Nick Sirianni describes Chiefs HC Andy Reid’s influence on his career

Sirianni said that Reid’s conduct in letting him go back in 2013 had an effect on him as a coach. | from @TheJohnDillon

When Andy Reid became the head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs back in 2013, he couldn’t have known that he would face a member of the team’s incumbent coaching staff in a Super Bowl a decade later.

Reid technically fired Philadelphia Eagles’ head coach Nick Sirianni, who was with the Chiefs for four years between 2009 and 2012 in various roles on the offensive coaching staff. Instead of retaining Sirianni, who was under contract, Reid opted for his assistant head coach David Culley to coach his wide receivers. A role that would ultimately play a part in Culley’s short-lived stint as the head coach of the Houston Texans years later.

Reid’s coaching tree has already reached legendary status, and Sirianni told reporters at a media availability session on Tuesday about the role that the long-tenured Kansas City coach has played in his career.

“He was very good to me in the sense that he brought me in to talk to me,” Sirianni explained. “He didn’t have to do that. He didn’t have to bring me in to talk to me to let me go, right? But he did because it seems like that’s the type of person he is, that’s the kind of coach he is, and I was grateful for that.”

In describing the way that he was lifted up by Reid during a less-than-ideal time in his career, he didn’t hold back in letting the media know how much Reid’s encouragement meant to him.

“I was down in that moment,” Sirianni said, “and he gave me strength when I was down, he tried to pick me up when I was down, and I think that says a lot about his character and who he is, so I was appreciative of that.”

While there doesn’t seem to be any bad blood heading into this matchup, Chiefs fans can rest assured that Sirianni will be angling to secure his first Super Bowl win against Reid on Sunday.

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DeMeco Ryans could turn the Texans into a powerhouse, but only if they let him

If the Texans actually empower Ryans, they’ll be a contender soon.

From a glance, the Texans hit a home run by hiring DeMeco Ryans to be their new head coach.

After spending half a decade as a stout linebacker for Houston in the early 2000s, Ryans now has the daunting mission of finally elevating a franchise mired in pro football’s doldrums. And as someone who just finished coordinating the 49ers’ monstrous defense over the last couple of years — under the tutelage of the brilliant Kyle Shanahan and Robert Saleh — there might not be a better man for the job than him.

This is because Ryans has acclaim for being an ingenious leader and defensive mind. San Francisco likely doesn’t continue its reign as a Championship Sunday-level team if Ryans isn’t pulling the strings, maximizing terrors like Nick Bosa, Fred Warner and Talanoa Hufanga. He was routinely front and center, ensuring everyone was in the right spot and on their Ps and Qs.

But the Texans must let Ryans do his job before he can take his leadership and coaching methods and transfer them over seamlessly. You’d be forgiven if you had doubts about their intentions. After all, it’s hard to trust Houston after it essentially tanked two years just to be in this position to do right by a former player.

In jettisoning David Culley and Lovie Smith, two skilled Black coaches who were fired for not winning more with bare-bones rosters after respective single seasons, the Texans showed they have little design on growing the game for everyone. In line with a pervasive hiring problem around the league as a whole, the Texans declined to give leeway and equal opportunity to two consecutive Black sideline leaders compared with their white peers, while disrespectfully treating them as placeholders. They rightfully earned criticism for these moves, and hiring Ryans — even on a six-year contract — doesn’t gloss over them.

This is not, and will never be, how healthy NFL teams operate. Even if Ryans is one of the sport’s biggest coaching names, the manner in which the Texans shamelessly cleared the deck for him should inspire suspicion they’ll give him the key to their car. Or, at the very least, that they’ll let him drive the automobile at his leisure, instilling his vision at his own pace.

Houston doesn’t have a lot of core pieces in place for the future.

Outside of a triumvirate of the promising running back Dameon Pierce, franchise left tackle Laremy Tunsil and 2022 second-round safety Jalen Pitre, this continues to be a thin roster that has an extended path back to any meaningful competition. The Texans are in dire need of a full-scale rebuild, and they need someone with the requisite experience in quality and patient player development as talent is gradually added to the mix. Given that Houston possesses the No. 2 overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, it’s likely the quarterback of the future (Bryce Young, C.J. Stroud… Will Levis?) will also take snaps in a new era come September.

This is where the Texans struck gold with Ryans.

