New Titans OLBs coach Ben Bloom: 3 things to know

New Titans OLBs coach Ben Bloom was known as the “Bleu Cheese Bodybag” in college.

Former Tennessee Titans outside linebackers coach Ryan Crow was not retained by the team following the firing of Mike Vrabel, which led to Tennessee hiring Ben Bloom to take his place.

Bloom started his coaching career back in 2005 when he became a graduate assistant at Tufts University, his alma mater.

After three years there as a graduate assistant and defensive line coach, Bloom moved on to Harvard to work as an assistant offensive line coach before he made his first foray into NFL coaching in 2009.

We’ll talk about that and more as we take a look at three things to know about the Titans’ new outside linebackers coach.

Browns could still keep Ben Bloom despite hiring a new DL coach

Despite adding a new defensive line coach today, the former one could hang around

The Cleveland Browns hired a new defensive line coach on Saturday, but Ben Bloom may not be out of a job.

Defensive coordinator did not hand-pick his defensive line coach when he got hired last offseason. Instead, the Browns reassigned Bloom to the role. After the year ended, Schwartz then met with Ryan Crow, who he worked with in Tennessee for the role of defensive line coach.

This raised a few red flags as Bloom is still with the team. The Browns have hired a new defensive line coach in Jacques Cesaire from the Houston Texans, but this does not necessarily spell the end of Bloom’s time in Cleveland.

Cleveland dot com’s Mary Kay Cabot and ESPN’s Jake Trotter have reported that Bloom is well-liked in the building and has the chance to stay on staff in 2024.

Bloom has experience as the run game coordinator with the Browns. He could return to this role after one year as the defensive line coach. Only time will tell, but the offensive side of the ball was not the only shakeups to take place in Cleveland.

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4 Browns coaches named ‘young NFL coaches to watch’

The Browns had four coaches, headlined by Bubba Ventrone, added to this year’s “young NFL coaches” to watch list for head coaching gigs.

The Cleveland Browns are finding success this season, and as a result, they are finding coaches added to the NFL’s yearly “young coaches to watch” list. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero put the list together, and four of their current coaches found their names mentioned in the NFL.com article. The obvious headliner of coaches who were considered younger and who had never had a previous head coaching position.

Ventrone came over to the Browns this offseason after they moved on from former special teams coordinator Mike Priefer. Before coming to Cleveland, Ventrone was the special teams coordinator for the Indianapolis Colts for the past five seasons. He can also be remembered for his time as a special teams ace for the Browns during his tenure as a player from 2009-2012.

Here is the full list of Browns’ coaches who made the list, including a handful of additions who have ties to the organization and saw their names appear as well.

Browns announce 8 changes to their coaching staff

The Browns announce 8 changes to their staff.

The Cleveland Browns are getting set for the NFL Scouting Combine, and they have finalized eight changes to their staff before hitting the road for Indianapolis, Indiana. The hire of Bill Musgrave as a Senior Offensive Assistant has been the headlining hire over the past couple of days, but there is also still a vacancy at passing game coordinator on the defensive side of the ball.

Outside of the hiring of Musgrave, here are seven other moves the Browns have finalized as we get set for the start of the new league year, the combine, and for some new faces to join the roster in free agency.

Browns handing DL coach responsibilities to run game coordinator Ben Bloom

The Browns have named their new defensive line coach.

After allowing Chris Kiffin to take a lateral move with the Houston Texans without blocking his departure (a sign that this regime allowed guys like him, Jeff Howard, and Mike Priefer to avoid being fired), the Cleveland Browns have now landed their new defensive line coach. And according to SI’s Albert Breer, it was an internal hire as they are giving defensive run game coordinator Ben Bloom the title of defensive line coach as well.

As the Browns transition to a new era under new defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz, they desperately need the young players on their defense to come to life as one-year deals for veterans in free agency will do little for the long-term health of the unit. Can Bloom get the best out of young defensive linemen like Alex Wright and Perrion Winfrey?

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Band Back Together: Cowboys linebacker group among NFL best, per PFF

The Dallas Cowboys linebacking corps is ranked No. 2 in the league by Pro Football Focus.

At this time last year there was talk about how the Dallas Cowboys linebackers would contend to be the best throughout the NFL landscape.. Leighton Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith were coming off of productive seasons that earned the former a Pro Bowl berth and the latter praise that put concerns regarding the recovery from his gruesome collegiate knee injury to rest.

The 2019 season did everything to undo all of that. Vander Esch was put on injured reserve with a neck injury he battled throughout the nine games he appeared in and putting his football future in doubt. Smith, despite the uptick in tackles and a Pro Bowl nod, wasn’t the same disruptive force he’d been the previous season. Despite the setback, this duo is the core of the linebackers room that Pro Football Focus claims is the second best in the league.

The room doesn’t lack for depth. Veteran Sean Lee who, for the first time in his career played all 16 games last season, is back for another run. Joe Thomas, perhaps the most underappreciated player in the room, could start for several teams in the league but also chose to remain in Dallas. With all of the talent at the position, what could have gone wrong last season? Look no further then coaching.

It’s not uncommon for positional coaches and players to fail to see eye to eye, but there’s been rumors that the time former linebacker’s coach Ben Bloom missed last year wasn’t due to illness as was originally reported, but instead a clash bad enough to warrant a brief timeout.

