Comparing Adam Gase to other first-year head coaches

Jets Wire compares Adam Gase to other first-year head coaches around the league with a comprehensive breakdown.

Adam Gase’s first season with the Jets has featured a little bit of good and a lot of bad.

New York was supposed to be on its way back to contender status under Gase. Instead, due to injuries and incompetence across the board, the Jets have sputtered to a 4-8 record.

Gase isn’t the only first-year head coach that has experienced disappointment in 2019. Likewise, there are plenty of other first-year coaches that have achieved great success throughout the year.

So, how does Gase stack up compared to other first-year head coaches? Let’s take a look.

Zac Taylor

David Kohl-USA TODAY Sports

What better way to kick things off than beginning with the coach who just defeated the Jets to pick up his first career win?

There’s not much sense in heaping praise upon Zac Taylor. It took him three months to win a game and considering who the victory came against, it’s really not all that impressive of a feat.

With that being said, Taylor inherited a roster seriously deprived of talent. His quarterbacks are over the hill Andy Dalton and Ryan Finley, who is clearly not up to the task of being an NFL quarterback despite putting together a solid career at NC State. He hasn’t had A.J. Green all year and Joe Mixon hasn’t been able to do much on the ground because of the atrocious offensive line he runs behind.

It would be unfair to paint Taylor as a bad coach considering what he’s working with. Until Cincinnati puts together an NFL-caliber roster, the verdict is still out on the former Sean McVay protege.

Packers, even at 8-2, still searching for complete game from all 3 phases

The Packers are looking for a complete game from the offense, defense and special teams.

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Coaches are designed to want more, to chase perfection. So even though his team is 8-2 coming out of the bye week, Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur believes his team is capable of so much more.

Specifically, LaFleur doesn’t think the Packers have put together a complete game so far in 2019.

“I don’t think we’ve gotten to a point where all three phases have really put it together for all four quarters,” LaFleur said Wednesday. “There have been glimpses in each phase.”

A look at “expected points added” from each phase during the team’s first 10 games validates LaFleur’s opinion. The Packers still haven’t finished a game with positive expected points added on offense, defense and special teams.

And there have been flashes from all three. It just hasn’t all come together at once. Every team strives for consistency, and the Packers haven’t found it in any one phase.

“I think there’s a lot of room for improvement in all three phases. I think more than anything, just playing consistent football,” LaFleur said.

The lack of a complete game doesn’t just fall on the special teams, either. The Packers only have two games where both the offense and defense provided positive expected points added.

Sunday night would be an ideal time for the Packers’ first complete game. A trip to San Francisco to play the 9-1 49ers figures to provide the biggest test of the year for LaFleur’s team, and it could be a season-defining game for a team with aspirations of obtaining homefield advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

Beating good teams on the road almost always requires positive contributions  from all three phases. Can the Packers be efficient on offense against the NFL’s No. 2 scoring defense? Can Mike Pettine’s defense control the 49ers’ versatile and creative offense? And will the Packers special teams find its footing and avoid crippling mistakes?

The answers to those questions may determine whether or not the Packers come back from San Francisco with the top seed in the NFC on Sunday night.

Packers coach Matt LaFleur outlines areas of improvement coming out bye

Packers coach Matt LaFleur wants fewer big plays allowed on defense, fewer self-inflicted mistakes on offense and more consistency from the special teams.

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Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur wants fewer big plays allowed on defense, fewer self-inflicted mistakes on offense and more consistency from the special teams as his team comes out of the bye and prepares for the final six games of the 2019 season.

The Packers spent the off week executing a “self scout” exercise, and LaFleur  and his staff found areas of necessary improvement.

“There’s a lot of things that are pretty obvious in terms of what we need to clean up from a defensive perspective of giving up the big plays,” LaFleur said Monday.

The Packers allowed 38 passing plays of at least 20 yards and nine running plays of at least 15 yards through the first 10 games. All the big plays have added up against Mike Pettine’s defense.

Between Weeks 4-10, the Packers gave up the most total yards in the NFL (2,862) and the second-most yards per play (6.5). Only a strong red-zone defense and a consistent pass rush kept the Packers from completely dissolving on defense over the last two months.

The team won’t survive long in January without improvement from Pettine’s defense.

On offense, LaFleur wants better early-down execution and a reduction of the penalties and discipline errors that have often stalled drives.

“From an offensive perspective of staying ahead of the sticks and not having the negative yardage plays,” LaFleur said. “When you look at us, offensively, third down and long, we’ve had too many of them. We’ve been pretty solid when it’s 3rd-and-7 or less, those 3rd-and-manageable situations. It’s tough sledding in this league when you’re at 3rd-and-8 or more. It’s tough. A lot of it has been self-inflicted. Too many penalties, just pre-snap penalties, discipline penalties that we’ve got to clean up in order for us to be the team we want to be.”

The Packers have 16 false start penalties, the sixth-most in the NFL this season. Of those 16, 10 have come at home.

The Packers also have 24 runs or completions resulting in negative yardage this season.

Tacking on an extra yards has made moving the sticks on third down more difficult, according to LaFleur. The Packers are only converting 37.2 percent of third down opportunities, which ranks 19th in the NFL.

The Packers’ special teams have struggled throughout the season, especially in terms of returning kicks and punts and covering kickoffs. While Mason Crosby and JK Scott have been solid, just about everything else has been a problem.

“On special teams, we have to put a consistent product out there,” LaFleur said. “It’s been inconsistent. There’s been some really good moments and then there’s been some really bad ones. Consistency, really all across the board.”

The Packers are 8-2 and coming out of the bye week with clear and obvious areas of improvement. Can LaFleur’s team find answers over the final six weeks and cement their status as a Super Bowl contender, or will problem areas developed over the first 10 games prove to be fatal flaws?

