Bears request to interview Browns’ Kwesi Adofo-Mensah for GM job

The Bears have put in a request to interview Browns VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah for their GM vacancy.

The Chicago Bears parted ways with head coach Matt Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace on Monday, which means their search for a new head coach and GM has just started.

Chairman George McCaskey said they would prefer to hire a GM first. But if they find a head coaching candidate they want, they’ll make the hire. McCaskey, President/CEO Ted Phillips and Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian will be conducting the GM search.

According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the Bears have requested to interview Browns VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah for their GM vacancy.

Adofo-Mensah, a graduate from Princeton, was the director of football research in San Francisco before serving as the Browns’ VP of Football Operations. Even during his short tenure, he’s garnered attention as a GM candidate. Adofo-Mensah interviewed for the Carolina Panthers GM opening last season.

Chicago has also requested to interview Colts director of college scouting Morocco Brown for their GM opening, and he’s believed to be a “strong” candidate.

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GM candidates the Giants could consider if they fire Dave Gettleman

With the New York Giants likely to part ways with general manager Dave Gettleman, here are several potential options to replace him.

The New York Giants are likely to move on from general manager Dave Gettleman following the season. Whether he’s fired or retires remains to be seen but either way, Big Blue will be thrust into another GM search.

If the Giants are firm in their commitment to head coach Joe Judge, that may thin out their pool of options. It may also strengthen the likelihood of landing a new GM that has previous ties to Judge.

Is that good or bad? We’ll let you decide.

With a GM swap all but a certainty, here’s a look at several potential options who could replace Gettleman in 2022 and beyond.

Andrew Berry proving himself early as the Browns GM with a string of impressive moves

Berry’s early regime has a different and more capable feel to it than we’ve seen in Cleveland in a long time

It’s been a big week for the Cleveland Browns off the field. Just as he’s done with several other big moves and decisions this offseason, new Browns GM Andrew Berry once again proved he’s off to a very impressive start.

The biggest splash is the most important one. Berry reached a deal with the team’s best player, Myles Garrett, on a massive new contract extension. Garrett will earn $125 million, including $100 million guaranteed, with his new deal. The defensive end is one of the NFL’s rising stars and most devastating pass rushers, and he’s just 24. Now he’ll be in Cleveland until at least 2027.

Garrett made the equation a little more complicated with his actions in Pittsburgh last season. Getting an indefinite suspension with six games to go and the Browns still not completely out of the postseason picture, in what should have been a tremendous triumph over a hated rival on national television, required some forbearance from the team. Berry and the Browns have put their faith in Garrett’s overriding character, choosing to believe the man they know as a whole is more valuable than the crazed worst moment of his career.

In doing so now, the Browns insured against Garrett’s price tag going up if he comes even close to his stated — and quite realistic — goal of winning Defensive Player of the Year and leading the franchise into the playoffs and beyond. There is indeed some risk that Garrett loses his cool once again and both sides lose everything here, but it’s a risk Berry and the Browns couldn’t afford not to take.

Getting the entire draft class signed before the onset of training camp isn’t nearly as big of a deal as it would have been a few years ago. The salaries and terms are almost entirely predetermined based on the rookie wage scale, after all. But Berry and the Browns were the first to lock up their entire class when safety Grant Delpit signed on Wednesday.

It’s that sort of dotting the I’s and crossing the T’s that hasn’t always been the case with Cleveland’s front offices. Then there is the restraint and discipline shown in the team’s pursuit of free agent pass rusher Jadeveon Clowney.

Numerous reports indicate the Browns made a very rich offer to Clowney, the highest he’s received this offseason. Clowney balked, for whatever reason — it doesn’t really matter here. What does matter is that Berry and the Browns let it go. They didn’t keep negotiating against themselves for a player who would be a nice addition but not necessarily worthwhile bang for the considerable buck it would cost.

Just as they did when opting to let Pro Bowl LB Joe Schobert leave in free agency, this front office stuck to its guns and it’s budget parameters. Paying Schobert what Jacksonville spent to lure him would have major implications down the road, and the team’s diminishing emphasis on the LB position simply did not justify it. Past regimes might have kowtowed to the pressure to keep one of the team’s top players, the cost be damned, but this group didn’t bite that forbidden fruit.

He appears to have learned from his predecessors and prior bosses. Sashi Brown was too coolly analytical and distant, failing to grasp the urgency to win for players, coaches and fans. John Dorsey was too impetuous as well as too overconfident in his personnel evaluations.