With an entirely new defensive staff that, by all accounts, plans to display multiple looks and the incredibly advanced idea of disguising itself entirely, there’s certainly hope this group reaches the lofty heights that they failed to reach in 2019. A bit of luck on the injury front would go a long way in helping that.

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Browns define what senior defensive assistant Ben Bloom will do with the team

Bloom has spent the last 9 years coaching LBs and DL in Dallas

Ben Bloom was one of the final group of six coaching hires by new head coach Kevin Stefanski. Bloom was given the rather vague title of senior defensive assistant.

Now the team has provided some clarity as to what exactly Bloom will do for the Browns defense and coordinator Joe Woods. In a post on the team’s official website, Bloom’s role gets some definition.

He’ll work closely with linebackers coach Jason Tarver and focus heavily on the Browns’ front seven.

Using Bloom with the front seven makes sense. He has coached both the LBs and the DL during his time with the Dallas Cowboys over the last nine seasons

Browns complete their coaching staff, add 6 more assistants

The Kevin Stefanski staff for 2020 is now complete

With days to go in advance of the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine, the Cleveland Browns have completed the hiring process for the entire coaching staff under head coach Kevin Stefanski. The team announced the hiring of six more assistants on Wednesday in conjunction with the inaugural press conferences for new coordinators Alex Van Pelt and Joe Woods.

The Browns added the following sextet of assistants to Stefanski’s staff:

  • Ben Bloom – senior defensive assistant
  • Stephen Bravo-Brown – defensive quality control
  • Ryan Cordell – coaching assistant
  • Jeremy Garrett – assistant defensive line
  • Brandon Lynch – assistant defensive backs
  • Seitu Smith – offensive quality control to the coaching staff

Cordell is the only coach who is a holdover, having served as a football research analyst for the Browns in 2019.

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3 candidates to replace Saints linebackers coach Mike Nolan

The Saints have not replaced Mike Nolan, now the Cowboys coordinator. Candidates may include Marcus Freeman, Pete Kwiatkowski, and Ben Bloom

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The NFL’s hiring cycle is winding down, and the New Orleans Saints appear to have escaped with their coaching staff largely intact. But there was one big departure in overqualified linebackers coach Mike Nolan, who was picked up by the Dallas Cowboys as their new defensive coordinator. Nolan’s loss with the team is huge; before he was hired in 2017, the Saints largely acted without a plan or presence in the middle of their defense.

Since Nolan’s arrival, the unit has put up some of the best performances in recent memory, or at least since Sean Payton was hired as head coach. They’ve hit on draft picks like Alex Anzalone (when healthy), free agent signings such as Demario Davis and A.J. Klein, and trade acquisitions like Kiko Alonso. Nolan did a terrific job of identifying his players’ strengths and putting them in positions to succeed. That’s not something that could be said out of his predecessors in New Orleans.

However, the Saints still haven’t announced his replacement. It’s likely that they’re waiting for the NFL to converge on Mobile, Ala. in the week leading up to this year’s Senior Bowl. Coaches and team personnel gather from all around the league’s orbit to socialize and scout draft prospects, and it’s where Payton has found new hires before (such as Nolan himself, and defensive line coach Ryan Nielsen).

With that in mind, here are three candidates we’d like to see the Saints target as their next linebackers coach:

Marcus Freeman, Cincinnati Bearcats

Freeman, 34, hit the ground running after his NFL playing career ended back in 2009. He’s spent the last decade rising in the coaching ranks with stops at his alma mater, Ohio State, as well as Kent State and Purdue before landing in Cincinnati, where he’s stayed since 2017. Now the team’s defensive coordinator, he’s coached up a Bearcats defense that often punches above its weight class. While it could be difficult to lure him away (bigger college programs have reportedly offered head coaching positions to him before, and were all turned down), he’d be a great fit in New Orleans. He could enjoy being surrounded by so many of his fellow Buckeyes graduates, even if they’re of a later generation.

Pete Kwiatkowski, Washington Huskies

Kwiatkowski, 54, has been a fixture in Washington for the last six years, working under recently-retired head coach Chris Peterson. Kwiatkowski has coordinated the Huskies defense both by himself and by splitting responsibilities with co-coordinators, which speaks to his ability to see the big picture and work well with others. The 31-year coaching veteran is probably content to remain on staff under his longtime friend and coworker, first-year head coach Jimmy Lake, but it’s possible the Saints could get him to jump to the NFL. There’s no arguing with his results — Kwiatkowski has seen 11 of his defenders drafted in the top-two rounds since 2015, including linebackers Shaq Thompson and Hau’oli Kikaha.

Ben Bloom, Dallas Cowboys

Bloom, 32, might be a baby getting thrown out with the bathwater in Dallas, much like defensive coordinator Kris Richard. Mike McCarthy is building a new coaching staff and retaining few members from longtime head coach Jason Garrett’s crew, so Bloom could be on the move. He’s spent the last nine years with the Cowboys, though just the last two were in the capacity of linebackers coach. Before that, he assisted longtime Matt Eberflus, who held that office. He’s played a part in helping scout and develop star linebackers such as Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander Esch, and could be a good get for the Saints if he’s not part of McCarthy’s big plans.

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