Titans LBs coach explains why Cedric Gray can handle the green dot

Titans LBs coach Frank Bush recently touched on the possibility of rookie Cedric Gray wearing the green dot.

Following the departure of linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair in free agency, the Tennessee Titans are searching for the next player to wear the green dot, with fourth-round pick and linebacker Cedric Gray being one of the options, assuming he can grab a starting role.

During rookie minicamp this weekend, linebackers coach Frank Bush explained why Gray is capable of taking on the job in his first season.

“I’ve got friends on the staff (in North Carolina) watch this kid over the years just get better and better and better,” he said, per ESPN’s Turron Davenport. “He’s shown leadership, he’s shown the ability to fix his mistakes; he self corrects. He talks football — there’s some football knowledge in there. He understands schemes and whatnot, so you know you’re dealing with a set of traits that are going to help him go forward.”

Gray is already getting a look as the play-caller after the Titans gave him the responsibility during rookie minicamp on Friday. The North Carolina product touched on the subject after practice.

“It was good,” Gray said, according to Jim Wyatt. “That’s something in the job that I want to be able to have. So being able to go out there and do that for the first time today, it was (great).”

First things first, Gray will have to compete for the starting job alongside Kenneth Murray, who is not expected to wear the green dot. Jack Gibbens and Otis Reese figure to be his stiffest competition for the role.

If Gray doesn’t get the green dot for whatever reason, general manager Ran Carthon has said veteran safety Amani Hooker has offered to take it.

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New Titans LBs coach Frank Bush: 3 things to know

Three things to know about new Titans LBs coach Frank Bush.

One of two reported additions to the Tennessee Titans’ defensive coaching staff on Friday, Tennessee is hiring ex-Atlanta Falcons linebackers coach Frank Bush to the same role.

Bush has an extensive coaching background that dates all the way back to 2003. He’s held the title of linebackers coach a whopping eight times, with his latest stop being with the Falcons for three seasons.

Bush is already very familiar with the franchise he’s joining, as he’s had multiple stints with the Oilers/Titans.

We go over that and more as we take a look at three things to know about the Titans’ new (kind of) linebackers coach.

Titans hire two former Falcons defensive coaches, per report

Two former Falcons defensive coaches have been hired by the Tennessee Titans

The Atlanta Falcons have hired over a dozen assistants to Raheem Morris’ coaching staff, but a few coaches were not retained. Defensive backs coach Steven Jackson and linebackers coach Frank Bush have both been hired by the Tennessee Titans, ESPN’s Turron Davenport reported on Friday afternoon.

Bush joined the team in 2021 as a member of former Falcons head coach Arthur Smith‘s staff. Jackson joined the staff in 2023.

The Falcons added Ike Hilliard as their wide receivers coach and have reportedly hired former Chargers assistant Kevin Kroger as their tight ends coach. Check out Atlanta’s updated 2024 coaching staff HERE!

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Titans hire Frank Bush, Steven Jackson to defensive staff

The Titans have reportedly added two coaches to their defensive staff who were both players and coaches with the franchise before.

The Tennessee Titans have reportedly made a pair of additions to the defensive staff of head coach Brian Callahan and defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson.

According to ESPN’s Turron Davenport, the Titans are hiring former Atlanta Falcons defensive backs coach Steven Jackson and linebackers coach Frank Bush to the same roles.

Both coaches have actually had multiple stints with the franchise already, both as a player and coach.

Bush was a fifth-round pick of the Oilers in 1985 and spent two years as a linebacker with the team. He was then a linebackers coach with the Oilers (1985-86) and had the same role with the Titans (2011-12).

Jackson was a third-round pick of the Oilers in 1991 and played defensive back, both in Houston and Tennessee, until 1999. He also served as defensive backs coach for the Titans (2016-17).

Both coaches also have connections with Callahan and/or Wilson. Jackson and Bush were on the New York Jets’ staff with Wilson, and Jackson was on staff with Cincinnati when Callahan was there.

With these additions, the Titans have now made a trio of hires on each side of the ball. Wilson (DC), Bush (LB) and Jackson (DB) on defense and Nick Holz (OC), Bill Callahan (OL) and Tyke Tolbert (WRs) on offense.

