VFL Jerod Mayo to interview with Eagles

Former UT linebacker Jerod Mayo to interview for Eagles’ head coaching job.

A former University of Tennessee football player has emerged as a candidate for a head coaching job in the NFL.

Jerod Mayo, a standout player for the Volunteers and the NFL’s New England Patriots, will interview for Philadelphia’s head coaching vacancy, which was created when Doug Pederson was fired Monday.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapaport reported the news.

Mayo was the NFL’s Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2008. He has spent the last two seasons as New England’s inside linebackers coach.

Tennessee Volunteers defensive coordinator John Chavis talks to linebacker Jerod Mayo (7) at the SEC Championship against the LSU Tigers at the Georgia Dome. The Tigers defeated the Volunteers 21-14. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Marvin Gentry-USA TODAY Sports

With the Volunteers, Mayo was an All-Southeastern Conference standout in 2007. He also made the Pro Bowl in 2010 and 2012 while playing for the Patriots.

[vertical-gallery id=33952]

Eagles to interview Patriots LB coach Jerod Mayo for head coaching job on Friday

Eagles to interview Patriots LB coach Jerod Mayo for head coaching job on Friday

The Philadelphia Eagles are set to interview former All-Pro linebacker Jerod Mayo for the teams’ vacant head coaching position on Friday per Jeff McLane.

One of the top young coaches in the game, Mayo spent eight years with the Patriots as a player and the past two seasons as an inside linebackers coach with the team.

With Mayo on the staff, the Patriots defense has allowed the fewest points per game in the NFL over the past two seasons (18.1), while opposing quarterbacks had just a 75.5 passer rating against the Patriots defense over the past two seasons, the lowest in the league.

The Eagles have already interviewed Joe Brady, Robert Saleh and will interview Titans offensive coordinator Arthur Smith on Thursday.

[listicle id=645621]

[lawrence-related id=645845,645840,645757,645835,645828]

Patriots’ ILB coach Jerod Mayo expected to Interview for Eagles’ head coaching job

Patriots’ ILB coach Jerod Mayo expected to Interview for Eagles’ head coaching job

Another interesting name has surfaced in the Eagles head coaching search, as Ian Rapoport is reporting that Patriots inside linebackers coach, Jerod Mayo, is expected to land an interview with Philadelphia.

Mayo, 34, played for Bill Belichick in New England and the former middle linebacker is one of the young up and coming candidates in the coaching ranks.

[listicle id=645621]

[lawrence-related id=645753,645743,645744,645738]

Report: Eagles to interview Patriots coaching assistant Jerod Mayo for head coaching vacancy

This will be Mayo’s first head coaching interview.

New England Patriots linebackers coach Jerod Mayo will interview with the Philadelphia Eagles for the head coaching vacancy this week, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. This will be Mayo’s first head coaching interview.

Mayo, nominally, serves as the inside linebacker coach, but it seems his responsibilities are fairly expansive. How expansive? Bill Belichick won’t clarify.

New England has not had a defensive coordinator since Matt Patricia left in 2017. Brian Flores acted as the de-facto defensive coordinator before taking the Dolphins hech coaching job. And now, Steve Belichick, currently the outside linebackers coach, is calling plays for the defense. Mayo seems to be helping Steve in his ascent up the coaching staff.

Mayo played linebacker for the Patriots from 2008, when he was the 10th overall pick, to 2015. He moved to a career in media for a brief period before returning to the Patriots linebackers coach, a position he’s held since 2019.

“Coach Mayo, man, you see I’m smiling. It’s just been fun,” rookie linebacker Josh Uche said this season. “It’s been great and just having a role model, somebody that I can go back and watch their film and actually try to emulate what they did. Just having someone that can coach you from a player’s perspective has just been very insightful. I’ve been able to learn a lot.”

[vertical-gallery id=101046]

Patriots’ Adrian Phillips explains why he wouldn’t call himself a linebacker

“I wouldn’t say it’s necessarily a linebacker.”

