Ravens reportedly scheduling second interview with Broncos OC Justin Outten

Mike Garafolo reports the Baltimore Ravens are scheduling a second interview with Denver Broncos’ OC Justin Outten

With the Baltimore Ravens looking for a new offensive coordinator to take over for Greg Roman, the list of candidates keep increasing.  It’s not surprising that the team is searching and looking at all teams, and are being thorough in their search.  With that said, some candidates are being scheduled to interview for a second time as the hiring process continues.

It is being reported by Mike Garafolo of the NFL Network that the Ravens have scheduled a second interview with Denver Broncos offensive coordinator Justin Outten.  To go along with Outten, second interviews are being held with Dave Canales and Todd Monken as well.

With the news of a second interview for Justin Outten, it adds onto a list of qualified candidates who will get another opportunity to figure out of a fit between them and Baltimore is right. The Ravens have a big offseason ahead, and finding the right option at offensive coordinator is one of the top questions still surrounding the team.

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Notre Dame football: 9 potential candidates to replace Tommy Rees

Who do you want to replace Tommy Rees?

Just a year after declaring he wanted to stay and fight for Notre Dame, offensive coordinator [autotag]Tommy Rees[/autotag] is off to Tuscaloosa to join Nick Saban’s staff at Alabama. Rees took over as Notre Dame’s play-caller in 2020 and showed signs of stardom. He also made a few decisions that left Notre Dame fans rather frustrated.

The new offensive coordinator will be tasked with some difficult things.  Notably, Rees raised the level of talent in the quarterback room significantly.  When you look at what Notre Dame had at the position on their roster from 2017-2022 and look at the projected depth charts in coming years you can’t help seeing a significant step in the right direction.

But who will replace Rees?

This will be a massive test for Marcus Freeman early in his head coaching career because the hiring of quality assistants is a must for any sustained success. Here are nine names he would be wise to at least look at to replace Rees.

Buccaneers interview Saints coach Ronald Curry for OC opening

The Buccaneers interviewed Ronald Curry for their offensive coordinator opening, meaning all three opposing NFC South teams have met with Saints assistant coaches:

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers announced Wednesday that they have interviewed Ronald Curry for their offensive coordinator opening, meaning all three opposing NFC South teams have met with New Orleans Saints assistant coaches. Tampa Bay dismissed offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich early in the offseason and has been busy searching for his replacement.

Curry is the Saints’ passing game coordinator and quarterbacks coach, and he’s highly respected by his players and peers in league circles. He’s a coach on the rise who would be a big loss for New Orleans if he is offered the Bucs job. He was also selected as the National Team offensive coordinator at the Senior Bowl this week where he’s working closely with many 2023 draft prospects.

New Orleans already lost one talented assistant with defensive line coach Ryan Nielsen leaving to become the Atlanta Falcons defensive coordinator; secondary coach Kris Richard interviewed for the same position with the Carolina Panthers, though it doesn’t appear he is a candidate for the job at this time. At any rate, there’s a real possibility that each of the Saints’ rivals around the division end up siphoning talent from Dennis Allen’s coaching staff. It’s something to watch out for in the days ahead.

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Saints stand pat while rest of NFC South elect for coaching staff changes

The #Saints will likely be the only team in the NFC South without changes at HC, OC, and/or DC. Their results will be highly anticipated, via @RossJacksonNOLA:

In what was the worst division in football this year, every NFC South team is making major changes at either head coach, offensive coordinator and/or defensive coordinator save one: the New Orleans Saints. The team will again rely on consistency over change going into 2023 after choosing not to move on from offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael. Meanwhile, every other team around the division will be making changes in the hopes of improving their 2022 results.

The Carolina Panthers moved on from head coach Matt Rhule during the season and fired defensive coordinator Phil Snow as well. The Atlanta Falcons did not fire or part ways with any staffers, but defensive coordinator Dean Pees retired. Meanwhile, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers moved on from a slew of coaches including offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich. The Saints though, unless either or both co-defensive coordinators Kris Richard and Ryan Nielsen are hired away, will make no changes to their top coaching staff members with assistant head coach and special team coordinator Darren Rizzi never really being warrant of departure as well.

