Bevell, Meyer, and Schottenheimer to attend Lawrence’s workout Friday

Trevor Lawrence will throw for the NFL tomorrow, and of course, the Jags will be there.

Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence will be taking the field tomorrow morning for a workout in front of the whole NFL, although it’s pretty much a guarantee that he’ll be going first overall to the Jacksonville Jaguars. On Thursday, offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell told the media he will be attending with Brian Schottenheimer and Urban Meyer in what will be their last look at Lawrence before he has a left shoulder injury repaired.

In what was his first meeting with the Jacksonville media, Bevell also said he’ll personally be paying attention to Lawrence’s velocity, as it’s something that can be hard to gauge on film.

“I think for me it’s just important, like I said earlier, just to see the ball come out of his hands,” said Bevell. “I think one of the hardest things to do on tape is to be able to tell velocity and just the way it comes out of his hand. I also want to see the command that he’s going to have. [It’s] kind of our first opportunity to be able to get him in person, so [I’m] excited to do that.

The news broke of Lawrence’s workout and injury last week. While it isn’t known how or when he sustained the injury, it is known that he’ll be ready for training camp. That would seem to indicate that the labrum injury to his non-throwing shoulder isn’t severe.

As for Bevell, he isn’t foreign to rookie quarterbacks after working with Russell Wilson during his first season and beyond. That said, fans should be very excited about the OTA and training camp phase as Bevell had a long and mostly successful run in Seattle.

2021 NFL coaching changes: Jacksonville Jaguars

Jaguars turn to a new coaching staff for turnaround

The Jacksonville Jaguars move on after four years with head coach Doug Marrone logging a 10-6 record that won the AFC South in 2017. They advanced to the Conference Championship that year but the wheels quickly came off. The Jaguars went 5-11, 6-10, and then finally 1-15 last season. While this will be the first new head coach since 2017, it will also be a different offensive coordinator for the fourth straight season.

The Jaguars lured Urban Meyer into the NFL after he was the head coach at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida, and Ohio State over 17 years. Meyer totaled up a 187-32 record at those colleges that included most recently 83-9 at Ohio State (2012-2018). He is one of the most successful coaches in college football history and he goes to a rock-bottom 1-15 Jaguars franchise.

That NFL-worst record in 2020 was a part of why Meyer agreed to head up the team. The Jaguars hold that No. 1 overall draft pick that Meyer can use to build the exact sort of team that he wants. He spent the last year studying the NFL and spoke with former players about the differences between college and the pros. Unlike most coaches that jump from one fire to another, Meyer did not coach last year and used the time to study the NFL and how to optimize a team there.

There’s a monumental difference in the NFL in how players are obtained, taught and motivated than in college. At Ohio State, Meyer could rely on attracting the highest caliber players from across the country. In the pros, he’ll have to wait his turn though he holds that No. 1 pick. The Jaguars also own several chances to rebuild quickly through the NFL draft holding the 1.01, 1.25, 2.01, 2.14, and 3.01 over the first two days.

He’ll need the help. The franchise is on a three-year stretch of losing records and contains no star power. They ranked no better than average in all offensive categories and featured no wide receiver with more than 706 receiving yards. They have ranked in the Bottom-5 in rushing attempts and touchdowns for the last three years.

Coaching tendencies

Head Coach Urban Meyer – The feeling is that this is either going to work very well with a quick turnaround, or it will be yet another instance of a successful college coach unable to adjust to the complexities and challenges of the NFL. Meyer built an identity of excellence in college that culminated in  Championship teams for both Florida and Ohio State. Meyer never lost more than two games in any of his seven seasons with the Buckeyes.

Meyer is a perfectionist and demands excellence. He will bring in a culture of accountability. It is easier to reap a fresh crop of outstanding players each year and then tell them that excellence and buying into the program is the only way to play. It is another to inherit a 1-15 team stocked with mostly mediocrity. But to his credit, he’s spent time figuring out how the transition from college to the pros differs and what he needs to do to succeed.

Meyer’s teams at Ohio State were noted for being relentless and tough. He recruited the speediest players possible and said he intends to do the same thing with the Jaguars since he wants the fastest team in the NFL. If he hits well on those four picks in the first two rounds of the draft, Meyer can turn this franchise around but he’s starting out with a roster full of mediocrity – something that he’s never willing to accept.

