Report: Giants’ Kevin Sherrer, Burton Burns not expected to return

An update on what’s to become of some members of the New York Giants’ previous coaching staff.

After the New York Giants decided to move in a new direction with head coach Brian Daboll, what will become of some of the last coaching staff?

The New York Post’s Ryan Dunleavy reports that linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer is not expected back, and running backs coach Burton Burns is expected to retire.

Adding to those two, tight ends coach Derek Dooley’s contract is expired, defensive backs coach Jerome Henderson could get a look for defensive coordinator, and New York was also apparently interested in keeping quarterbacks coach Jerry Schuplinski on board before hiring Shea Tierney.

After Patrick Graham left for Las Vegas, the Giants have now turned their attention to their defensive coordinator vacancy.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Mike Garafolo, and the New York Post’s Paul Schwartz, the Giants are also taking a look at candidates such as former Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator, Don “Wink” Martindale, former Chicago Bears defensive coordinator, Sean Desai, Tennessee Titans senior defensive assistant, Jim Schwartz, and Pittsburgh Steelers senior defensive assistant and secondary coach, Teryl Austin.

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Report: Jessie Armstead will coach Giants OLBs in Week 15

Jessie Armstead, a long-time New York Giants linebacker, will reportedly coach the team’s outside linebackers in Week 15.

The New York Giants were forced to make several coaching staff changes on the fly this week after offensive coordinator Jason Garrett tested positive for COVID-19 and outside linebackers coach/senior defensive assistant Bret Bielema took the head coaching job at Illinois.

Tight ends coach Freddie Kitchens will assume the play calling duties with Garrett out, while the Giants announced inside linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer and defensive assistant Jody Wright would split Bielema’s duties.

However, Jay Glazer reported on FOX NFL Sunday that Jessie Armstead, who currently serves as special assistant to the general manager, would descend from the front office in order to coach the outside linebackers in Week 15.

Armstead, an eighth-round pick of the Giants in the 1998 NFL Draft, spent nine of his 12 seasons in East Rutherford, earning five trips to the Pro Bowl and four All-Pro nods. He was inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor in 2010.

Glazer did not elaborate further on Armstead’s exact role or what it means for Sherrer or Wright, and also did not touch on whether or not Armstead would remain in that role over the final two weeks of the season.

Whatever the case may be, Giants fans are certain to love it. Not only was Armstead an intense and dominant linebacker during his playing days, he’s a long-time fan favorite.

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How Freddie Kitchens can play a role in the Tennessee-Georgia game

How Freddie Kitchens can play a role in the Tennessee-Georgia game.

No. 12 Tennessee (2-0, 2-0 SEC) will travel to No. 3 Georgia (2-0, 2-0 SEC) in Week 3 of a 10-game SEC-only schedule.

The Vols have a 8-game winning streak heading into the matchup, but will face its biggest challenge this season Saturday.

Mike Griffith previewed the SEC East contest on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.” Griffith covers Georgia football for DawgNation of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Topics of discussion included Jeremy Pruitt building Tennessee’s program in the last three years, Georgia’s team through two games and Bulldogs’ offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Todd Monken.

Monken is in his first season at Georgia after serving as offensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns, under then-head coach Freddie Kitchens, last season.

Tennessee-Georgia ‘a chess match’ between undefeated teams

Todd Monken’s Air Raid versus Jeremy Pruitt’s split safety coverage

Todd Monken, Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images.

Kitchens relinquished Monken’s duties of calling plays last season, causing a public discrepancy between the two.

Kitchens played quarterback at Alabama (1993-98) and was teammates with Pruitt and Vols’ offensive line coach Will Friend.

“It is interesting, Todd Monken used to work for Freddie Kitchens, who is Will Friend’s best friend at Alabama,” Griffith said. “Monken and Freddie did not get along last year, so both ended up losing their jobs. That was a very public feud between Freddie and his offensive coordinator. Monken was upset that he was not allowed to call plays.

“I can guarantee you that there were probably some calls made to Freddie Kitchens this week about Todd Monken, asking about some of his tendencies and thoughts. That’s what you do, you call your buddies and find out, I’m sure Freddie Kitchens would love to see Georgia get beat.”

Freddie Kitchens, Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports.