We won’t know if it all works until the games begin. And the Browns have had impressive offseasons before, only to fall flat when success started to get measured by wins and losses on the field. The Berry braintrust has put a great deal of faith in a rookie head coach and a young QB coming off a rough sophomore slump.

Those decisions will weigh heavily in the ending evaluation of Berry, VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, Senior Advisor Ryan Grigson and the front office. But it’s very hard to find fault with their first few months on the job in Cleveland. There’s a definite, tangible feeling of competence and diligence that hasn’t been there in some time.

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah: ‘I Still do not’ know what the word analytics means in football

New Browns VP of Football Ops Kwesi Adofo-Mensah explained his take on analytics and how the Browns will use the vaguely defined term

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah played basketball at Princeton and was a commodities broker before pivoting his professional career to the NFL. The Browns new VP of Football Operations was hired by GM Andrew Berry, another Ivy League grad, and joins Paul DePodesta — one of the godfathers of the numbers-driven models in baseball — in running the Cleveland football franchise.

Naturally, the term analytics is going to come up quite a bit. Yet in his press conference during the week, Adofo-Mensah downplayed the notion.

Adofo-Mensah was asked about the different connotations, both good and bad, associated with the word “analytics”. In his answer, the young VP explained the brain trust’s decision-making process and how that relates to the vague term.

“It is so funny, before I came into the NFL, I never heard that word and never used that word, and now that I am in the NFL, I still do not,” Adofo-Mensah told reporters via Zoom. “At the end of the day, we are trying to make good decisions. These are uncertain things that we are trying to figure out so we try to be evidence-based, I would more say. Look, coaches and scouts have been evidence-based in the NFL for a long time. Every quality control coach is evidence-based. They come up with a probability. I do not necessarily think that this is some new thing. I think we are just applying it, using different methods and also using it across football operations.”

Adofo-Mensah then explained how they use their process to make decisions.

“We are trying to win on the margins and so we are trying extricate every little winning possible advantage we can find across football operations and use the evidence to support that. I think that (coach Stefanski) Kevin, AB, DePodesta and everybody in this organization are aligned in that sense. I do not think we believe it is more than it is and I do not think we believe that is less than it is. I think we just believe that it is an important facet and something that can help us, and we are going to use whatever to help us.”

Adofo-Mensah comes from a similar approach used in San Francisco, a process that led the 49ers to the Super Bowl.

Browns VP Kwesi Adofo-Mensah embraces being a role model for young black men

Browns VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah embraces being a role model for young black men in his new role

One of the first things new Browns VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah took note of after being hired was how many young black men congratulated him for his climb up the NFL’s front office ladder. Adofo-Mensah was taken aback by how much reach his move from San Francisco to Cleveland had on the African-American community.

Adofo-Mensah noted he got “a lot” of congratulatory notes “from awesome Cleveland fans”, but it was others that he got that really hit home.

“Some of them were from black men who were just saying that it inspired them to see somebody like me in a position like this,” the 38-year-old exec explained in his Zoom session with reporters on Thursday. “That honestly was super meaningful to me and helped me kind of see that for what it was.”

What that is in Cleveland is a front office led by Andrew Berry, another young black man. It’s a rare occurrence to have two prominent, decision-making roles occupied by people of color in the NFL, a league where more than half the players are non-white.

That’s not lost on Adofo-Mensah.

“I know the league is trying their best,” he said. “It is a complex problem. It is not necessarily always the result of bad intentions. It is just sometimes these things are self-fulfilling feedbacks that continue over time, and it really is hard to break the cycle.”

Adofo-Mensah continued,

“Honestly, it is a cycle that happens throughout the rest of society. The NFL is no different than corporate America or Silicon Valley, where I just came from. I know that the NFL is trying, and I am going to be part of that effort to try and get my two cents of input.”

Browns hire Kwesi Adofo-Mensah as Vice President of Football Operations

The Cleveland Browns have hired Kwesi Adofo-Mensah as Vice President of Football Operations

The Cleveland Browns have hired Kwesi Adofo-Mensah as the new Vice President of Football Operations. Adofo-Mensah joins the Browns after spending the last seven years working in the front office of the San Francisco 49ers, most recently as Director of Football Research.

He brings an analytical background to the Browns, a natural fit under GM Andrew Berry and chief strategy officer Paul DePodesta. Adofo-Mensah worked closely with GM John Lynch to build the reigning NFC champions.

Prior to embarking on his career in football analytics, Adofo-Mensah worked as a commodities broker and portfolio manager for several large financial investment firms.