Bears head coach search adds Saints DC Dennis Allen to list of candidates

Bears head coach search adds Saints DC Dennis Allen to list of candidates

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There we go: NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill first reported that the Chicago Bears have scheduled an interview with Dennis Allen for their vacant head coaching job next week, adding the New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator to their list of candidates.

Allen has put together some outstanding defenses with the Saints in recent years and it was only a matter of time until he started getting more looks as a potential head coach. Here’s what I wrote of him earlier this offseason in previewing potential Saints losses on the coaching staff and front office:

“Allen, 49, interviewed for the open Miami Dolphins job in 2019 and the vacant Philadelphia Eagles position in 2020, and he has only seen his star rise higher since then. His defense was among the NFL’s best this season and he should draw more attention in the days and weeks ahead. His three-year run as the then-Oakland Raiders head coach didn’t go well (his Raiders teams went 8-28, and Allen was dismissed four games into his third season) but he’s obviously learned a lot from the experience and from returning to Sean Payton’s staff in New Orleans.”

Losing Allen would hurt, but Payton has assembled a strong group and could take the hit, depending on who leaves with him. Secondary coach Kris Richard has worked as a defensive play caller before, and defensive line/assistant head coach Ryan Nielsen seems poised to get another promotion sooner or later.

And while we’re really putting the cart before the horse here, let’s remember that one of Payton’s closest friends (and an old coworker on Bill Parcells’ Dallas Cowboys staff) is a free agent: former Minnesota Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer, whose current NFL future is up in the air.

Interestingly, the Bears also interviewed Saints college scouting director/assistant general manager Jeff Ireland for their open G.M. position. It’s possible he and Allen could end up being a package deal in Chicago, though it’s worth noting Ireland has not received a second interview like other candidates.

As for Allen: he’s facing an uphill battle entering this late in the process. The Bears have already scheduled a second interview with Indianapolis Colts defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus, one of seven head coach candidates to already speak with Chicago about the job. He’ll have to make a strong impression when he meets with team brass next week.

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Report: Bears to interview Saints DC Dennis Allen for head coaching vacancy

The Bears aren’t done interviewing head coaching candidates. They’re set to talk to Saints DC Dennis Allen.

The Chicago Bears are starting to schedule second interviews for their head coaching vacancy, but don’t appear to be done bringing other candidates in yet for their first round of interviews.

According to Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football, the Bears will be interviewing New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen sometime next week.

Allen has been the Saints defensive coordinator since 2015, slowly turning them from one of the worst defenses in the league, to one of the best over the course of seven seasons. He also spent time with the Saints in the mid-to-late 2000s as a positional coach on the defense, helping them win Super Bowl XLIV before getting his first crack as a defensive coordinator with the Denver Broncos in 2011.

After one season with the Broncos, Allen was hired as the Oakland Raiders head coach in 2012. He compiled a dismal 8-28 record in two and a half seasons, finishing 4-12 in both 2012 and 2013. After an 0-4 start in 2014, Allen was fired.

Allen’s candidacy for the Bears job is interesting, considering they have already interviewed current Saints college scouting director Jeff Ireland and Miami Dolphins senior personnel director Reggie McKenzie for the general manager job. Ireland currently works with Allen and McKenzie hired him in his first major move when he was the Raiders general manager in 2012.

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Dennis Allen headlines potential Saints losses to 2022 hiring cycle

Which Saints coaches and execs could depart in the 2022 hiring cycle? Defensive coordinator Dennis Allen has to top the list, ass does assistant GM Jeff Ireland:

Few coaching staffs were hit harder last year than the New Orleans Saints, who lost a number of key position coaches to other teams around the league — including their former tight ends coach Dan Campbell, who took secondary coach Aaron Glenn with him to go rebuild the Detroit Lions. Longtime quarterbacks coach Joe Lombardi and defensive assistant Michael Wilhoite both joined Brandon Staley’s first-year Los Angeles Chargers regime.

Now the cycle is beginning again, and the Saints could experience more upheaval. So which of their coaches and executives could be on the move as jobs open up across the NFL? Whether they’re considered for a head coach position or a bigger role as a coordinator or assistant, the Saints have some attractive candidates on their roster. Let’s dig in, starting with the most obvious possible departure:

Tom Brady embodies poor sportsmanship, trash talks Saints sideline after late interception

Tom Brady embodies poor sportsmanship, trash talks Saints sideline after late interception

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It’s easy to root against Tom Brady. Few NFL players have cultivated a more insufferable persona over the last 20 years, consistently pointing to the chip on his shoulder despite racking up a series of Super Bowl wins, lucrative endorsement deals, and glossy documentary features on ESPN. So it’s particularly satisfying to see Brady frustrated in a loss, which has happened often in recent years when his Tampa Bay Buccaneers and their bandwagon full of fans have left games disappointed after being stomped by the New Orleans Saints.

After throwing an interception to Saints defensive back C.J. Gardner-Johnson late in the game, Brady jogged to the Saints sideline and shouted at defensive coordinator/interim head coach Dennis Allen. In a video clip from the NBC broadcast widely shared on social media, Brady pretty clearly appeared to say, “Go [expletive] yourself,” as Allen clapped at his approach.