As a pure teacher and communicator, Ryans is the necessary sage to plant and maintain the seeds the Texans need. In due time, if Ryans and co. can strike the right chords, Houston might morph into a consistent AFC powerhouse. But whether they’ll truly stay patient with Ryans long enough for that dream vision to happen is up in the air. If Culley and Smith were given no breathing room to thrive, it’s hard to expect the Texans will treat Ryans any differently and honor his deal to its conclusion. But we can hope.

Past and recent precedent in Houston suggests Ryans will be restricted in some fashion. If there’s one place owner Janice McNair and relatively green GM Nick Caserio are in probable lockstep, it’s in ensuring Ryans has the tools to shine, but only until he, in their eyes, steps out of line, seeking more (earned) power. This is in stark contrast to how the Texans have operated with their various awful white coaches over the years.

Inaugural Houston coach Dom Capers won 19 games in Houston and never had a winning record. He coached them for four seasons. Gary Kubiak started with the Texans in 2006, didn’t have a winning season until 2009 and didn’t win a playoff game until 2011. He coached them for almost eight years. Bill O’Brien then took the helm — as a coach and eventual GM (in 2020), mind you — and proceeded to never make one Championship Sunday appearance while pouring gas all over the organization’s long-term prospects. He coached them for six years.

Meanwhile, Culley and Smith get a card deck full of two-of-hearts and spades, and they’re expected to make chicken salad out of chicken, well, you know, just to stay employed. It’s simply not a fair standard for two Black coaches compared with their white predecessors, who were allowed to screw up time and again and stay entrenched.

Great teams embolden the people they hire. Sorry franchises, like the Texans, look over their shoulder, micro-manage them, and keep a short leash on their exploits seemingly every step of the way — if they even let them get that far.

Since their expansion inception in 2002, the Texans can count on six postseason appearances and have won just four playoff games. Their all-time win-loss record is a depressing 142-195-1. They are a grim picture of two decades of futility. The NFL brought the league’s 32nd team into the fold for competitive balance (and revenue), and it’s acted as an embarrassing stepping stone for others instead.

Tuesday saw the Texans try to step out of the shadows. Their hire of Ryans, a genuinely premier coach with a proven track record of success, suggests they desire to no longer be a laughingstock.

They’ll have to let Ryans operate how he pleases — no questions asked and at a reasonable, progressive pace — for that to happen.

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David Culley held out hope Deshaun Watson would play for the Texans in 2021

Former Houston Texans coach David Culley hoped at one point in 2021 training camp that Deshaun Watson might change his mind and play.

David Culley was placed in an unenviable situation as he took over as coach for the Houston Texans.

Initially quarterback Deshaun Watson requested a trade. By March 2021, the first of a multitude of lawsuits from women alleging the three-time Pro Bowler committed sexual assault poured in.

For Culley, a rookie coach, the training camp at Houston Methodist Training Center in late July 2021 was rife with distractions, all of them surrounding Watson. However, Culley told OutKick 360 that Watson actually wasn’t a problem.

“He was at every meeting during training camp,” Culley said. “He was at every practice during training camp. There was only a certain amount of things that he was only going to do during practice because of the injury factor, but he was there. He was in every meeting. He wasn’t a distraction. He was just like everybody else there. But knowing that he wasn’t, there was always hope that maybe he might change his mind.”

Watson never changed his mind, and former 2015 Pro Bowler Tyrod Taylor continued to receive first-team snaps and the team continued to develop third-round rookie Davis Mills. When Watson was no longer an option, the Texans proceeded accordingly.

“We got to the point once the season got started, he was still coming in the building, but he wasn’t in our meetings anymore. There was no need for him to be in our meetings anymore because he was not going to be active. We knew that going in, and we handled it that way. We knew were going to have one less guy on our active roster that wasn’t going to play during the year, and we understood that and we dealt with it.”

Watson took up a roster spot on the Texans’ 53-man squad. Houston finished 4-13. Culley was fired. Watson was traded in the 2022 offseason. However, the litigation continues, and the Texans were recently named as defendants in another related civil suit.

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Doug Pederson should target this former AFC South head coach for an assistant position

Culley only lasted one season as a head coach, but he carries with him 27 years of NFL assistant experience.

The Jacksonville Jaguars are close to having a full staff under new head coach Doug Pederson. There’s only a few vacancies remaining on the team’s staff, though new roles could be added as well.

However, one of those offensive positions will be a crucial hire for Pederson, and that’s the receivers coach. The group was a disappointment in 2021 under prior coach Sanjay Lal, and its play limited the progress of rookie quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

Getting the hire right this time around is necessary, and there’s one candidate in particular that the Jags could (and should) consider, and he’s a coach who Jags fans may be familiar with.