Defensive Coordinator Joe Cullen  – The Jaguars hand the defense off to Joe Cullen who was an NFL defensive line coach for fourteen years. He coached the Lions (2006-2008), Jaguars (2010-2012), Browns (2013), Buccaneers (2014-2015), and most recently the Ravens (2016-2020).

This is the second stint with the Jaguars for Cullen. He inherits one of the worst defenses in the NFL last year. The Jaguars were below average against all fantasy positions and ranked in the Bottom-5 versus quarterbacks (No. 28) and  running backs (No. 30).

Cullen has been lauded for his work with defensive lines and that is a weakness for the Jaguars. His five seasons with the Ravens produced stellar units but this will be the first time that he’s called the plays for a defense. He’s been a high-energy, “in your face” coach that succeeded in developing players and his ascension into being a coordinator was praised by both ex-players and fellow coaches.

There’s little to go on regarding what his defense will look like as a first-time defensive coordinator, but he’ll be groomed by Urban Meyer and will have a positive impact on the previously anemic pass rush in Jacksonville.  The biggest success factor will be drafting or signing better talent. Urban Meyers said his primary job on both sides of the ball is finding a scheme that fits his players and using coordinators with extensive NFL experience.

Offensive Coordinator Darrell Bevell –  Early expectations were that Scott Linehan would be hired but Darrell Bevell was selected after 15 years as an offensive coordinator in the NFL. He coached the Vikings (2006-2010), Seahawks (2011-2017), and Lions (2019-2020). He served as the interim head coach for the Lions last year after Matt Patricia was fired.

Bevell was the Seahawk’s offensive coordinator through two Super Bowls with Russell Wilson. He was brought onto the Lions for the last two years in the hopes that he could revamp a mediocre rushing attack but the Barry Sanders curse remains in place for the Lions, despite spending the 2.03 pick on D’Andre Swift. He was saddled with a team that couldn’t stop most opponents, so the rushing effort too rarely was an option.

The Lions did cobble together three running backs to total 17 rushing scores, and they maintained a Top-10 passing attack despite constant injuries over the last two seasons.

Bevell oversaw the passing game while in Seattle while Tom Cable was the offensive line coach and run-game coordinator. He was eventually fired in Seattle for an offense that started slowly with Russell Wilson at the helm. The Jaguars also hired Brian Schottenheimer as their pass-game coordinator who was the offensive coordinator that replaced Bevell in Seattle. This offense will lean more towards the pass than the run as have the offenses by both Bevell and Schottenheimer. The lack of balance with the run was a reason why Pete Carroll fired both of them.

Bevell is in line with Meyer’s plan to hire coordinators with extensive NFL experience and then adopt the offensive scheme to the players. There’s plenty to fix in all facets of this team, but the one unquestioned move is drafting Trevor Lawrence and installing a fast, high-powered passing game.

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Personnel changes

There is enough salary cap space to make free agent moves and use five draft selections in the first 65 picks to restock the team. Trevor Lawrence is expected to be the Week 1 starter so his learning curve is paramount to team success. He’s expected to be an elite if not generational-level player with both the athletic skills and intelligence to make the transition into the NFL.

James Robinson earned his spot as the starting running back and there’s little reason to expect him to share more this season. There’s no one else on the roster that merits much playing time and far too many other needs to worry about a No. 2 running back.

Bevell has to sort through a menagerie of potentially talented players. There’s a good chance he adds another wideout to the mix and he’ll be looking for a speedster when he does.

Fantasy football takeaway

The first season for any rookie quarterback is usually a disappointment in fantasy terms. Justin Herbert exceeded expectations to be sure, but he also had Keenan Allen. The only players with locked-down roles are the rookie Lawrence, D.J. Chark and James Robinson.

Chark broke out in 2019 with 1,008 yards and eight touchdowns but then suffered a down 2020 along with the rest of the offense. He fits into the style of receiver that Meyer used in Ohio State and ran a 4.34/40 in the NFL combine. An upgrade at quarterback should get him back into the fantasy starter picture.

