Cory Undlin brings attention to detail in teaching Texans defense

Defensive passing game coordinator Cory Undlin has made an impression on the Houston Texans’ secondary for his attention to detail.

Jimmie Ward knows what to expect with Cory Undlin.

The Houston Texans hired the former San Francisco 49ers pass game specialist and secondary coach as part of DeMeco Ryans’ staff.

The safety spent the past two seasons with Undlin on Kyle Shanahan’s staff, and there was an underlying theme as it related to playing in Ryans’ defense.

“Be patient,” Ward said May 4. “In this defense you don’t have to force plays. Like I said earlier, this defense is ran through the defensive front. This is going to be an attacking D-line. All you have to do is be in your spot and plays will come to you.”

Ward collected 89 combined tackles, two tackles for loss, two quarterback hits, five interceptions, including one returned for a touchdown, five pass breakups, and a forced fumble in his 28 games playing for Undlin.

Second-year safety Jalen Pitre has only had the fortune have working with Undlin throughout the Texans’ offseason program. Nevertheless Undlin’s instruction has been useful to the former second-rounder from Baylor.

“I love Cory,” Pitre said after organized team activities on May 23. “He’s in the meetings. He’s very interactive. He knows a lot about the game of football as a whole and especially about the secondary. In the meeting room, he’s not going to let anything slide and make sure every detail is said in the meeting room and making sure we get everything squared away.”

Pitre led the Texans with five interceptions through 17 starts last season. If Pitre stays patient, as Undlin advised Ward, there may be more opportunities for the Stanford High School alumnus to produce key takeaways.

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Report: 49ers losing defensive assistant to DeMeco Ryans’ Texans

DeMeco Ryans is snagging another 49ers defensive assistant according to KPRC2 in Houston.

Another 49ers assistant coach is heading to Houston. New Texans head coach DeMeco Ryans is set to hire former 49ers defensive backs coach Cory Undlin as their new defensive passing game coordinator per Aaron Wilson of KPRC2 in Houston.

Undlin spent the last two seasons with the 49ers as their defensive backs coach and defensive pass game specialist. He helped oversee the development of DBs Deommodore Lenoir and Talanoa Hufanga. The 49ers this season allowed the fifth-fewest passing TDs and hauled in a league-high 20 interceptions.

Prior to his arrival in San Francisco, Undlin was the defensive coordinator for a Lions defense that finished last in points and yards allowed. Now he’ll get another shot to carve out a significant role under Ryans following two years of working alongside him when Ryans joined the 49ers as their defensive coordinator.

Ryans also hired 49ers offensive passing game coordinator Bobby Slowik to be the Texans’ offensive coordinator, along with a couple of lower level assistants Nick Kray and Stephen Adegoke. Kray was Kyle Shanahan’s chief of staff. Agedoke was a defensive quality control coach.

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DeMeco Ryans coaching staff tracker: Who joins the Houston Texans?

DeMeco Ryans is assembling his coaching staff. Stay up to date on who is joining the Houston Texans.

The Houston Texans continue to assemble their new coaching staff under DeMeco Ryans, the sixth full-time coach in team history.

The Texans’ search has done exactly what Ryans said they would do in his introductory presser: commit to diversity.

“You want a diverse staff because players learn differently, so, we want to be able to present things in a different way to different players to make sure when they step on the field Sunday, they’re clear minds,” said Ryans. “They’re not thinking. They’re playing as fast as possible.”

Here is a look at who the Texans have talked to as they put together a new staff. The titles listed for each candidate is what they held at the beginning of the 2022 season.

Zulgad: Candidates for the Vikings’ defensive coordinator job continue to take a pass

From @jzulgad: The Vikings continue to get told no for their defensive coordinator job. Where could they go from here?

The Vikings’ failure to name a defensive coordinator was a source of consternation for some last week but as the weekend arrived it appeared the pieces were falling into place.

The news on Friday that Sean Desai had pulled his name out of the running for the position so he could focus on pursuing the same job in Denver seemed to be offset by the news Saturday that Ejiro Evero had been released from his contract as the Broncos’ defensive coordinator and was free to talk to the Vikings.

In a season in which the Broncos were terrible on offense, Evero had emerged as a potential head coaching candidate and a hot name in the coordinator market because he was in charge of a successful defense in Denver.

Getting the 42-year-old Evero would have been considered a victory for general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and coach Kevin O’Connell. Unfortunately for the Vikings, this one will end up in the loss column.

Evero reportedly agreed to become the defensive coordinator for the Carolina Panthers on Sunday, joining the staff of new coach Frank Reich. He will inherit a defense that is considered the strength of the team.