Adrian Phillips is listed on the New England Patriots’ depth chart as a safety, but that hardly looks like the position he plays. He’s lined up with the team’s linebackers in the front-seven, which is likely contributing to the fact that his leading the team in tackles. Phillips was asked whether he’s accustomed to playing so much linebacker during a call with reporters Wednesday.

“I wouldn’t say it’s necessarily a linebacker,” Phillips said. “If you want to put generics on it, I guess it’s a linebacker. But when you get in-depth with it, it’s more of just playing close to the line, getting more into the action. For the past few years, I’ve been doing this. We’ll switch it up week to week and the game plan might change, but it’s nothing I’m not used to. I did it a lot in college actually. In the league — my first 3 or 4 years — I was in the back end, but I made my way up to the action, to the line.”

It’s not a role that’s totally novel in New England’s defense. Safety Patrick Chung was often near the line of scrimmage to help out with run support while working in coverage against tight ends and defensive backs.

New England has faced a handful of pass-heavy teams, which means the Patriots are countering by putting more defensive backs on the field. That means players like Phillips, admittedly on the small side to be in a spot that typically involves fighting off blocks from offensive linemen, gets on the field more often in that linebacker-like role. Because of his versatility, he has played 70% of defensive snaps and 36% of special teams snaps.

“I like to say Adrian is a linebacker at heart,” linebackers coach Jerod Mayo said on Sept. 16. “He just stopped growing a little early, a little sooner than the rest of us. … He’s just a hard-nosed player. He loves to run and tackle. You guys got a chance to see that on the field this past Sunday. He just loves to tackle and I can definitely appreciate that.”

[vertical-gallery id=96266]

Two VFLs among first-timers on Hall of Fame ballot

Peyton Manning and Jerod Mayo appear on Pro Football Hall of Fame ballot. Both in their first year of eligibility

CANTON — A pair of former University of Tennessee football stars are first-time candidates for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Quarterback Peyton Manning and linebacker Jerod Mayo were on the ballot that was released Wednesday.

Manning and Mayo were among 14 players in their first year of eligibility.

Manning, who won Super Bowl championships with the Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos, led the Vols to the 1997 Southeastern Conference title.

In the NFL, Manning was a five-time Most Valuable Player, a 14-time Pro Bowler, seven-time First-Team All-Pro, a three-time Second-Team All-Pro, a Super Bowl MVP and a two-time Offensive Player of the Year.

Manning was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1998 NFL draft by the Colts. He retired from the NFL as one of the league’s most decorated players.

Mayo, a linebacker and team captain during his playing days with the New England Patriots, was a Super Bowl champion (XLIX), a two-time Pro Bowler and a First-Team All-Pro in 2010.

He was a First-Team All-SEC standout in 2007 and the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2008.

Mayo was a first-round pick by the Patriots in 2008, going with the No. 10 overall selection.

Two VFLs among first-timers on Hall of Fame ballot

Peyton Manning and Jerod Mayo appear on Pro Football Hall of Fame ballot. Both in their first year of eligibility

CANTON — A pair of former University of Tennessee football stars are first-time candidates for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Quarterback Peyton Manning and linebacker Jerod Mayo were on the ballot that was released Wednesday.

Manning and Mayo were among 14 players in their first year of eligibility.

Manning, who won Super Bowl championships with the Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos, led the Vols to the 1997 Southeastern Conference title.

In the NFL, Manning was a five-time Most Valuable Player, a 14-time Pro Bowler, seven-time First-Team All-Pro, a three-time Second-Team All-Pro, a Super Bowl MVP and a two-time Offensive Player of the Year.

Manning was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1998 NFL draft by the Colts. He retired from the NFL as one of the league’s most decorated players.

Mayo, a linebacker and team captain during his playing days with the New England Patriots, was a Super Bowl champion (XLIX), a two-time Pro Bowler and a First-Team All-Pro in 2010.

He was a First-Team All-SEC standout in 2007 and the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2008.

Mayo was a first-round pick by the Patriots in 2008, going with the No. 10 overall selection.

Jerod Mayo delivers funny compliment about safety Adrian Phillips

It seems Adrian Phillips is perfect for the Patriots’ system.

