Ranking our top 4 candidates for the Panthers’ DC job

Here are our top four candidates for the Panthers’ defensive coordinator job.

Now that the Carolina Panthers have landed their head coach in Frank Reich, it’s time to start scooping up his staff. And one of the biggest, if not the biggest hole sits at the defensive coordinator position.

So, let’s sort our top contenders before the Panthers, of course, ultimately do that for us.

Falcons announce Ryan Nielsen as their new defensive coordinator

Falcons announce Saints’ co-defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen as their new DC, via @RossJacksonNOLA:

It was only a matter of time, really. Since becoming the defensive line coach for the New Orleans Saints 2017, Ryan Nielsen has been held in high regard across the coaching landscape. Almost infamously poached by the LSU Tigers just a few years ago, Saints fans knew that eventually the defensive line coach turned co-defensive coordinator would depart for a larger opportunity. Finally, that day has come.

Per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Nielsen has been hired by the division rival Atlanta Falcons to be their defensive coordinator. Earlier this offseason, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis said that the club would not impede coaching staff members from getting accelerated offers. Certainly co-coordinators Nielsen and Kris Richard were in mind when he mentioned that. Although, as co-coordinators, the Saints could not have blocked the incoming interview requests, anyway. Nielsen also interviewed with the Minnesota Vikings for their open position while Richard received interviews with the Carolina Panthers and Miami Dolphins. The Saints may be able to now offer Richard the solo defensive coordinator role to keep him in the Big Easy.

For the Saints, their next move will be to lessen the ripple effect that comes with a defensive coordinator being poached from their team within the division. Along with the news that Nielsen would be hired by Atlanta, they also announced the firings of several position coaches. That means Nielsen could look to bring some of his New Orleans colleague with him. As if the Falcons were not already getting a good one as is. Since the former NC State defensive coordinator arrived in the New Orleans, the Saints’ defense has piled on 40 or more sacks each season and have been (up until 2022) a top run defense as well.

Another potential impact here is that the Saints have many free agent defensive linemen set to his the market this offseason. Defensive end and former first-round draft pick Marcus Davenport along with several interior defenders like David Onyemata, Shy Tuttle, Malcolm Roach and Kentavius Street. Nielsen could lead an exodus of defensive line talent northeast from New Orleans to Atlanta. Losing a talented defensive mind to the hated Falcons will be a tough pill to swallow, but talent following him from the roster would make that pill even more bitter.

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Dolphins request interview with Saints’ co-defensive coordinator Kris Richard

The Miami Dolphins have requested an interview with New Orleans Saints co-defensive coordinator Kris Richard, who has already met with the Carolina Panthers;

Another interview request has come in for one of the New Orleans Saitns co-defensive coordinators. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reports that the Miami Dolphins are seeking permission to speak with Kris Richard, who held the co-DC position along with Ryan Nielsen last season. Before that promotion, Richard worked as the secondary coach while Nielsen coached the defensive line.

Richard has been a full-time coordinator before with the Seattle Seahawks and Dallas Cowboys, and he’s been overqualified for the role in New Orleans for some time. He recently met with the Carolina Panthers about their defensive coordinator vacancy and it feels like only a matter of time before he moves on to bigger responsibilities.

And because he shares the co-coordinator title with Nielsen, the Saints can’t block Richard from any of these opportunities since it’s technically an advancement. Nielsen has interviewed with both the Minnesota Vikings and Atlanta Falcons, too, so there’s a real possibility the Saints lose one or both of them to this hiring cycle. It’s something to monitor in the days ahead.

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Dolphins to interview Saints co-defensive coordinator/DB coach Kris Richard for their DC job

He was previously defensive coordinator for the Seahawks.

With the Miami Dolphins in full-on offseason mode, they’re currently working on filling their defensive coordinator role which was left vacant when they fired Josh Boyer after their elimination from the postseason.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Dolphins have added a fourth confirmed candidate for the position, as they’ve requested to interview New Orleans Saints co-defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach Kris Richard.

Richard, 43, is a former player, who spent the 2005 season with Miami. He joined New Orleans’ staff back in 2021. Prior to that, he spent time with the Dallas Cowboys as defensive backs coach and passing-game coordinator (2018-19). His highest position was with the Seattle Seahawks from 2015-17 when he was the defensive coordinator.

Miami has also requested to interview Vic Fangio, Sean Desai and Anthony Campanile for the open position.