Evero is believed to have gotten big bucks to take the Panthers’ job — no word on what the Vikings might have been willing to offer — but that doesn’t sound like the big issue.

That would be the fact top candidates look at what fired coordinator Ed Donatell had to work with this season and decide the Vikings personnel on defense doesn’t give them much of a chance to be successful. It’s an aging unit with a lack of talent and is badly in need of an overhaul that might take a few years. There’s a reason why the Vikings’ defense was near the bottom of the NFL this season and why so many players struggled to adjust to Donatell’s 3-4 scheme.

Evero also interviewed for the head coaching jobs in Arizona and Indianapolis and aspires to be in charge of his own team one day. His stock might drop if his next stop was with a team that couldn’t stop opponents. Desai, obviously, viewed things the same way.

The Vikings also had interest in New Orleans co-defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen at the start of this process but he quickly was named the Falcons’ coordinator.

Evero never had an official interview with Minnesota, so of the four people the Vikings interviewed for the job, there are two remaining. One is Pittsburgh assistant and former Miami coach Brian Flores, who remains a candidate for the head coaching position in Arizona, and the other is veteran defensive coordinator and former Browns coach Mike Pettine, who served as O’Connell’s assistant head coach with the Vikings in 2022.

Flores also is in the running to get the DC job in Denver. Does that mean Desai could re-emerge in the Vikings’ search, if he doesn’t get the Broncos job with new coach Sean Payton? Would Desai even want the position after taking his name out of the running?

The other possibility is that more candidates could emerge. Former Wisconsin Badgers DC Jim Leonhard was one name thrown around after Donatell was fired but there have been no reports linking him to the Vikings. Other names that have been floated, but not confirmed, include San Francisco secondary coach Cory Undlin and Philadelphia defensive backs coach Dennard Wilson.

Undlin, 51, who is from St. Cloud, Minn., and Wilson, 40, also hold the titles of defensive pass game specialist and defensive passing game coordinator, respectively.

Obviously, these aren’t the names that were atop the Vikings’ list when this process started, but with each day that passes, and each candidate that ends up elsewhere, it’s looking as if rebuilding the Vikings’ defense is a challenge many don’t want to undertake.

Judd Zulgad is co-host of the Purple Daily Podcast and Mackey & Judd podcast at www.skornorth.com

Report: Texans looking at Cory Undlin as defensive coordinator

The Houston Texans are considering San Francisco 49ers passing game specialist and secondary coach Cory Undlin as their new defensive coordinator.

The Houston Texans found their sixth full-time coach in team history with DeMeco Ryans. Now, the Texans are looking to build his staff.

According to Aaron Wilson from KPRC-TV, the Texans are looking at current San Francisco 49ers passing game specialist and secondary coach Cory Undlin to be Ryans’ defensive coordinator.

Undlin has defensive coordinator experience as well. In 2020, Undlin was the defensive coordinator for the Detroit Lions in coach Matt Patricia’s final season with the team. Detroit finished last in points allowed and total defense.

Before the 49ers, Ryans had experience with Undlin going back to the 2015 Philadelphia Eagles. Ryans was playing his final year in the NFL at linebacker while Undlin was beginning his first season as a defensive backs coach.

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Former Lions defensive coordinator Cory Undlin heading to the 49ers as DBs coach

Undlin’s defense finished dead last in his one year in Detroit

Former Detroit Lions defensive coordinator Cory Undlin has found a new job. Undlin will join the San Francisco 49ers as the pass game specialist/secondary coach under new defensive coordinator, Demeco Ryans.

Undlin ran the Lions defense under Matt Patricia in the 2020 season. To say it did not go well for Undlin and the Detroit defense is an understatement; the Lions allowed more points and yards than any other NFL team last year, Undlin’s first and only with the team. Much of the blame does generally fall upon Patricia, but Undlin didn’t do much to help his case after the team fired the head coach with five games remaining.

Undlin coached in Philadelphia while Ryans was a linebacker for the Eagles. San Francisco continues to remake its defensive coaching staff after former coordinator Robert Saleh left to become the head coach of the New York Jets.

49ers to hire former Lions defensive coordinator

The San Francisco 49ers added Cory Undlin to their coaching staff. He was previously the Detroit Lions defensive coordinator.

The San Francisco 49ers coaching staff is continuing to take shape. Field Yates on Friday reported former Lions defensive coordinator Cory Undlin will join defensive coordinator DeMeco Ryans’ staff as a pass game specialist and secondary coach.