Adrian Phillips isn’t a typical safety, even if the New England Patriots have made a habit of identifying players with a similar skill set. Patrick Chung and Phillips have a similar brand of play, but they are uniquely talented individuals who can handle a great number of responsibilities.

When New England added Phillips this offseason, he didn’t spend his time learning the playbook with the safeties alone. He worked with linebackers, too. And judging from his role in Week 1, that work proved essential. Phillips spent most of his time in the box. Though he spent a great deal of time in coverage — and even managed an interception — Phillips lined up like a linebacker before the snap.

His strong play in the box drew a funny compliment from Patriots inside linebackers coach Jerod Mayo – who said Phillips is a linebacker at heart, he just stopped growing a bit early.

“I like to say Adrian is a linebacker at heart,” Mayo said Tuesday. “He just stopped growing a little early, a little sooner than the rest of us. … He’s just a hard-nosed player. He loves to run and tackle. You guys got a chance to see that on the field this past Sunday. He just loves to tackle and I can definitely appreciate that.”

So when Phillips finished Sunday with a team-high eight tackles, Mayo probably wasn’t surprised. He has a knack for coverage (with the interception) and for physical play (with those crucial tackles). The interception was an obvious game-changing highlight, but coach Bill Belichick pointed out Phillips’ all-around excellence on Sunday.

“He’s a smart player, he’s tough, he’s physical, he runs well and he tackles well and plays really within the defense, plays a smart game,” Belichick said on a video conference call on Tuesday. “Glad we have him and he’s working well with our other linemen, linebackers and specifically defensive backs, which is where he works the most. But, when he’s around the line of scrimmage, he has to have a good feel for what those other guys are doing, too. He’s shown the ability to play near the line and not near the line, so it just kind of depends on what they’re in and what we’re trying to do.”

Phillips’ versatility seems to be coming in handy already for the Patriots in 2020. With New England’s defense and an ever-changing game plan, he could see his snaps go up or down in any given week. But to start the season, he played 43 snaps (69%), fifth-most among defensive backs.

[vertical-gallery id=94685]

Bill Belichick explains what goes into position changes for assistant coaches

This is what keeps the Patriots’ coaching staff in sync with each other.

Bill Belichick has a long history of moving assistant coaches to different positions from season to season.

Former star receiver Troy Brown began his coaching career last season to help with the wide outs, and now he’s with the running backs. Cole Popovich helped out with the running backs last season and now he’s the co-offensive line coach alongside Carmen Bricillo.

These are two minor examples of coaching changes that happen yearly in the New England Patriots organization. It’s a smart move that familiarizes coaches with each position and the intricate details that each entails.

Belichick joined a Zoom call on Friday morning and explained these position changes in much further detail.

“I would say every situation is a little bit different, but also coaches – they specialize or focus on a certain position, their area of responsibility, but they’re also aware of other things, whether it’s on the other side of the ball at the complementary positions, like wide receivers and defensive backs type of thing, or whether it’s adjacent positions,” Belichick said. “So, that’s linebackers to D-line, that type of thing. I think the move isn’t maybe quite as monumental as what you think it is. It’s hard to coach one position without knowing what the guys beside you are doing, or if you’re a back, not knowing what the line is doing in front of you or not knowing what the guys across the ball are doing.”

I think there’s certainly a build-up of knowledge there, and in some cases, it brings a little bit of a different perspective than if you’ve just coached only that one spot. The opportunity to coach something else and see what’s going on around it or how those units work together or work against each other, depending on if it’s the opposite side of the ball, that can be valuable, too. So, ultimately, it’s the staff on either side of the ball or special teams meshing together and making sure the communication, the assignments and all that are consistent so the players are getting the same thing and it all fits together.”

Belichick’s method has proved useful and it’s helped guys like Brian Flores and Joe Judge land head coaching jobs.