David Culley’s tenure as the head coach of the Houston Texans ended in one year just like Urban Meyer’s did, but unlike Meyer, Culley maintains a solid reputation around the league. He also has worked with Pederson in the past in his stops in Philadelphia (before Pederson was a head coach) and Kansas City.

A long-time coach who has spent 45 years in the field (27 of them as an NFL assistant), there are fewer coaches more experienced than Culley. Much of that experience has been as a receivers coach, and given both his track record in coaching and reputation for building strong relationships with players, Culley could be a perfect candidate to join Pederson’s staff.

The Texans went just 4-13 in his one year at the helm, but that was arguably overachieving, especially considering the fact that quarterback Tyrod Taylor went down and had to be replaced with third-round rookie Davis Mills, who had arguably the best season of any first-year passer.

Bringing Culley on to the staff would not only give the Jags an experienced option to coach the position group that needs the most work, but it would also give Pederson an obvious candidate for an assistant head coach position. That’s a role that Culley also held under John Harbaugh in Baltimore before taking the Houston job.

Culley is well-liked by his players, a seasoned receivers coach and has head coaching experience, too, albeit for just one season. Pederson will likely consider other candidates as well, but it would be hard to make a better hire than Culley.

Texans’ repeat coaching search has entirely different feel

The Houston Texans are looking for a coach in January. Again. However, the search in 2022 has a different feel than it did in 2021.

A year ago, the Houston Texans were in the midst of complete chaos following the hire of new General Manager Nick Caserio. The highly controversial selection, against the advice of Cal McNair’s own search committee, had seemingly sent the franchise spiraling. Jack Easterby had cemented his status in the organization, rumors of J.J. Watt’s impending departure began to swirl, and franchise quarterback Deshaun Watson demanded a trade.

Another problem for Houston? Nobody wanted to coach the team.

There was heavy speculation regarding Kansas City Chiefs’ offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy as a potential peace offering to Watson. However, ultimately the coaching search came down to Buffalo Bills defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier and Baltimore Ravens receivers coach David Culley. Originally, speculation around the Culley interview revolved around his previous relationship with Bieniemy. Nobody thought the team would seriously consider a candidate who had never been a coordinator for their first head coaching gig at 65 years old — 66 upon season’s end.

On Jan. 29, David Culley was announced as the fourth full-time coach of the franchise. Across the NFL, despite Culley’s reputation as a standout man with tons of experience in the league, both fans and the media alike were stunned at the selection.

When asked at his introductory press conference why he took the job, Culley responded “I took this job simply because there’s 32 of these in this league.”

Despite Caserio’s insistence that there was “tons of interest league-wide in the position” and that “Deshaun Watson is our quarterback” it was obvious to everyone watching that the Texans’ were a disaster that few were willing to stake their professional reputation to.

As such, it comes as no surprise that the Texans were also a bit of a disaster. An organization marred by conflict, with one of the worst rosters in the league, married to a rookie coach who wasn’t afraid to admit he was over his skis at times. No promising glimpses by Davis Mills or victories over an equal disaster in Jacksonville Jaguars could cover up a bad football team.

The Texans finished 4-13 and earned the rights to the third overall pick in the draft, taking home the honor of finishing 30th in the NFL this past season. Caserio, after a long deliberation period, opted to move on from Culley and cited philosophical differences.

This brings us to the present where once again, just a year later, Houston is looking for a new coach. It partially feels like déjà vu for Texans fans, a bad team with a bad record once again needs a new coach.

However, it feels markedly different this time.

Houston has got off to a fast start with five interviews. Within 24 hours of firing Culley, former Miami Dolphins coach and New England Patriots defensive coordinator Brian Flores was interviewing in Houston. They quickly moved to former Pittsburgh Steelers receiver Hines Ward, Los Angeles Chargers offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, and Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon. The Los Angeles Rams’ offensive coordinator, Kevin O’Connell, agreed to interview with the team at a time that’s yet to be determined.

There is a marked emphasis on youth this coaching cycle. Flores is the only candidate thus far with any coaching experience at the NFL level and he’s only 40 years old. This is all before any presumed interviews with New England Patriots candidates such as offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels and inside linebackers coach Jerod Mayo have been scheduled.

Maybe it’s the impending draft capital to be acquired from the trading of Watson and Laremy Tunsil. Maybe it’s clarity regarding a clear leadership structure helmed by Caserio rather than the Easterby-McNair relationship that’s dominated the headlines. Regardless, this is not 2021.