That seems to signal that the Saints are hoping that sticking to their usual cadence of cohesion and continuity will set them apart in 2023. Particularly on the offensive side of the ball, it seems warranted to question that approach. However, the line of thinking remains in lockstep with their usual approach. That means at the end of 2023, the Saints will either win as the most consistent unit, or lose thanks to a commitment to not undergo change. The results will be clear and obvious this time next year.

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Ravens OC Greg Roman resigns, Bucs fire OC Byron Leftwich

NFL News: Ravens offensive coordinator Greg Roman resigns, Buccaneers fire OC Byron Leftwich

As the Falcons continue their search for a new defensive coordinator, several teams are now on the prowl for a new offensive play-caller.

On Thursday, the Buccaneers fired offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, and Ravens offensive coordinator Greg Roman stepped down. Letfwich, a former NFL quarterback who spent one of his 10 seasons in Atlanta, was a popular head-coaching candidate during last year’s hiring cycle.

His firing after four seasons in Tampa Bay is a bit of a surprise, as NFL Network breaks down below.

As for Roman, his departure is not entirely surprising, but many wonder what it means for the future of Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson. The former MVP thrived with Roman calling the plays, becoming one of the NFL’s true duel-threat quarterbacks.

Perhaps the two will reunite again on a different team. Jackson’s future in Baltimore is a complete unknown at this point. The Falcons have been thrown in the mix as a team that could potentially acquire Jackson if the Ravens look to move him this offseason.

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Bucs make it official, announce sweeping changes to coaching staff

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have announced multiple changes to their coaching staff after a disappointing 2022 season

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are shaking up their coaching staff, announcing multiple changes Thursday.

The team is parting ways with offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, specialists coach Chris Boniol, wide receivers coach Kevin Garver, offensive quality control coach Jeff Kastl, assistant defensive line coach Lori Locust, and running backs Coach Todd McNair.

In addition, quarterbacks Coach Clyde Christensen, senior offensive assistant Rick Christophel, and outside linebackers coach Bob Sanders have all decided to retire.

“We appreciate the hard work and contributions that all of these coaches made to our successes over the past four seasons,” Bucs head coach Todd Bowles said in the team’s official release. “As a collective group, we did not meet the high standards that had been set for this past year and my focus now is on doing what is needed to ensure a successful 2023 season. These were very difficult decisions but something that I felt was necessary for our football team going forward.”

Bowles will now get an opportunity to mold much of his own coaching staff after inheriting this most recent group from former Bucs head coach Bruce Arians, who retired last offseason.

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The Buccaneers fired Byron Leftwich, which may suggest they’re done with Tom Brady too

The Buccaneers fired an offensive coordinator who was a rising star one year ago. And also one of Tom Brady’s closest confidants in Tampa.

One of Tom Brady’s first connections as a Tampa Bay Buccaneer wasn’t with Mike Evans or Chris Godwin. It was with Byron Leftwich, the team’s offensive coordinator and then a rising star as a potential head coach.

The two met throughout Brady’s first offseason with the team to build a playbook. Brady even visited Leftwich’s neighbors, albeit accidentally when he wasn’t sure exactly which house was his coordinator’s. Together they built on the quarterback’s prolific legacy. The Bucs won Super Bowl 54 at home. Brady threw 40 touchdowns that season.

One year later, Brady was the runner-up in MVP voting at age 44. But the wheels came off in 2022 thanks to injuries and departures on the offensive line. The veteran quarterback set a career high for total passes and his lowest yards per attempt in two decades. That frustrating year, it turns out, was enough to cost Leftwich his job.

This is a surprise on a few levels. Leftwich had been considered one of the best young coordinators in the game as recently as a year ago. But one season without the guidance of former head coach Bruce Arians under defensive-minded Todd Bowles proved costly. Leftwich faced a tough situation with a quarterback who didn’t want to get hit and an offensive line unable to protect him and ultimately couldn’t escape with his job.