Last season the defensive backs were coached by Tony Oden, and Mike Rutenberg was the pass game specialist. Now it appears Undlin will step in to fill both roles. There’s no word on Oden and Rutenberg’s status with the club.

Undlin got his start in the NFL with the Patriots in 2004 as a defensive assistant. He also spent time with the Browns where he moved from a quality control coach, to assistant special teams coach to defensive backs coach across four seasons.

He eventually moved on to the Jaguars, Broncos and Eagles where he held a variety of defensive coaching positions. His time as the Eagles’ defensive backs coach overlapped with Ryans’ tenure there as a player by one season. Undlin was the DB coach for Philadelphia starting in 2015, the year before Ryans retired. The Lions gave Undlin his first defensive coordinator job last season after he spent five years with the Eagles.

Detroit’s defense was statistically the worst in the NFL last season, with last place finishes in both total yards allowed and points allowed.

Undlin joins former Giants defensive coordinator James Bettcher as 49ers coaches with previous defensive coordinator jobs. It appears San Francisco is aiming to surround Ryans, a first-time coordinator with just four seasons of NFL coaching under his belt, with veteran coaches who have several years of NFL experience and at least a little time as a defensive coordinator.

10 candidates to replace Jim Schwartz as Eagles defensive coordinator

Adam Zimmer and Dan Campbell are among 10 candidates to replace Jim Schwartz as Eagles defensive coordinator

The coaching carousel in Philadelphia is underway, as defensive coordinator, Jim Schwartz, made the stunning move to not renew his contract or seek a new deal.

Philadelphia won the only Super Bowl in franchise history with Schwartz as defensive coordinator and his units twice finished in the top 5 in DVOA and never finished below No. 17.

The Eagles ranked ninth in scoring defense during his tenure and despite some ugly performances, he’s respected around the league.

With Schwartz set to sail off into the sunset, here are 10 candidates to replace him.

Cory Undlin acknowledges it’s unlikely he or other Lions coaches will return in 2021

Undlin’s defense could set the NFL record for most points allowed in a season

Lions defensive coordinator has proven to be an honest interview, if nothing else, during his time in Detroit. He showed that again during his Monday press conference when assessing his future with the team beyond next Sunday’s season finale against the Minnesota Vikings.

When asked about the status of the coaches after the season, Undlin was blunt,

“I have no idea what’s going to happen after this season but we all know how this business works.”

Undlin came to Detroit from Philadelphia specifically at former head coach Matt Patricia’s behest. The two are old friends and Undlin jumped at the chance to take over the defense from Paul Pasqualoni, who was not retained after 2019.

It’s not gone well for Undlin or anyone associated with the Lions defense. Already terrible under Patricia, it’s devolved even worse since his departure. The Lions gave up almost 600 yards in Saturday’s loss to Tampa Bay. Detroit ranks dead last in scoring defense and could set the NFL record for most points allowed in a season in Week 17.

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Cory Undlin laments not playing more man coverage vs. Washington

The Lions played more zone in the first half when the Football Team couldn’t move the ball

In the first half of Sunday’s game against the Washington Football Team, the Detroit Lions defense held the visitors to just three points on six possessions. The defense was aided by a fumble and a missed field goal, but the Lions were in good control of the Washington offense throughout the half.

They got there by playing more zone coverage than man coverage. When defensive coordinator Cory Undlin switched it up to playing more man coverage after halftime, the Washington offense perked up.

The Football Team picked up 22 first downs in four second-half drives. They scored on every possession, three TDs and a field goal. Quarterback Alex Smith got into a groove by consistently beating the man coverage on the outside and across the middle of the field.

Yet Undlin believes he should have played more man coverage, not less.

“I don’t know exactly what the numbers are, but yeah, we played a lot of zone in the first half and I played a lot of zone starting the second half,” Undlin said in his press conference on Tuesday. “I probably should’ve played more man in the second half, kind of stayed with the plan there as they kind of went through the no-huddle and then Alex (Smith) was ripping that ball out super quick.”

Undlin continued,

“Looking back on it I could’ve probably changed it up faster than that just to give them another look. We’re going to play man, or we’re going to play zone, whatever I think is going to be the best key to win the game. So, if I can do it again, I probably would’ve played some more man faster in the second half.”

The rookie coordinator noted the pass rush wasn’t as effective in impacting Smith as it had been in the first half, as well as citing a couple of unfortunate penalties that contributed to the issues in man coverage.

Even so, the zone worked well in the first half. The man coverage after halftime most definitely did not. It’s an interesting thought from Undlin that he wished he played even more man coverage, not less, when it was obviously helping Washington’s offense.

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