Kitchens is currently serving as tight ends coach for the New York Giants alongside Kevin Sherrer. Sherrer, a teammate of Pruitt, Friend and Kitchens at Alabama, served as an assistant at Tennessee the last two seasons.

The show with Griffith can be listened to here or below.

 

Could Giants use Lorenzo Carter on offense this season?

New York Giants inside linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer believes LB Lorenzo Carter could play offense in 2020 if the team gets into a bind.

New York Giants linebacker Lorenzo Carter has yet to have his breakthrough season, but there’s no denying that the 24-year-old is extremely athletic and possesses a unique skill set.

Just how unique? Enough that inside linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer believes Carter could play on the offensive side of the ball — something that could become a possibility if COVID-19 impacts the team to any substantial degree.

“He has a unique skillset overall with his length, athleticism,” Sherrer told reporters on Monday. “There are probably a lot of positions he could play. He could probably… I’m sure they’d probably like to have him on the offensive side with the way he can run. There’s a possibility of that. If we got into a bind, I’m sure he could jump over there and do that.

“There were some things he did at the college level. It wasn’t his main deal to play inside linebacker, but the scheme kind of allowed it to happen, if that makes sense. He’s a guy that can possibly do that if needed.”

At 6-foot-5, 256 pounds and with 4.46 40-yard dash speed, Carter certainly has the makeup to play tight end on the offensive side of the ball, but hasn’t really seen much time on offense since high school. And even then, he was primarily a defensive end/linebacker.

But the Giants are preparing contingencies, and even head coach Joe Judge alluded to players potentially seeing action outside of their normal positions on Sunday.

“We’ve talked to players [about playing out of position],” Judge said, specifically alluding to kickers and punters. “We haven’t worked them all out individually as kickers and punters, but look, we have professional athletes. These guys have all been really good athletes their entire life, so it’s amazing how many guys have been the punter, the kicker for their high school team. Someone that may be able to get you out of a game if needed. We’re exploring all options with personnel on the practice squad in terms of that next man up mentality. But we’re also making sure that we have answers on the roster for whatever comes up.”

Still, it’s fascinating to think about the possibilities and what-ifs. And while none of us hope the Giants find themselves in such a dire situation, it may be something worth keeping an eye on as the NFL wades through the coronavirus waters for 17 weeks.

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Giants’ Lorenzo Carter drawing rave reviews from coaches, teammates

New York Giants LB Lorenzo Carter is receiving a lot of hype from his teammates and coaches as he enters Year 3.

New York Giants outside linebacker Lorenzo Carter has always been dogged about not living up to his enormous talent. At Georgia, he was one of the most highly-rated recruits only to have a less-than fulfilling college career.

That is likely why Carter fell to the third round of the 2018 NFL Draft. The Giants thought they were getting a steal. Instead, they have witnessed pretty much what scouts saw in Carter in college.

Carter’s first two seasons in the NFL have demonstrated that as well. As a rookie on 2018, Carter “flashed” with 43 total tackles, four sacks with 10 QB hits and four passes defensed in 15 games, only two of which he started.

The Giants were hopeful after sliding him into the starting lineup in 2019 that he would explode with a breakout year. It didn’t happen. In 15 games with 12 starts, Carter posted similar numbers (45 tackles, 4.5 sacks, 13 QB hits and five passes defensed).

This summer, with a new outside linebackers coach in Bret Bielema, the Giants are hoping once again that Carter will breakout. This time their patience might be paying off. His teammates have recognized a change in Carter this year.

“Zo and X work hard, that’s all those guys do,” said veteran Markus Golden about Carter and second year pro Oshane Ximines.” Since they were young last year they have always been working hard. You have to respect those guys and the work they put in. Me, myself, I expect big things from them I know they are working hard. They expect things from themselves, but at the end of the day it’s another year in the league and you can always come back better.”

“Zo is working really hard,” defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence said of Carter. “He came in looking really good, also in good shape. You kind of see it transferring on the field. I have a locker right next to him and we chat it up a little bit. He’s doing good. He’s special.”

“Zo’s a great player,” said right guard Kevin Zeitler. “He’s doing a lot of good things here. Just like everyone else, he’s getting better every day. It’ll be a fun battle these next couple weeks. Knowing the type of person he is, I can only imagine that he’ll improve. I’m excited to see what happens.

Giants new inside linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer coached Carter at the University of Georgia. He knows how infectious a presence Carter can be for a defense.