Maybe more experienced lip-readers came away with a different message. When asked about what he said in the encounter postgame, Brady wilted and replied, “Nothing. Just football.”

Entertaining as it may be, it’s really sad that Brady handles adversity this poorly. He’s been to the mountaintop more often than anyone else in the NFL, winning more championships and breaking more records than all of his peers. And he still isn’t satisfied with his success or able to take a setback on the chin. In meltdowns like this or his temper tantrum on the Tampa Bay sideline, lashing out and trashing team equipment, he looks more like a toddler than a 44-year-old multimillionaire. It’s a terrible example from someone with his platform and with so many young fans watching.

And let’s not act like there isn’t a double standard here. Many other players have been penalized and fined for taunting on lesser offenses than this. If the NFL is going to have stupid taunting penalties the least they could do is be consistent in calling them. What more does Brady need to do to be held accountable?

Whatever the case, the Saints left Tampa Bay with a lot to be happy about. They frustrated Brady and his vaunted offense at every turn and now they’ve swept him twice in two years — something that never happened during his decades in the AFC East. Maybe Brady can learn to lose more gracefully in more matchups with New Orleans.

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Report: Eagles to interview Saints DC Dennis Allen for head-coaching job

The Saints could be in danger of losing their defensive coordinator, Dennis Allen, this offseason.

The New Orleans Saints had one of the best defenses in the NFL this season, ranking fifth in points and yards allowed. Unfortunately, they could be in danger of the guy who led that side of the ball this past season.

According to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the Eagles will interview Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen for their head-coaching vacancy on Wednesday as Philadelphia searches for its replacement for Doug Pederson.

Allen has been the Saints’ defensive coordinator since 2015 and the team has ranked inside the top 15 in points allowed in each of the last four years. Losing Allen would be a huge blow to the Saints, who got stellar play from the defense this season.

Allen, 48, has previous head-coaching experience. He was the head coach of the Raiders from 2012-2014 but only went 8-28 during that three-year span.

Eagles slated to interview Saints DC Dennis Allen for head coaching job on Wednesday

Eagles slated to interview Saints DC Dennis Allen on Wednesday

Jeffrey Lurie made it clear that the Eagles wouldn’t rush to hire a head coach and another name has been added to the list of candidates.

Rush off a stint with one of the NFL’s fiercest defenses, Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen will interview on Wednesday.

Through the first 12 games of the 2020 regular season, Allen has his defensive unit at or near the top of the NFL in most defensive statistics. The Saints were ranked No. 1 in total defense (288.5 yards per game), No. 2 in rush defense (76.1), No. 4 in pass defense (212.8), and No. 5 in scoring defense (20.1 points per game) through the first 12 weeks.

Per Nola.com, Saints’ linebacker Demario Davis called Allen one of the smartest coaches he’s ever worked with.

Now Allen has the chance to impress Jeffrey Lurie.

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The NFL’s best defensive play-callers

Great players make great defenses happen, but great coaching is just as important. Here are the NFL’s best defensive minds in 2020.

When you look at the NFL’s best defenses in 2020 — the ones that are able to stay consistently efficient-to-dominant in a league that sets up success in the passing game above all — there are mandatory characteristics that transcend coordinator and scheme. Especially in an era in which sub-packages and hybrid defenders are the norm as opposed to the outlier, modern defenses must have these three things:

  1. Front multiplicity and gap confusion. Great defenses rarely show the same fronts twice in a row from play to play. You may see a base front on one play, and then, some sort of wicked NASCAR or amoeba front on the next. Then, variants of those concepts as drives continue. Those different looks challenge offensive protection calls, especially when offenses are running packages with three or more receivers on 65% of their plays. Then, when you create gap confusion with different line stunts and multi-level blitzes, you wind up with some very uncomfortable quarterbacks and fractured passing games. How many defensive linemen have their hands down, and how many are standing up? Where are they attacking based on where they start?
  2. Muddied looks at the linebacker level. When your defense has one or more moneybacks or monsterbacks — players who can affect offenses everywhere from the line of scrimmage to the deep third — you have an extreme tactical advantage you can use in all kinds of different ways. Move beyond the traditional stay-at-home linebacker, as modern defenses have, and you are able to present clear pre-snap looks to a quarterback and his receivers, and then go about doing radically different things after the snap. Throw linebacker pressure from the A-gaps and then drop into coverage from there, and even Russell Wilson will lose his place.
  3. Coverage switches in the secondary. It is the job of every modern defensive coordinator and secondary coach to plant schematic and spacing inabilities in the mind of the opposing quarterback. This is done in the secondary through the refusal to run coverage based on what is shown pre-snap. What might look like a Cover-0 jailbreak blitz pre-snap turns into 2-Man. What might look like a man defense indicator based on reaction to offensive motion becomes zone. That single-high safety look you see before you take the ball from the center is actually Cover-2 or Quarters, and as the quarterback, you now have to re-focus — especially if you’re running heavy play-action, you turn your back to the defense at your second step, and you turn back around at your fourth or fifth step to see something entirely different than what you expected.