“But specifically, each person is responsible for a certain area, but certainly the more that they can know, understand and even be able to coach other positions is valuable, too,” Belichick continued. “When we do group drills together – like putting the line and linebackers together, or the linebackers and defensive backs together, or the tight ends and tackles together, or the running backs and the line together – then the more that those coaches can know what’s going on with those adjacent or complementary positions, then the more effective they can coach and the better the drills and the information is to the players.”

This strategy of putting his coaches in the right positions and allowing them to learn every aspect of the game could be easily applicable to everyday employees. Learning every aspect of the job a person has will quickly lead to promotions and a further understanding of how things operate.

[vertical-gallery id=92334]

What to make of Steve Belichick’s new role with the Patriots

Steve Belichick will start a new job in 2020, but it’s not the promotion most were expecting.

New England Patriots coach Steve Belichick will start a new job in 2020, but it’s not the promotion most were expecting.

Bill Belichick’s eldest son spent last season shrouded in mystery. He had the position title of safeties coach, a position he’d had for four years at the time, but he seemed to be taking on more responsibility. He was wearing a headset and carrying around a play sheet. It looked as if he was calling plays, but no one in the organization would confirm it. Because there was no defensive coordinator, a gig as the play-caller would probably be a big indicator of who was taking the top leadership role in the defense. Bill Belichick kept that under wraps, however.

When this season began, Steve Belichick’s status with the team seemed like one of the biggest points of interest when the team released its media guide, their way of making any big announcements in staff changes each year. But rather than get the defensive coordinator position, Belichick moved to outside linebackers, where he’ll coach alongside inside linebackers coach Jerod Mayo.

“Every year, there’s always different responsibilities and new things that come along. I’m really excited this year to work with a different group,” Belichick said Aug. 7. “I’m obviously going to miss those guys that I coached last year. It’s not that I’m not coaching them anymore, but not spending as much time with them. I’m looking forward to seeing the game from a different level, working with some different guys on the team, and whatever role I get, I’m just going to do the best I can with it. … So whatever role I get, I’m going to do the best I can with. It’s a new group, I’ve got a lot to learn, but we’re going about it day by day just trying to get better.”

The safeties group, for years, has been a particularly experienced, with Devin McCourty, Patrick Chung and Duron Harmon. This outside linebacker group, however, is experiencing major departures, with Kyle Van Noy and Jamie Collins departing in free agency. The team will likely look to linebackers John Simon, a journeyman veteran, and Chase Winovich, a 2019 third-round pick. Rookies Anfernee Jennings and Josh Uche may take on big roles, too. The composition of the outside linebacker group is in a much more challenging place than that of the safety group when Belichick coached the unit. (It has since entered a similarly large state of flux after the Harmon trade and the Patrick Chung opt-out.)

The work with the linebackers may also bring Belichick closer to Mayo, who was clearly in constant communication during games. Mayo was also on the headsets, and though he didn’t have a play sheet, he seemed to have an influential role in defensive leadership. Perhaps because Belichick and Mayo are taking a more collaborative approach to the coordinator role, the Patriots decided to have them working together on a more immediate basis by sharing the linebackers.

But as Belichick noted, he won’t abandon the secondary altogether. He worked with both safeties and cornerbacks in 2020. It sounds like he’ll keep an eye on other position groups, particularly with his younger brother Brian Belichick running the safety group.

“As an older brother and a more veteran coach than he is, I’m doing the best I can to lead him through that safety room,” Steve Belichick said. “Having Devin (McCourty) in that group really helps and I’m sure Devin’s helping that room. I’ve spent a lot of time with Brian in the offseason and so far in training camp to try to bring him up to speed.”

Though the move from safety to outside linebacker may seem lateral — or even like a demotion — the position change is more complicated. Clearly, New England is trying to get Belichick more experience at a new position and with new players. And perhaps they’re still grooming him to take over the defensive coordinator role in the near future. For now, he’s still casting mystery over his actual day-to-day role with the team. He was asked whether he’ll be calling plays in 2020.

“Oh, we’re a long way away from games, so we’ll see how that goes,” he said.

If there’s anything we’ve come to expect from Belichick this year, it’s that he’ll probably keep attempting to confuse what it is he does, exactly.

[vertical-gallery id=92334]