Laviska Shenault led the receivers with 58 catches last year but only gained 600 yards for an anemic 11.2 yards per catch. His draft stock dropped him into the second round last year after running a 4.58/40 at the combine. That may not fit into the fast team that Meyer wants. Keelan  Cole is another slower player that only managed a 4.59/40 at his college Pro Day.

Collin Johnson started coming on later last year, but the ex-Longhorn only ran a 4.58/40 and used his 6-6 frame to make a difference. Free agency and the NFL draft are likely to add to the receivers since other than Chark, the rest of the productive wideouts all rate as slow in NFL terms and Meyer wants the fastest crew in the league.

Podcast: Breaking down Urban Meyer’s pending Jaguars staff

Jags Wire’s James Johnson breaks down what Urban Meyer’s coordinators bring to the table in the latest episode of Bleav in the Jags.

Another week of the offseason is in the books, and with that came another episode of Bleav in the Jags.

On this week’s episode, Jags Wire’s James Johnson broke down the reported hires the Jags have made to their coaching staff assembled by Urban Meyer. With a wide range of different experience now in the staff, James also discussed what the top assistants bring to the table for the organization.

Episode 57 and the rest of our archived episodes can be heard below in the media player and links provided.

Click here for archived episodes of Bleav in the Jags and feel free to subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or Spotify.

Rapoport: Matthew Stafford would have wanted to stay with the Lions if Darrell Bevell was the coach

It’s an interesting take that Stafford valued Bevell so highly

More details are coming out about the impetus behind Matthew Stafford asking to be traded away from the Detroit Lions. The longtime Lions quarterback and the team have decided to part ways by mutual decision, though at Stafford’s behest.

His behest might have been different had the team kept former offensive coordinator and interim head coach Darrell Bevell around. So claims NFL.com insider Ian Rapoport in an appearance on the NFL Network on Monday.

After noting that “it should cost at least a first-rounder (draft pick) or more” to acquire Stafford from the Lions, Rapoport veered into an interesting tangent.

“I know this is something Stafford has been considering and his wife has been considering for some time, potentially leaving Detroit and starting somewhere new,” Rapoport said. “Had the Lions retained Darrell Bevell — from what I understand — I do not believe Stafford would have wanted to ask out, I believe he would have wanted to stay there.”

Bevell did interview for the Lions head coaching position, but the team went in a different direction with Dan Campbell. Bevell has since joined Urban Meyer with the staff overhaul in Jacksonville.

Stafford certainly meshed well with Bevell’s coaching, both as an offensive coordinator and during the five-game stint as the interim head coach.

It is just Rapoport’s opinion/observation from afar, that needs to be noted.

Report: Jags expected to land Darrell Bevell for offensive coordinator job

The Jags are close to naming their new offensive coordinator and it’s expected to be Darrell Bevell.

While it hasn’t been made official, the Jacksonville Jaguars and Urban Meyer found their defensive coordinator and it will be former Baltimore Ravens defensive line coach Joe Cullen. Not too long afterward, it appears they found their offensive coordinator, too.

Per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the Jags are expected to hire former Detroit Lions interim coach Darrell Bevell as their offensive coordinator. While the signing isn’t official, it seems the Jags beat out several others for his services.

Bevell, 51, is a coordinator who will bring 21 years of NFL coaching experience to Meyer’s staff, which is a huge plus. He started his career with the Green Bay Packers in 2000 as an offensive assistant and quality control coach and spent six seasons there. He also became their quarterbacks coach in 2003-05. Afterward, he spent five seasons as an offensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings, then served as the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator from 2011-17.

After taking a few seasons off, Bevell found himself in Detroit as an offensive coordinator from 2019. He became the interim head coach when Matt Patricia was fired on Nov. 28. Many came away impressed with the job that he did when taking over for Patricia and thought he had a decent chance to remove the interim tag from his name.

The Lions finished 2020 with 30th in rushing with a 93.7-yard average, which may concern some fans. However, it’s worth noting he’s inheriting a talented running back (James Robinson) and a good interior offensive line that aided him to put up historic numbers as a rookie. It’s also worth noting that the Lions finished eighth in passing, averaging 274.8 yards.

Many fans will recognize Bevell for the infamous play-call in Super Bowl XLIX where he called a pass play on the 1-yard line during the Seahawks last offensive series. Instead of utilizing Marshawn Lynch to pound it in, he had Russell Wilson attempt to hit receiver Ricardo Lockett for a play where corners Malcolm Butler and Brandon Browner would interfere with each other. It backfired and ended up being a pick, however, that one play shouldn’t define Bevell’s career.