You’ll see different iterations of these concepts among the NFL’s best defensive play-callers in 2020, but you won’t see the absence of any of them. Here, with all that said, are the league’s best defensive minds this season, and the staple ideas that make those defenses great.

6 Saints coaches, staffers who should get buzz in the NFL’s next hiring cycle

The Saints could lose important members of the organization when the 2021 NFL hiring cycle kicks off, from Terry Fontenot to Dennis Allen.

Could this be the year the New Orleans Saints start to lose personnel to rival teams? With coaching staffs and front offices around the league already preparing for turnover in the offseason, it seems likely. Somehow half a dozen teams interviewed Saints assistants last year without hiring any of them away. Expect that to change as new opportunities present themselves to the people working behind the scenes in New Orleans that are hungry for more high-profile jobs in the NFL.

Others, like offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael Jr., haven’t shown as keen an interest; his interview for the Packers job last offseason was just the third time he’s seriously considered an opportunity with another team in 12 years with the Saints, having interviewed for head coaching positions with the Raiders and Bears in 2012 and 2013, respectively. It’s possible he puts his name out there again in 2021, but there appear to be other, more ambitious candidates in New Orleans. Here are six names we’ll be watching closely:

Ex-Saints linebackers coach Mike Nolan struggling to install Cowboys defense

Mike Nolan was a stellar assistant coach for the New Orleans Saints linebackers, but he hasn’t found his footing with the Dallas Cowboys.

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When the Dallas Cowboys hired Mike McCarthy as their head coach earlier this year, he was quick to handpick his new defensive coordinator: Mike Nolan, the New Orleans Saints linebackers coach the last three years. Nolan and McCarthy worked together with the San Francisco 49ers back in 2005, so they clearly had a history together, and expected swift results in Dallas.

But the early returns have been disappointing. Nolan has preached the need for schematic variety ever since he took the job, stressing the importance of finding a balance between man and zone coverage. So far, his Cowboys defense hasn’t executed anything very well. Our colleague Doug Farrar broke it down over at Touchdown Wire, writing:

Variety has not been the spice of the Cowboys’ life through their first four games. At the same time Dallas’ offense is roasting enemy defenses at a record clip, Nolan’s squad is getting equally bombed. Dallas ranks second in the NFL, tied with the Browns behind the Falcons, with 12 touchdown passes allowed, and just one interception for their trouble. That opposing QBR allowed has shot up to 115.37 (only the Falcons are worse), and the defense has plummeted to 24th in DVOA.

It’s quite a tumble from Nolan’s impressive streak with the Saints. He helped coach up Demario Davis into a first-team All-Pro late in his career; before joining the Saints, Davis had been a so-so starter for the New York Jets and Cleveland Browns. Nolan also played a part in landing draft picks like Alex Anzalone and Kaden Elliss, whom he coached up into starting-quality pros. Manti Te’o was another project Nolan brought over from his Chargers tenure, and he ended up making some critical plays for the Saints.

Maybe the Cowboys can turn things around with more experience. Defenses are underperforming around the NFL, having lost months of summer practices and the entire preseason to the COVID-19 pandemic, and improvement should be expected.

On the other hand, some coaches are best suited to work as assistants, and that could be the case for Nolan. He certainly left a positive mark on the Saints and was an important assistant to defensive coordinator Dennis Allen.

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NFL power rankings, Week 3: 1-win Saints keep slipping down the board

The New Orleans Saints have an uninspiring 1-2 record after Week 3, prompting Touchdown Wire to drop them in the updated NFL power rankings.

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The hits keep coming and they just keep coming, and the New Orleans Saints are a bad day against the always-frisky Matthew Stafford and his Detroit Lions away from a 1-3 start to the 2020 season. That’s, well, far beneath just about everyone’s expectations.

It’s been rough. Drew Brees has drawn his share of the blame for limiting what the offense is capable of, but the Saints defense undid all of the good will they built up in training camp by falling flat on their faces right out of the gate.

That’s who Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar took aim at in his Week 3 NFL power rankings, blasting Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen for wasting a strong performance from Alvin Kamara and mistake-free quarterbacking from Brees. After dropping the Saints down to No. 12 a week ago, Farrar now ranks them at No. 15 with their loss to the Green Bay Packers:

Okay, it’s time to stop picking on Drew Brees. Let’s talk about the Saints’ defense. Through their first three games, Dennis Allen’s squad has allowed eight touchdown passes to just two interceptions, 6.7 yards per attempt, 42 first downs, and a whole lot of explosive plays. No, it doesn’t help when Brees can’t match those explosive plays allowed with as many of his own anymore, but New Orleans’ offense wasn’t the problem in the team’s 37-31 Sunday night loss to the Packers — Brees was more than efficient enough, and Alvin Kamara ran over everybody.

Here’s hoping they figure things out. The Saints are notorious slow starters under Sean Payton, often sleepwalking through the opening weeks in September before rallying during October. They’re poised to do just that with very winnable games against the Lions and Los Angeles Chargers standing between them and a Week 6 bye.

If they can add much-needed reinforcements like pass rusher Marcus Davenport and wide receiver Michael Thomas, this show could get turned around in a hurry.

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