offensive coordinator comes from within.

Whoever the Titans hire will have big shoes to fill after Smith led the Titans to an elite offense in 2020. Furthermore, Tennessee has to get it right, as the offense is the heart and soul of this team.

Seeing as how Vrabel likes his guys, we’ve listed some possibilities for the Titans to consider on their current coaching staff, as well as a few options from outside the team.

Seahawks spoke with former Eagles coach Doug Pederson about OC job

The Seattle Seahawks have reached out to former Eagles head coach Doug Pederson about their offensive coordinator job

The Seattle Seahawks are searching for a new offensive coordinator after parting ways with Brian Schottenheimer after three seasons.

An interesting name has emerged, as Tom Pelissero is reporting that the Seahawks have reached out to former Eagles head coach, Doug Pederson.

The Seahawks announced Tuesday that Schottenheimer was out after three seasons, citing philosophical differences. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that Carroll and Schottenheimer met Monday evening and mutually decided to separate in the best interest of both parties.

Pederson was fired by the Eagles on Monday after five seasons and one Super Bowl win in 2017.

The former Eagles head coach had been linked to the Jets job and he’s highly thought of around the NFL as a solid play-caller.

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Seahawks spoke with former Chargers coach Anthony Lynn about OC job

Pete Carroll and the Seattle Seahawks have spoken with former Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn about the open offensive coordinator job.

The Seattle Seahawks are in the hunt for a new offensive coordinator after parting ways with Brian Schottenheimer after three seasons. The first interested candidate has now emerged.

“Former #Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has spoken with Pete Carroll about the #Seahawks offensive coordinator job, sources tell me and @RapSheet,” NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero tweeted Friday morning. “Lynn hasn’t decided what he wants to do in 2021, but he’d be among Seattle’s top choices.”

An NFL running back, Lynn had moved up the coaching ranks following his professional career. He most recently served as the Chargers’ head coach before he was let go after four seasons with the team. He finished his tenure in LA with a 33-31 record.
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Report: Anthony Lynn named a candidate for Seahawks offensive coordinator position

Pete Carroll wants Anthony Lynn in Seattle.

The Chargers parted ways with Anthony Lynn earlier this month. However, there’s a good chance that Lynn will likely be back on his feet coaching as early as this next season.

According to NFL Media’s Tom Pelissero, Lynn has spoken with Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll about becoming the team’s new offensive coordinator.

Pelissero added that Lynn isn’t sure of his future plans but Seattle wants him to be in charge of their offense.

This wouldn’t be Lynn’s first rodeo as offensive coordinator. He was hired as the Bills’ OC early in the 2016 season after Greg Roman was fired. Prior to that, he served as Buffalo’s running backs coach for a few seasons.

Along with Lynn, offensive coordinator Shane Steichen and quarterbacks coach Pep Hamilton are also in consideration for the same position.