“I think I was here maybe a week and he popped in. I hadn’t really seen much of him since we both left the University of Georgia. Lorenzo is a great person, great player, good family. I’m actually looking forward to it. You kind of hope he’s a voice in the locker room that lets players know who you are before you show up,” he said.

Is 2020 finally the year Carter puts all the pieces together? We can only hope.

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Giants’ Kevin Sherrer always knew Joe Judge would become an NFL head coach

New York Giants assistant Kevin Sherrer always knew Joe Judge would eventually land an NFL head coaching job.

When Joe Judge took over the head coaching job of the New York Giants, he looked for leaders with not only football knowledge but people who can conceptualize things from a higher perspective.

That’s what he got when he hired former Alabama director of player development Kevin Sherrer as one of his new assistant coaches. Sherrer, a former tight end at Alabama in the mid-1990s, won two National Championship rings as Nick Saban’s DPD from 2010-12 before moving onto the coaching ranks, where he’s been coaching linebackers at two other SEC schools (Georgia, Tennessee) the past six years.

It was at Alabama where Sherrer first met Judge, who at the time was working for the Tide as Saban’s special teams assistant. Now, the two have come full circle here with the Giants.

“First off, [me coming here] had to do a lot with Joe,” Sherrer told reporters via video interview on Thursday. “Joe and I have known each other for I’d say 10-12 years, back from when I was coaching high school ball, and we worked together at the University of Alabama. He and I are pretty decent friends. We kept in touch. He was a big part.

“As far as the attraction to coaching in the NFL, you always want to coach at the highest level. Whether you’re a player, coach, whatever, to compete at that level. Once he got an opportunity and presented that to me, I was really excited. I was really excited about being here as well.”

Sherrer will be in charge of the inside linebackers, a group that consists of free agent Blake Martinez, David Mayo, Ryan Connelly, Jospeh Tauaefa and rookies T.J. Brunson and Tae Crowder.

Sherrer had coached Crowder in college at Georgia, along with another current Giant linebacker, Lorenzo Carter, but his concentration will be on getting Martinez acclimated to the signal-caller role as well as capitalizing on his propensity for piling up tackles.

One player that the Giants are hoping can take the next step is Connelly, who flashed as a rookie last year before suffering an ACL tear that ended his season.

“Like all the guys, they’ve done a really good job of coming in and working and kind of understanding what it is that Coach Judge has set down as a foundation of our team,” said Sherrer. “The fundamentals, attention to detail, situational awareness. He’s done a really good job. The training staff did a good job of getting him back in time for once training camp started. But he’s done a really good job, just like all of the guys have in the room of coming in and working and learning as much as they can each day.”

There’s no question Sherrer will do a fine job with the inside group, but it’s his connection to Judge and the mutual respect that bonds this staff. That’s a good start, especially in these trying times when teams can’t be as physically close as needed.

“It’s kind of funny,” said Sherrer when asked if he ever saw Judge as a head coach. “Yeah, I really thought he did. But when you think of a guy that’s kind of a friend of yours, a colleague, co-worker, getting a head coaching job with the New York Giants is something that’s really kind of like ‘wow.’ But yeah, early on, Joe has always been an organized guy, very articulate, does a really good job, loves football, a good family guy. He fits the mold, in my opinion.”

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PODCAST: Mike Bloomgren discusses coaching career

PODCAST: Mike Bloomgren discusses coaching career

HOUSTON — Mike Bloomgren enters his third season as head coach at Rice.

Before arriving at Rice, Bloomgren served as offensive coordinator at Stanford (2013-17), coaching the likes of Tennessee graduate transfer quarterback Keller Chryst.

NCAA Football: Rice at Wake Forest
Sep 29, 2018; Winston-Salem, NC, USA; Rice Owls head coach Mike Bloomgren checks his play sheet in the second quarter against the Wake Forest Demon Deacons at BB&T Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports

The third-year Rice head coach began his career as a student assistant at Florida State.

From 1999-2001, Bloomgren served as a graduate assistant at Alabama and coached alongside former Tennessee assistant Kevin Sherrer and current Vols’ offensive line coach Will Friend.