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Former Jets interim DC Frank Bush joins Falcons staff

After not being retained by Robert Saleh, Frank Bush will join the Atlanta Falcons coaching staff as the team’s linebackers coach.

Despite coaching with Robert Saleh in Houston, Frank Bush will not be retained by New York’s new head coach.

Instead, Bush will head to Atlanta, where he will serve as Arthur Smith’s linebackers coach. Bush was an assistant head coach and inside linebackers coach under Adam Gase. He was promoted to interim defensive coordinator following Gregg Williams’ in-season removal.

Under Bush’s direction, the Jets defense helped guide Gang Green to two victories in the team’s final four games.

In Atlanta, Bush will replace Jeff Ulbrich, who was officially named New York’s defensive coordinator on Thursday. Bush, who has 30-years of coaching experience, will reunite with Smith, as the two were on staff together in Tennesee from 2011-12.

The Jets have yet to announce who will replace Bush as the team’s inside linebackers coach, as Saleh has only hired five defensive assistants, in addition to Ulbrich.

Falcons name four assistants to coaching staff

Atlanta hired Charles London as quarterbacks coach and Frank Bush as linebackers coach. Dwayne Ledford was brought on as the offensive line coach and the team will retain Danny Breyer as an offensive assistant.

The new Atlanta Falcons coaching staff is coming right together. The team named three coordinators — Dean Pees, Dave Ragone and Marquice Williams — on Thursday. On Friday, four more assistant coaches came aboard Arthur Smith’s staff.

Atlanta hired Charles London as quarterbacks coach and Frank Bush as linebackers coach. Dwayne Ledford was brought on as the offensive line coach and the team will retain Danny Breyer as an offensive assistant.

Bush served as the Jets defensive coordinator for the final four games of 2020 after the team fired Greg Williams.  His 30-year track record as a coach will bring some much-needed experience to this Falcons staff.

London was the running backs coach for the Chicago Bears for the past three years. Atlanta already poached passing game coordinator Dave Ragone from Chicago on Thursday. London also coached for the Houston Texans and prior to that, at Penn State.

Ledford has served as the offensive coordinator at Louisville since 2018. He’s played but never coached in the NFL as an offensive lineman for the 49ers, Jaguars, Panthers and Browns.

Breyer, a former analytics assistant for the Buccaneers, joined the Falcons staff as an offensive assistant last season. He will be retained in 2021.

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Defensive heroics highlight 4 takeaways in Jets’ win over Cleveland

One more and it’s a winning streak.

For the second-consecutive week, the New York Jets vaulted out to an early lead and held on for dear life in the waning moments to garner a victory.

Courtesy of two takeaways and one last turnover on downs, Gang Green hurt the Cleveland Browns’ hope of clinching their first playoff berth since 2002 with a 23-16 victory at MetLife Stadium.

Here are four takeaways from the Jets’ triumph in their 2020 home finale.

Sergio Castillo, Frank Gore among Jets’ Studs & Duds in Week 14 loss to Seahawks

Jets Wire takes a look at the Jets studs and duds from the team’s 40-3 loss against the Seahawks on Sunday.

After the Jets came so close to securing their first win of the season last week, they were delivered a dose of reality in an embarrassing 40-3 defeat at the hands of the Seahawks this weekend.

The Jets struck first, but never struck again. The anemic offense was never jumpstarted and the team’s porous defense couldn’t stop a nose bleed. All in all, it was an atypical, uninspiring performance for Adam Gase’s team, which inched increasingly closer to 0-16 with a 37-point defeat.

Let’s take a look at New York’s best and (mostly) worst from the team’s latest loss.

Report: Frank Bush will be interim DC after Jets fire Gregg Williams

The Jets will name assistant head coach and inside linebackers coach Frank Bush as the interim defensive coordinator.

Shortly after firing defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, the Jets have found his replacement.

According to The Athletic’s Connor Hughes, the Jets will name assistant head coach and inside linebackers coach Frank Bush interim defensive coordinator with four games to go.

Bush was a defensive coordinator one other time in his 34-year coaching career. That came with the Houston Texans between 2009 and 2010. However, he was fired after two seasons, as Houston’s defense finished third-to-last in the NFL in total defense following the 2010 season.

Bush was also on Adam Gase’s staff in Miami as the assistant head coach and inside linebackers coach.

