Chargers request to interview four more candidates for head coach opening

The Chargers are now up to seven interviews.

The Chargers are wasting no time in attempt to fill the head coach void left by Anthony Lynn.

We knew of three candidates that Los Angeles requested to interview, but not long after that, the team requested to interview with four more candidates.

  1. Joe Brady, Panthers offensive coordinator
  2. Eric Bieniemy, Chiefs offensive coordinator
  3. Jason Garrett, Cowboys offensive coordinator
  4. Brian Daboll, Bills offensive coordinator

That brings the total to seven candidates that L.A. is expected to interview. With the Bolts slated to interview 10-12 coaches, we can anticipate a few more coming.

NFL informs teams of protocols for interviewing coaching, GM candidates during offseason

The COVID-19 pandemic will provide hurdles for teams who need to fill job vacancies in 2021 and the league has set up protocols to help.

The process of interviewing general manager and coaching candidates will be different with the NFL as the coronavirus pandemic is still a major issue for the United States. The nation is currently at an estimated 14.6 million cases with alarming numbers coming in by the day. With that being the case, the NFL released their guidelines for teams like the Jags who will be searching for new personnel come 2021.

The most important announcement to come from the NFL’s memo is that interviews for coaches and general managers will be done virtually for teams participating in the playoffs. However, once the candidate’s team is out of the playoffs they can have an interview in-person. Candidates who aren’t currently employed by the NFL will also have to interview virtually until the regular season concludes.

For those who will have in-person interviews, the interviewing team and the candidate will be required to wear masks and stay six feet apart. The league has also recommended that the in-person interviews be as short as possible, with meetings of 30-minute intervals being the preference over those that are two to three hours.

Another key takeaway is that in-person meetings that occur outside of a team’s city will be subject to COVID-19 testing demands, while NFL personnel members must abide by local, state, and federal regulations that concern quarantining, testing, etc.

As many are aware, the Jags will be looking to fill their general manager vacancy in 2021 (and probably for their coaching staff, too) as Dave Caldwell was fired Week 12. The protocols above should help them (and others) be productive in their searches, while also keeping everyone safe and eliminating the spread of COVID-19.

Notre Dame football: Clark Lea rumor season begins after Vanderbilt fires coach

Notre Dame defensive coordinator will be a hot name in coaching searches this off-season and the job at his alma mater became open Sunday.

Well, you can officially start “Clark Lea Watch 2020” is it came a few weeks earlier than we even expected it to officially come this football season.

Vanderbilt, fresh off another awful showing on Saturday, losing to Missouri 41-0 and falling to 0-8, fired head coach Derek Mason on Sunday.

What does that happen to do with anything in regards to Notre Dame defensive coordinator Clark Lea, you ask?

Lea is going to be one of the hottest coaching candidates for perhaps a Power Five job at a middle to lower term program traditionally this off-season.

Lea is also a graduate of Vanderbilt where he was a fullback on the football team from 2002-2004.

Naturally, the easy link to draw is that Lea would be interested in being the coach to save his alma mater from the depths of football hell they’re currently in.

Must See:  40 pictures from Notre Dame’s 31-17 win at North Carolina

However, some basic logic tells you it’s hard to imagine this would be a two-foot putt for Lea to take if he were to be eventually offered the Vanderbilt opening.

One key reason why is not only the disaster that Vanderbilt football currently is but simply being in the SEC and the problems that bring.

That’s not to say it can’t be done as James Franklin had success at Vanderbilt before taking the Penn State job but it’d be an incredible undertaking at this point with cards stacked against you in terms of recruiting in your own conference.

Having gone there I’m certain Lea is aware of such matters.

I’ve said for a while that if Lea wants to be a head coach then he’s going to get that opportunity before much longer.

Now what can Notre Dame do to try and sway his decision?

You can back up the Brinks truck and offer an incredible pay raise but if his dream is to be a head coach, you’re not going to change that, not that Brian Kelly and Notre Dame’s staff would want to.

The link between Lea and Vanderbilt makes plenty of sense but the fit for Lea seems far-fetched for someone taking on their first potential head coaching job right now.

I fully expect Lea to be offered a head job this off-season but I have trouble thinking of some of the potential openings, that he’ll see this one as a destination job, even if he did go to college there.

Report: Joneses have been in contact with Urban Meyer recently

The Dallas Cowboys are going to ride out the season with their current cadre of calamitous coaches; that much was made clear following their unenthusiastic, malaise-ridden defeat at the hands of the Chicago Bears on Thursday Night Football. After a …

The Dallas Cowboys are going to ride out the season with their current cadre of calamitous coaches; that much was made clear following their unenthusiastic, malaise-ridden defeat at the hands of the Chicago Bears on Thursday Night Football. After a second consecutive, nationally-televised disaster, rabble rousers have reached a deafening tone, begging owner Jerry Jones to make a move that would likely be spinning wheels, but would at least offer a different voice of leadership as it appears clear to most observers the club has stopped responding to the words from head coach Jason Garrett.

Half of the issue is that no one on the coaching staff seems a right fit, at least from the outside looking in, to take over the reigns. Many feel even with no worthy successor, change for changes sake while the team still has the inside track on a playoff berth would be worth it. There doesn’t seem to be anything to lose outside of the ownership groups very personal relationship with Garrett. It seems that level loyalty means more to the Jones family than the outcome of the season. It makes sense, as Garrett seems to be considered family to Jerry and his son Stephen. The pending dismissal everyone sees coming is likely to take place in person, and the immediacy of having his successor seems something they aren’t willing to do.

That changes after the Cowboys are all at home, after Garrett has a chance to say goodbye to the men he’s led for almost a full decade. The Jones’ want to give him that farewell opportunity before he looks for new work in the league. Garrett will land somewhere, eventually, and the Cowboys will replace him, likely with a big name. One such candidate has been revealed, according to Jane Slater of the NFL Network. The club has already been in contact with former Ohio State head coach and national champion Urban Meyer.

Meyer ranked 2nd in this week’s Garrett Replacement Coach Power Rankings, with current Oklahoma Sooners coach Lincoln Riley ranking 4th. Tony Elliott was not on the radar previously, but will be added to next week’s rankings.

Meyer took over for in Columbus in 2012 and went 54-4 with four bowl victories in six seasons, including the 2014 national championship earned in the Sugar Bowl. He was the coach who recruited Ezekiel Elliott to the Buckeyes and saw his and several other future NFL top picks and standouts careers flourish. He has spent his entire career in the collegiate ranks, but he has expanded his resume by spending the last season off the sidelines and in the office as Ohio State’s assistant athletic director this season.

This past October, Meyer voiced his interest in becoming the next head coach of the Cowboys if the opportunity presented itself, following being asked if Riley would leave the great gig with the Sooners for such a shot.

“That’s New York Yankees, that’s the Dallas Cowboys,” Meyer said. “That’s the one. Great city. They got Dak Prescott, Zeke Elliott. You got a loaded team. And I can’t speak for him obviously, I hate to even speculate because I don’t know him, that’s really not fair, but to me, that’s the one job in professional football that you say, ‘I got to go do that.’”

The follow-up question of his interest was answered succinctly.

“Sure,” Meyer said. “Absolutely. Absolutely. That one? Yes.”

Etiquette be damned, coaches publicly speaking on coaching opportunities when the job isn’t vacant is frowned upon, Meyer took his shot and it appears the Cowboys’ front office is intrigued by the possibility.

[vertical-gallery id=635660][lawrence-newsletter]