If the Texans’ previous coaching cycle will be remembered by clear disinterest from the likes of top candidates such as Brian Daboll, Matt Eberflus and Bieniemy, the optics look entirely different now. There is a marked interest in young candidates that could serve the position for years to come and candidates that would bring an edge to their respective side of the football. Essentially, the opposite of what Culley offered in 2021 as a veteran, “Leader of Men” style coach.

O’Connell could bring the Sean McVay scheme that has gotten the most out of quarterbacks Jared Goff and Matthew Stafford, hopefully making life easier for second-year quarterback Davis Mills. Brian Flores ran one of the most schematically diverse defenses in the NFL while coaching Miami and could help turn around Houston quickly in a weak division. Gannon is highly regarded in circles around the league with multiple interviews lined up.

In short, each candidate brings something both advantageous and unique to the table. Houston may not have to take the scraps this time around.

What could render Houston choosing from a pool of who’s left as opposed to a pool of who’s interested is Caserio’s vise grip as the most involved general manager in the NFL. However, the roster, draft capital, and salary cap space are vastly different. Winning cures all, and the Texans appear to be in a better situation to attract and secure a good coach than they were a year ago.

AFC South news: Texans fire David Culley

The Jags aren’t the only team in the AFC South looking for a new coach.

The Jacksonville Jaguars aren’t the only team conducting a head coaching search in the AFC South at the moment, as the Houston Texans are doing the same, too. After just one season, the team decided to fire coach David Culley, giving the Texans the seventh NFL opening.

Culley, who has almost 30 years of NFL experience, was hired by the Texans on Jan. 29 of last year to replace Bill O’Brien, who was fired before the 2020 season could end. With Deshaun Watson demanding a trade and limited draft selections, the Texans’ job was one many felt should’ve come with low expectations in Year 1, but Culley still managed to go 4-13.

Of course, two of Culley’s wins were against the Jags, including his first regular season game as an NFL head coach as the Texans defeated the Jags easily by a score of 30-16. He was also able to defeat another AFC South team in the Tennessee Titans as well as the Los Angeles Chargers.

In addition to Culley, the team also fired its offensive coordinator in Tim Kelly who had been with the team since 2014.

Culley joins former Jags coach Urban Meyer, Matt Nagy, Joe Judge, Brian Flores, Vic Fangio, and Mike Zimmer on the list of coaches who were let go this offseason. However, many of the names may not be available for long when considering their experience and connections.

Texans GM Nick Caserio says current coaching candidates did not trigger David Culley being fired

Houston Texans general manager Nick Caserio says the current crop of coaching candidates is not why the team fired coach David Culley.

The Houston Texans’ 4-13 record was settled; it didn’t need pending review from the league office to confirm the club had lost 28-25 to the Tennessee Titans in Week 18 at NRG Stadium.

Nevertheless the Texans waited until Thursday, Jan. 13 to decide they were going in another direction at coach by firing David Culley after one year.

During the three full days that passed after the Texans’ final regular season game, the Miami Dolphins fired coach Brian Flores. Other coaches that made it to the available section were the Minnesota Vikings’ Mike Zimmer.

However, it isn’t just the retread coaches that are available that make this particular cycle interesting. There are young, fresh minds in the game in San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator DeMeco Ryans, Dallas Cowboys offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, and New England Patriots inside linebackers coach Jerod Mayo.

According to Texans general manager Nick Caserio, the crop of coaching candidates had nothing to do with the organization deciding to fire Culley on Thursday.

“Those are independent entities,” Caserio said. “I don’t think you make said decision based on all of a sudden something that has changed or something is different. I think you have to first start with your situation, evaluate it, make an honest assessment, make the decision and then if that so happens to be in conjunction with other things that happen in the league, that’s out of our control, out of my control. That’s really not the criteria to which, the lens through which you make those decisions. You have to look at everything as an independent entity.”

Even if the Texans didn’t make their decision regarding Culley because of the coaching candidates, they now become a part of the Texans’ plans moving forward. While they were independent from the decision on Culley, they are nevertheless intertwined with Houston’s coaching situation.

David Culley not being open to change may have been reason Texans fired him

The Houston Texans may have decided to go in a different direction at coach because David Culley was resistant to change.

Nick Caserio had to answer copious questions about the state of the Houston Texans and how the franchise moves forward after the firing of coach David Culley on Jan. 13.

Caserio, who completed his first season as general manager, provided some insight as to why the Texans moved on from Culley after a 4-13 finish in his only season as coach.