This all comes after Williams was fired for sending an all-out blitz in the closing moments of the Jets’ game against the Raiders on Sunday, leading to New York’s 12th loss of the season.

Jets personnel, specifically Marcus Maye, were highly critical of their former defensive coordinator for not putting them in a better situation to succeed. The Jets had the game won, but Williams took a big gamble by sending pressure.

We’ll see if Bush can make a difference as a defensive coordinator now with the season coming to a close in just a few weeks.

More Jets, including Jamison Crowder & Le’Veon, react to Jacob Blake shooting

Jamison Crowder, Bradley McDougald and assistant HC Frank Bush discussed the Jacob Blake’ shooting after practice on Wednesday.

One day after Marcus Maye offered his thoughts on the shooting of Jacob Blake, more Jets players and coaches followed suit and addressed the incident after practice on Wednesday.

Wide receiver Jamison Crowder and safety Bradley McDougald both discussed the team’s reaction to Blake’s shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin over the weekend. On Sunday, Blake, 29 was shot multiple times in the back by police in front of his children. He survived the shooting but is reportedly paralyzed from the waist down.

“You know, it was definitely an unfortunate event. I’ve seen it on social media like everybody else,” McDougald said. “And then we get to work yesterday and Adam Gase gives us an opportunity to talk about it as a team, but I feel like the real conversation was when we separated into individual rooms as far as defensive backs and quarterbacks and everybody’s position. Everybody had the opportunity to share their two cents and speak on it. Like I said, it was unfortunate, it was very unfortunate. My heart goes out to the family.”

McDougald went on to say that he and his teammates were “sick and tired of being sick and tired,” calling for actual change as opposed to recycled conversations about potential reform.

“It seems like all we can do right now is just talk and formulate ideas and guys are getting tired of talking,” he said. “Guys are getting tired of forming these ideas. Whatever solution we’re supposed to come up with as a community, or as these athletes with these platforms, but guys are just getting sick and tired of being sick and tired. Yesterday was the first time I’ve seen guys really as affected as they were. Some guys shed tears and it’s unfortunate.”

The shooting hit Crowder especially hard, as he felt he could relate to the position Blake found himself in before being shot. As a student at Duke, Crowder was pulled over multiple times by police and feared that he would be profiled.

“It’s definitely tough, man,” Crowder said. “Like I said, it’s not necessarily just seeing that, but like I said, it’s a reminder of me and my situation that I’ve been in, you know what I’m saying?” Crowder said. “I was in college, trying to be a student-athlete, doing the right things and to be stereotyped and to be targeted because of the car I was driving, it’s definitely hurtful.”

Two Jets running backs joined the conversation on Twitter Thursday. Le’Veon Bell wrote, “we’ve been protecting the shield…it’s time for the shield to protect us.” Rookie La’Mical Perine, meanwhile, tweeted, “Without a Helmet I’m A Target …”

Assistant head coach and linebackers coach Frank Bush, one of seven black coaches on New York’s coaching staff, also offered his thoughts on the shooting Wednesday. The Jets are in the “infant stages” of formulating their action plan for social justice, but Bush is pleased with how the organization has approached the situation.

“When you look at racism and justice and whatnot, it’s pervasive,” Bush said. “I mean there’s no particular kind of place we can go to kind of end it. There’s no spot to go on the map or any country to say, ‘Oh, go here and we can fix it here.’ It’s pervasive, it’s like trying to plug a bunch of holes. Fortunately, I’m in a situation where ownership gets it. We have team talks about it all the time. The head coach gets it, so they’ve been out in front of it in the sense of having team meetings and trying to get players to come up with an action plan.”

It remains to be seen whether or not kneeling during the national anthem will be part of New York’s social justice action plan. Maye said on Tuesday that “a few guys have certain plans,” and Gase has stated that he would support his players if they kneeled during the anthem. Regardless, it is clear that the Jets are not going to sit on the sideline and idly watch as police brutality and racial and social injustices run rampant in America.

They have had enough of doing that.

“It’s just definitely something that I don’t want — and a lot of my brothers in the locker room — swept under the rug,” McDougald said. “This is not just a one-day topic or when it happens, we need to talk about it. This is something real in our community that we’re dealing with. And I’m going to deal with it for the rest of my life and my kids are going to deal with it. When we put street clothes on, when we walk out these doors, it’s real.”