In addition to Stafford, Bevell coached Wilson from his rookie season to his sixth season and also coached Aaron Rodgers and Brett Farve when with the Packers. That should certainly help Jags fans feel good about him possibly inheriting Trevor Lawrence when the veteran coach makes his signing official.

Several reports indicate ex-Lions OC Darrell Bevell will be the Jaguars offensive coordinator

Bevell will work under Urban Meyer and likely get to coach Trevor Lawrence

Darrell Bevell has quickly found a new team after being passed over in the Detroit Lions head coaching search. Several reports, including fresh updates from NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero and Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press, incident Bevell will be the new offensive coordinator for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

The move is not yet official but could be finalized quickly. Bevell was the Lions offensive coordinator for the last two seasons, and he also took over as the interim head coach in Detroit when the team fired Matt Patricia with five games to play in the 2020 season.

In Jacksonville, Bevell will work under new head coach Urban Meyer, who was hired last week to turn around the Jaguars. Jacksonville went 1-15 in 2020, losing their final 15 games and firing Doug Marrone in the process. They are widely expected to use the No. 1 overall pick in the 2021 NFL draft on Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence. Bevell’s impressive body of work with Matthew Stafford — the No. 1 overall pick in 2009 — is a nice feather in his coaching cap.

The Lions are interviewing candidates to be Bevell’s replacement as Detroit’s offensive coordinator, including Ravens QB coach James Urban and Steelers WR coach Ike Hilliard.

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Report: Detroit Lions have 4 GM and 3 coaching interviews scheduled this week

Multiple sources are reporting that the Detroit Lions are aggressively interviewing general manager and coaching candidates this week.

MMQB’s Albert Breer and NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport have reported several interviews this week for the Detroit Lions general manager and coaching vacancies.

In total, the Lions reportedly will interview four general manager and three coaching candidates over the next five days, as well as two more coaching interviews set up for next week.

At a glance interview schedule

Monday Eric Bieniemy, Chiefs’ OC (source)
Tuesday Darrell Bevell, Lions’ OC (source) Terry Fontenot, Saints’ Asst. GM, VP Pro personnel (source)
Wednesday Brad Holmes, Rams’ Dir. College Scouting (source) Geroge Paton, Vikings’ Asst. GM (source)
Thursday Robert Saleh, 49ers’ DC (source)
Friday Jeff Ireland, Saints’ Asst. GM, VP college scouting (source)
Next Week Arthur Smith, Titans’ OC (source) Dan Campbell, Saints’ Asst. Head Coach, TE coach (source)
TBD John Schneider, Seahawks’ GM (source)

Bieniemy, Saleh, and Smith were all identified and profiled in Lions Wire’s Top-10 coaching options for the Lions, and fans should be familiar with Bevell as he was the Lions OC over the last two seasons, but this is the first time we have discussed Dan Campbell.

Campbell is a former NFL tight end, spent three seasons (2006-08) with the Lions, and began coaching in 2010 with the Miami Dolphins. After five years as their tight ends coach, he was promoted to interim coach in 2015 but was let go after the season. He joined the Saints the next season as their tight ends coach and also carried an assistant head coach (to Sean Payton) title.

Paton and Ireland were candidates identified and profiled in Lions Wire’s Top general manager candidates, we also profiled Holmes last week, then Schneider over the weekend, and while we have mentioned Fontenot in other articles, we haven’t profiled him yet.

Fontenot, like Ireland, is an assistant general manager with the Saints, but while Ireland is focused on the college scouting side of the front office, Fontenot deals with their pro personnel department. Fontenot has been with the Saints’ organization for 16 seasons, beginning his career as a scout, and overseeing the pro scouting department for the last six seasons.

Lions completed GM interviews:

Lions completed coaching interviews:

Names the Lions are reportedly interested in but nothing set up yet

Darrell Bevell ‘loving every minute’ of being the Lions’ interim head coach

Bevell appreciates the opportunity and knows it’s not worth worrying about the future

Darrell Bevell is rapidly approaching the end of his tenure as the interim head coach of the Detroit Lions. Bevell and the rest of the coaching staff are prepping for Sunday’s season finale against the Minnesota Vikings with the knowledge that it’s likely the last time they will do anything as an employee of the Lions.