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Vikings ask to interview Saints co-defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen

The Minnesota Vikings asked to interview New Orleans Saints co-defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen for their own DC vacancy:

The Minnesota Vikings fired defensive coordinator Ed Donatell after their one-and-done playoff appearance, and they aren’t wasting much time searching for his replacement. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the Vikings requested an interview with New Orleans Saints co-defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen for the vacancy.

This is the second such request Nielsen has received; the NFC South-rival Atlanta Falcons are also looking to meet with him as a candidate for their defensive coordinator vacancy. Nielsen shared his title with Kris Richard in 2022, who has his own interview request to consider from the Carolina Panthers.

Nielsen has scouted, drafted, and developed most of the Saints defensive line since joining Sean Payton’s staff back in 2017. Nielsen rose to his current role in New Orleans once Dennis Allen was promoted to head coach, and his star has continued to rise in NFL coaching circles. Depending on how his meetings with Minnesota and Atlanta go, he could be on the outs this offseason.

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Panthers DC candidate profile: Kris Richard

Carolina Panthers defensive coordinator candidate profile: Kris Richard

Between their searches for a head coach and a defensive coordinator, the Carolina Panthers have thrown a lot of names our way over the past few weeks. And one of those names, which may be a familiar one to some, is New Orleans Saints co-defensive coordinator and secondary coach Kris Richard.

Richard has built a long and decorated résumé in the league, having been on the sidelines for 13 seasons now. The former cornerback started his NFL coaching career where he started his on-field one—with the Seattle Seahawks.

Under Pete Carroll, Richard played an integral part in developing the famous “Legion of Boom,” a daunted secondary that rostered the likes of Richard Sherman, Brandon Browner, Earl Thomas, and Kam Chancellor. Only one of those players, Thomas, was considered an elite prospect coming out of college—so to get the most out of the diamonds in the rough spoke volumes.

In 2015, Richard was promoted to the defensive coordinator role for the Seahawks following the departure of Dan Quinn to Atlanta. He’d see immediate success, as his unit allowed the fewest points in the league that season. He stayed in that role until the end of 2017 and never ranked worse than 13th in points allowed during his tenure.

Richard then landed in Dallas as a defense backs coach, where he was key in developing multiple players in that secondary and even garnered some chatter for head-coaching vacancies in 2019. He moved into his role with New Orleans in 2021.

A hiring of Richard would bring a respected and experienced coach who has had a ton of success in the role prior. He could help in the development of young cornerbacks Jaycee Horn and CJ Henderson, and would certainly bolster an already stout defense going into the 2023 season.

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Panthers 2023 defensive coordinator search tracker

Join us right here as we keep track of every candidate in the Panthers’ search for a new defensive coordinator.

Well, it’s time to start tracking more than just potential head coaches for the Carolina Panthers.

Here’s our running tally of every candidate to pop up in the team’s search for a new defensive coordinator.

Panthers request permission to interview Saints co-DC Kris Richard

The Saints could face a unique challenge this offseason if both co-DCs are hired away. The Panthers requested permission to interview Kris Richard, via @RossJacksonNOLA:

So it begins. While a potential offensive coordinator shift is a popular focus for New Orleans Saints fans right now, the team may be forced to undergo a change at defensive coordinator as well. On Monday, the Carolina Panthers requested permission to interview Saints co-defensive coordinator and secondary coach Kris Richard.

Richard has been in New Orleans since the 2021 season when he was brought in to Sean Payton’s staff, replacing former secondary coach Aaron Glenn as he left for the  Detroit Lions’ defensive coordinator job. Richard was then promoted to co-defensive coordinator ahead of this season as Dennis Allen moved into the head coach position.

His cohort Ryan Nielsen is getting a look this offseason too. The news of the Panthers’ request to interview Richard comes hot on the heals of Nielsen being requested by the Atlanta Falcons. Meaning New Orleans could be in line to lose not one, but two defensive coordinators this offseason.

General manager Mickey Loomis made it clear in his end-of-year press conference on Friday that the organization would not stand in the way of their staff getting advancement opportunities elsewhere. That has been typical of New Orleans in the past with examples like the aforementioned Glenn, Lions head coach Dan Campbell, and Falcons general manager Terry Fontenot to name a few.

Per a high-ranking NFL executive, the option for franchises to block these interviews cannot be exercised when a candidate with a “co” title is being offered an opportunity to take on sole ownership of the same role. So even if New Orleans was to try to stand in the way of the advancement of one of these candidates, their options are limited. Short of promoting one of their co-coordinators, which effectively would mean moving on from the other, there is not much the Saints can do here. Instead, an NFC South rival or two could force the team’s hand. Could Richard team up with Payton in Carolina?