This surprising dismissal could also be a message on Brady’s future with the franchise. Arians’ sudden retirement — in March, after Brady had retired, then unretired, and several weeks after most coaching decisions had been made — reportedly stemmed from a conflict with the quarterback and his play-caller. Arians told the media he “probably would still be coaching” had the future Hall of Famer sat out 2022.

Rumors swirled that Arians left due to philosophical differences between the head coach and his QB-OC combination. His departure was supposed to retain the playbook flexibility on which Brady and Leftwich built a contender. Both Bowles and Leftwich have said the quarterback tweaks game plans the night of and during games and that they accept it — something Brady later denied this winter. True or not, the end result worked wonders in 2020 and 2021.

The Buccaneers weren’t a contender in 2022, merely victors by default in an awful division. Is Leftwich’s firing the sacrifice the team needed to show Brady they’re serious about change and willing to hire someone new to restore his greatness in 2023? Or was it a message that this era is over, they don’t believe Brady is coming back and no longer require the services of the coordinator who built an offense around him?

All we know at this point is that Leftwich, once a leading candidate for the Jacksonville Jaguars head coaching job only to be passed over for Urban by-god Meyer, has gone from one of the hottest prospects on the sideline to unemployed in roughly a year’s time. That’s a curious timeline — and it’s fair to wonder if there’s a larger message baked into the fabric of Tampa’s latest coaching move.

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Who could replace Byron Leftwich as Bucs’ offensive coordinator?

Check out some of the top candidates the Tampa Bay Buccaneers could consider to replace offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers started an offseason of overhaul Thursday morning, firing offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, as well as a handful of other assistant coaches.

Leftwich’s offenses put up some big numbers over his first three seasons with the Bucs, but this year’s dismal showing was too much for head coach Todd Bowles and the rest of the team’s leadership to bear.

The Bucs will have some big questions to answer with their roster this offseason, which will obviously have a huge impact on how they pursue replacements for the departing staff members.

Who could the Bucs target to replace Leftwich?

Here are a few possible candidates:

Bucs fire offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are making big changes on their coaching staff, firing offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich after a dismal season

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are wasting little time making big changes to their coaching staff after getting bounced from the playoffs Monday night.

Offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich has been fired, per Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times.

After coordinating one of the NFL’s most prolific offenses over his first three years in Tampa, Leftwich’s unit plummeted in 2022, averaging just 18 points per game, and finishing dead last in the league in every major rushing category. After averaging more than 30 points per game over the previous two season, Tampa Bay scored 30 points just twice this year.

This marks the first big staff change for head coach Todd Bowles, who will now look to replace Leftwich with a new coordinator who can maximize the immense talent the Bucs still have on that side of the ball.

Leftwich is just a year removed from being a hot name in the head-coaching carousel, but will now have to look for another assistant role elsewhere.

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Report: Bucs expected to fire offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are reportedly expected to move on from offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich after a dismal season

After a season full of offensive struggles, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers appear to have some big changes ahead on that side of the ball.

The Bucs are expected to fire offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, per Scott Reynolds of Pewter Report.

Leftwich’s offense saw a huge drop in production this year, averaging just 18 points per game, after averaging more than 30 per game over the past two seasons. Tampa Bay struggled to move the ball consistently all year long, finished last in the NFL in rushing, and scored more than 30 points just twice this season.

After joining the Bucs as offensive coordinator under Bruce Arians in 2019, Leftwich spent one season with Jameis Winston at quarterback before the arrival of Tom Brady in 2020. Despite two seasons of big numbers and plenty of success, it looks like a dismal 2022 campaign was enough to overshadow his previous accomplishments with the offense.

Tampa Bay is facing plenty of potential roster changes this offseason, with a number of key players on both sides of the ball headed for free agency, and a challenging salary cap situation.

With all the changes that lie ahead for this team, it looks like they’ll be starting with the coaching staff.

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