Bevell has been grateful for the opportunity to lead the team since head coach Matt Patricia was sent packing after Week 12. The audition to remain hasn’t exactly gone as well as hoped for Bevell. The Lions have won once under Bevell, the first game against the Chicago Bears.

The interim coach remains appreciative of each moment he gets in his first-ever head coaching opportunity.

“I’ve been pouring everything into this week. Obviously, I wasn’t even in the building last week, so it gives you that moment to kind of step back where you know how special these moments are, so I want to be in it,” Bevell told reporters on Friday. “I’m living this moment day to day, I’m talking to the players day to day, loving every minute of this opportunity. The future happens in the future. If we worry about that, we can lose track. So, I’m just excited about this day.”

Last Sunday’s lifeless loss to Tampa Bay was one of the lowest points for the franchise. It was a game Bevell and several assistants watched remotely after being deemed close contacts to a positive COVID-19 case. It gave him a quick minute to appreciate the experience,

“I appreciate the opportunities that I’ve had to learn each and every one of these experiences. It’s just been a whirlwind of five weeks.”

Matthew Stafford’s multiple injuries lead to delayed Detroit Lions betting line in Week 17

With Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford’s game status undetermined, due to multiple injuries, BetMGM is waiting to set a bet line for their Week 17 game against the Minnesota Vikings.

Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford entered Week 16 dealing with a partial ligament tear in his right thumb (his throwing hand) and a painful rib cartilage injury from two weeks prior. One series into last week’s game and Stafford suffered yet another injury, this time to his right ankle, and was unable to finish the game.

With his status for the Lions’ Week 17 game against the Minnesota Vikings up in the air, the good folks over at BetMGM have elected to hold off introducing the betting line for this game until Stafford’s status can be determined.

This has been a theme for the Lions over the last month, as Stafford has dealt with multiple injuries, and on most week’s BetMGM will set a betting line once injury declarations have been declared on Friday.

Despite the uncertainty, Stafford insists he wants to play if he is able.

“If I’m good, I want to be out there,” Stafford said. “I want to play. Doing everything I can to get there toward the end of the week, and kind of have to figure it out as we go day-to-day just to see how it responds to treatment and all that. But, hopefully, I can get it good enough to go and be out there.”

Interim coach Darrell Bevell echoed Stafford, suggesting the team is preparing to take the same approach.

“As far as the game goes,” Bevell said of Stafford, “we’re going to take it exactly as we always do. Obviously, it will be health-based, we’re not going to put him out there if he can’t protect himself, or if he’s got a chance of something major happening from the injuries that he already has. But as I said, the guy’s tough as nails. The guy respects the game, he loves his teammates, he wants to be out there. Obviously, he gives us the best opportunity to be able to win a game when he is out there. I know he wants it.”

Stay tuned to Lions Wire for updated betting odds as they become available.

Report: Robert Prince to replace Darrell Bevell as interim coach in Week 16

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport is reporting that wide receivers coach Robert Prince will replace Darrell Bevell as interim coach in Week 16.

Due to a COVID-19 exposure, the Detroit Lions will need an interim coach to replace their interim coach.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport is reporting that wide receivers coach Robert Prince will replace Darrell Bevell as interim coach in Week 16.

Bevell is “deemed a high-risk close contact of someone who tested positive for COVID-19”, Rapoport said, and “won’t coach this Saturday vs the Bucs, sources say. The first head coach to miss a game due to COVID protocols this season.”

Prince, a senior member of the Lions staff that has been with the team since 2014, is highly respected by the players due to his intelligence, energy level, and personality. Prince is familiar with the Lions offensive scheme, but with 30-years of coaching experience, he has experiences that extend beyond just offense.

Prince’s leadership style is highly energetic and infectious, and he is someone the players can rally behind.

Rapoport also reported that quarterbacks coach Sean Ryan, who is considered an offensive coordinator in waiting, will take over offensive play calling in Bevell’s stay. Ryan and Matthew Stafford have built a trusting relationship over the last two seasons and there should be little lag in their ability to produce on offense this week.