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Panthers request interview with Saints DB coach Kris Richard for DC job

The Panthers have requested permission to interview Saints secondary coach Kris Richard for their DC opening.

Sean Payton isn’t the only man the Carolina Panthers have called up their NFC South rivals about.

As first reported by NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport on Monday afternoon, the Panthers have requested permission to talk with New Orleans Saints defensive backs coach Kris Richard about their defensive coordinator position.

The 43-year-old rose to a bit of prominence during his days in Seattle, a tenure that spanned from 2010 to 2017. There, with current Panthers general manager Scott Fitterer in the Seahawks’ front office at time, Richard served in a number positions—including as a cornerbacks coach, a defensive backs coach and a defensive coordinator.

He moved on to the Dallas Cowboys in 2018, as the team’s defensive backs coach and passing game coordinator for two seasons. His run with in New Orleans then began in 2021, where he’s also assumed the role of co-defensive coordinator.

Carolina, as far as locking down their defensive coordinator, has also expressed interest in New York Jets safeties coach Marquand Manuel and Philadelphia Eagles defensive consultant Vic Fangio.

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Dennis Allen concerned about injuries, but the Saints have bigger problems

Dennis Allen expressed concerns about injuries, but his coaching staff’s decisions have been a bigger problem for the Saints:

You’d be excused for not tuning into the New Orleans Saints’ ugly loss in prime time to the Arizona Cardinals. If watching Andy Dalton melt down and throw three interceptions before halftime didn’t do it for you, Dennis Allen’s blasé response afterwards probably would have. The Saints looked rudderless and overmatched by what’s widely considered to be one of the worst-managed teams in the NFL. It was brutal to watch.

Things didn’t really improve during Allen’s postgame press conference. After first commenting on his defense’s “shoddy tackling” in his opening statement Allen turned his attention to other factors at play in the loss, adding “My biggest concern is we haven’t had the health of our players.”

Now, there’s some merit to that: the Saints were without six of their starters in this game (seven if you count first-round left tackle Trevor Penning, who was not expected to start as a rookie prior to a late-summer injury) including both starting cornerbacks and their top two receivers, as well as last year’s first rounder Payton Turner. Health has been a real problem for New Orleans throughout the season so far. There aren’t many teams managing worse injury situations.

But the bigger problems are on the sidelines. Allen’s coaching staff has made too many baffling decisions to overlook. Two weeks in a row we’ve seen rookie receiver Rashid Shaheed score a long touchdown (going 44 yards on the ground last week and 53 yards through the air this week) only to go the rest of the game without ever touching the ball again. Pete Carmichael Jr. has failed to weaponize a bright young talent.

That extends to other issues with the offense. He’s demonstrated an obvious play calling trend in calling a run play on more than 80% of second downs following an incomplete pass on first downs, setting the offense up to fail with too many third-and-long situations. When they have managed to get downfield and fight and claw their way into scoring position inside the opposing red zone, Carmichael has taken his best players off the field.

He’s failed to score a single touchdown with Alvin Kamara through five games; Kamara started the season poised to take Marques Colston’s career touchdowns record, but the Saints can’t get him the ball inside their opponents’ 20-yard line. Taysom Hill is an automatic score in short-yardage situations but they’ve got Andy Dalton throwing to Tre’Quan Smith in traffic instead. Make it make sense.

And let’s talk about the defense. There was a lot of noise about who would be calling plays defensively, with Allen having named defensive line coach Ryan Nielsen and secondary coach Kris Richard as co-coordinators. And it certainly looks like a unit with too many cooks in the kitchen. The Saints are missing what feels like dozens of tackles per game, allowing coverage busts left and right, and struggling to even hold up at the line of scrimmage, much less break through to disrupt the offense. They’re failing the fundamentals that middle school teams across the country work on every day.

They’ve lost to one team that was actively tanking (the Carolina Panthers, who gave Matt Rhule another week or two in the office with that win) and two others that wouldn’t have shocked anyone by firing their head coaches weeks earlier (the Zac Taylor-led Cincinnati Bengals and Kliff Kingsbury-coached Cardinals). The Saints are who their record says they are: a really bad and poorly-managed 2-5 team that bought their own hype, hired the wrong coach, and set their franchise back at least two years. We’re almost halfway into the season and there’s nothing you can say they do well. Now we wait until they take action to clean up this mess.

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