“Out of fairness, I think there’s a lot of things that go into it,” Caserio said. “I think, just generally speaking, when you evaluate a team or go through an operation or an organization, you always have to be sort of open minded to change. At least entertaining change, not necessarily change just to change, but there has to be an impetus to change.”

Reportedly Culley was not willing to make changes to his staff after the season, and that was the reason the organization dismissed him. As a corresponding measure, shortly after Culley was let go, offensive coordinator Tim Kelly was fired.

“Just if we move it over to a football perspective, look, our results are what the results are,” Caserio said. “There were certain areas, quite frankly, were we didn’t perform very well over the course multiple weeks. It wasn’t as if it was one week or one game. Going back to what I mentioned earlier, it’s about facing problems and finding solutions, and we need to do a better job of that, I need to do a better job of that.”

Caserio underscored that the decision to move on from Culley was more about what lies ahead, not so much what had occurred.

Said Caserio: “It’s not necessarily one specific thing. I think in the end, there was some differences about next steps or how we move forward, not necessarily rear-view mirror about what has happened.”

What lies ahead for Houston is finding their fifth full-time coach in team history.

GM Nick Caserio says Texans are looking for a coach with some David Culley traits

Houston Texans general manager Nick Caserio says the he wants the next coach of the team to have some of the same qualities as David Culley.

David Culley may have been with the Houston Texans for just one season, but he left an impression on general manager Nick Caserio.

The Texans’ general manager met with the media on Jan. 14 to address the state of the franchise after firing Culley on Jan. 13. The search commences for the team’s fifth full-time coach in club history.

According to Caserio, the Texans are actually looking for a coach who has some of the same traits that Culley had.

“Honestly, I’d say a lot of the qualities that David possessed,” said Caserio. “Those aren’t going to necessarily change. But I think the head coach position really is a probably a leadership position more than anything else. I think we get caught up in the X’s and O’s. Now, there’s an X’s and O’s strategy component to that, but again, it’s within the context and the construct of everything else that surrounds that.”

Culley was hardly an X’s and O’s coach as he had never been a coordinator at the NFL level. Instead, Culley’s calling card was mostly as a receivers coach in his 27 season prior to becoming the Texans’ coach in late January of 2021.

What Culley did possess was a consistent, upbeat attitude on a daily basis, which was one of the reasons he made an impression on Caserio at the NFL scouting combine years ago. Culley was also a “players coach” in that players loved to play for him.

“Our responsibility and my responsibility is to continue to provide support and create structure so that our entire organization and operation can succeed,” Caserio said. “I would say honestly a lot of the qualities that David possessed, those more than likely will not change.”

The Texans finished 4-13 in the only season with Culley on the sidelines. Houston sports fans are hopeful Caserio finds a coach with his second hire that has better staying power and stacks more wins in his first season and beyond.

Nick Caserio affirms Texans are in better position because of David Culley

Houston Texans general manager Nick Caserio says the team is in a better position than it was a year ago thanks to David Culley.

HOUSTON — Thursday afternoon, the Houston Texans fired David Culley as coach after one season. The Texans went 4-13 under Culley, winning the same number of games as the year prior.

Outside of finishing in the top-10 in takeaways, Houston ended the 2021 campaign near the bottom of every statistical category. But despite their on-field struggles, general manager Nick Caserio believes the Texans are in a better situation from the previous year because of Culley’s leadership.

“When you rewind and go back to a year ago when I took over, the organization was in a pretty rough spot, and I think we are in a lot better position now,” Caserio said when speaking to the media on Friday. “I think that is because of the leadership and guidance that David Culley provided this football team. I have a lot of respect and adoration for what he did for this team. And we will be forever indebted to him.”

When the Texans hired Culley in January of 2021, Caserio said his ability to motivate and work with others were the top attributes that led to his hiring.

Nearly a year since his arrival in Houston, the same qualities that Caserio first witnessed at a scouting combine is what ultimately earned Culley the respect and admiration of the locker room.

“I thought Coach Culley did a great job his first year as a head coach,” center Justin Britt said. “I feel like his leadership was consistent and who he was consistent, and that’s what we needed here as a leader, someone to run this team.”

“Obviously, things didn’t go the way we wanted it to, and we are going home early,” wide receiver Brandin Cooks said. “But at the end of the day, he brought some great energy to the team and kept that consistent throughout the year and helped us continue to fight given everything that was going on this whole year.”

Caserio said firing Culley was a tough decision, and he felt the 66-year-old coach was the right man for the job at the time. But Caserio felt moving on from Culley after finishing the year with the league’s third worst record was the most suitable decision for the franchise.