Bloomgren joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” to discuss his coaching career. The show can be listened to here or below.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/850817920″ params=”color=#ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&show_teaser=true” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /] Tennessee Two-A-Days · Mike Bloomgren

 

Former Vol assistants set for return to Tennessee

Former Vol assistants set for return to Tennessee.

NASHVILLE — 2020 National Football League schedules have been released.

This season, the Tennessee Titans will play host to a pair of former Volunteer assistant coaches from Jeremy Pruitt’s 2019 staff.

Inside linebackers coach and special teams coordinator Kevin Sherrer departed the University of Tennessee football program in January to join the New York Giants’ staff. He is serving as New York’s inside linebackers coach.

Sherrer will return to the Volunteer State when the Giants play a Week 2 preseason game in Nashville against Tennessee.

Kevin Sherrer
Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire
Chris Rumph
Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Co-defensive coordinator and outside linebackers coach Chris Rumph also left the Vols’ coaching staff this offseason. Rumph is now serving as outside linebackers coach for the Houston Texans.

Houston will play at Tennessee on Oct. 18 at 1 p.m. ET.

 

Giants draft pick Tae Crowder excited to reunite with Kevin Sherrer

New York Giants rookie LB Tae Crowder is looking forward to reuniting with Kevin Sherrer, who previously coached him at Georgia.

The New York Giants were on the clock for the final pick of a long and tiring three days at the virtual 2020 NFL Draft — the notorious “Mr. Irrelevant” selection as it is known.

With that pick, the Giants selected their fourth linebacker of the day, Georgia’s Tae Crowder, a 6-foot-3, 230-pound converted running back that was about to go undrafted and enter the wild frenzy of players trying to find their way onto NFL rosters.

But it didn’t quite happen that way. The Giants made Crowder Mr. Irrevelant.

“It was up there on the clock, and I was like dang. They said are you ready to be a Giant,” Crowder told WLTZ. “It was just a blessing that I was even nominated for that too. All I wanted was my mom to hear my name, even if it was the first pick or the last pick.”

Crowder was on the Giants’ radar as he was a player who had played for one of their current coaches — outside linebackers coach Kevin Sherrer — several years back when they were both at Georgia.

“It will just be pretty cool to catch up with him. He can show me things that’s in the NFL that’s stuff that I need to know. That’s new to me,” Crowder said.

The Giants love the athleticism that Crowder brings to the table even though he’s not a conventional, experienced linebacker. They like his productivity and believe he can be helpful on special teams and on passing downs on defense. He had four pass deflections as a senior in 2019.

“I like to play fast and do what I do. Try to get there and try to make plays, so however I can do that I’m going to try to do that the best I can,” he said.

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Kevin Sherrer to New York: ‘A great move’ and good NFL fit

Kevin Sherrer joins the New York Giants.

Kevin Sherrer
Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

KNOXVILLE – Tennessee inside linebackers coach and special teams coordinator Kevin Sherrer is departing the University of Tennessee football program and joining the New York Giants’ staff.

Sherrer is reuniting with newly-hired Giants head coach Joe Judge.

Sherrer and Judge were together at Alabama from 2010-11. Judge served as Alabama’s special teams assistant, while Sherrer oversaw the Crimson Tide’s Director of Player Development.

New York Giants Introduce New Head Coach Joe Judge
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ – JANUARY 09: Joe Judge poses with a helmet after he was introduced as the new head coach of the New York Giants during a news conference at MetLife Stadium on January 9, 2020 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Rich Schultz/Getty Images)

Before his time at Alabama, Sherrer served as defensive coordinator at Hoover High School under head coach Rush Propst.

Propst discussed his former assistant joining the Giants on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.”

“I think Kevin is as solid as a football coach as it gets,” Propst said. “To me, the NFL maybe the best suit for him because he is even temperament. He is a guy that is not loud or boisterous at all, he is steady, and he really understands the game of football inside and out.

“He has cut his teeth, and reuniting with Jeremy (Pruitt) and the things that they have done, schematically he is going to be fine. He is not going to get too far away from fundamentals that makes the game what it is today. He is a great teacher of the game and will walk into the room from a standpoint that he is not going to be overbearing enough and to where it is going to be good for that room in an NFL environment. I think it’s a great move for him and I think he will be very successful, and in due time he will parlay that job into something even greater. He has all the goods.”

The entire interview can be listened to below or here. Philadelphia Eagles assistant quarterbacks coach Spencer Phillips also joined the show.

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