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Lesson learned: Packers planning to leave for San Francisco on Saturday

After going to Los Angeles on Friday and getting beat, the Packers will wait a day and leave for San Francisco on Saturday.

Lessons learned during a disastrous trip to Los Angeles to start November led Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur to a course correction for this week’s trip to San Francisco.

Unlike their last visit to the West Coast, when LaFleur’s team left for Los Angeles on Friday and then got walloped by the Chargers, the Packers will wait a day and leave for San Francisco on Saturday.

LaFleur said he talked with a host of people, including the team’s medical staff, strength and conditioning coordinator Chris Gizzi, head athletic trainer Bryan “Flea” Engel and director of performance nutrition Adam Korzan, to better understand the logistics of a football team traveling to the West Coast.

“What I came to find out was that the two-hour time difference really doesn’t affect our guys a whole bunch,” LaFleur said Monday. “It’s harder on teams going from the West Coast to East Coast. Coupled with how I felt the Chargers trip went, I felt this was the best route to go for our football team.”

LaFleur said the NFL’s decision to flex the game to Sunday night did not affect the team’s travel plans. The intention was always to leave for San Francisco on Saturday.

Changes were required after the team’s last trip to the West Coast.

In early November, the Packers left for Los Angeles on Friday, had a walkthrough on Saturday and then played the team’s most lethargic and disappointing game of the season in a 26-11 loss to the Chargers. The Packers slept through the first half, had too many self-inflicted errors and never really got into the flow of the game, and both LaFleur and quarterback Aaron Rodgers weren’t happy with the focus and energy level of the team.

The Packers will hope another day in Green Bay and one fewer day out west will lead to a more energized and sharp performance against the 49ers, who are 9-1 and in possession of the top seed in the NFC entering Week 12.

The Packers and 49ers are scheduled for a 7:20 p.m. CT kickoff from Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara on Sunday night.

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Packers coach Matt LaFleur turns 40 on Thursday

The Packers’ first-year coach turns 40 years old on Thursday.

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Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur turns 40 years old on Thursday.

His birthday present? A chance for the first-year coach to recharge his batteries during the bye week and get prepared to lead the 8-2 Packers on a playoff push over the final six weeks of the 2019 season.

LaFleur’s first season as Packers coach has been a smashing success. He became the first coach in franchise history and the first NFL coach since Jim Harbaugh to win seven of his first eight games. Only 19 coaches in NFL history have ever started 7-1.

The Packers are now 8-2, in first place in the NFC North and in possession of the second overall seed in the conference.

LaFleur was the youngest coach hired by the team since Curly Lambeau, a founding member of the franchise who first coached a game at the age of 21. The team hadn’t hired a coach under the age of 40 until landing on LaFleur, then 39, in January.

LaFleur was born on Nov. 14, 1979, in Mount Pleasant, Michigan.

The Packers coach said the bye week will be centered around both spending time with family and self-scouting.

“The focus will be on what we need to do better moving forward, because there’s a lot to improve upon. I think our guys know that as well,” LaFleur said.

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Ex-Redskins coaches, players have found massive success since leaving

A number of the top minds in the NFL were at once a part of the Redskins organization, but they’ve found success elsewhere.

“I wish there was actually a way to know you’re in the good old days before you actually left them.”

Andy Bernard — played by Ed Helms — said that on the Season 9 finale of “The Office” years ago, but it fits pretty well with how the Washington Redskins might feel just about now. While they are currently sitting with the second-worst record in the NFL, a look around the rest of the league shows numerous staffers, coaches, and players finding great success in new locations. Whether it’s a coach who used to be a coordinator in Washington or a GM who found a new team to manage, it seems that the Redskins franchise was exactly the jumping-off point that these guys needed to get their careers going.

In case you need help remembering who all of those future stars were they go as the following: Kyle Shanahan, Redskins OC; John Schneider, Redskins VP of Player Personnel; Matt LaFleur, Redskins QB coach; Kirk Cousins, Redskins QB; Sean McVay, Redskins OC.

All of them were at one point in the building, working to bring success to Washington. Now, they’ve been able to find success elsewhere, and the Redskins are still sitting at the bottom of the league, looking for the right answers. Here’s to hoping that the good old days are right around the corner.

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Packers notes: Matt LaFleur regrets playcall on final play of first half vs. Panthers

Packers coach Matt LaFleur regrets the play he called at the end of the first half against the Panthers.

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur said if given another opportunity, he’d still go for a touchdown in an end-of-the-half scenario, but he’d want to call a different play.

The Packers got stuffed by Carolina Panthers defensive lineman Gerald McCoy on the final play of the second quarter when McCoy blew into the backfield and stopped Jamaal Williams for a loss.

The missed opportunity didn’t end up costing the Packers, but LaFleur still regrets calling that play in that situation.

“Just going back to that, I don’t like the playcall,” LaFleur said Monday. “We didn’t practice it for that situation. I put that on my shoulders. I have to do a better job of making sure that we’re well prepared for whatever they may show, and I don’t think I did a good enough job in that regard. Still would go for it again, if that opportunity presented itself.”

The Packers got a penalty to get to the 2-yard line with two seconds left, decided to forego the easy field goal and used a timeout to help provide time to find the right play.

McCoy said after Sunday’s game that he picked up on a few pre-snap keys and knew when to jump the snap. That advantage allowed him to blow past left tackle David Bakhtiari and stuff Williams just as he was getting the football on an inside run.

LaFleur said the Packers had been getting significant push up the middle in the first half, and he was confident the offensive line could open up enough room for Williams to get three feet.

“I thought we could cram it up for a yard and it didn’t work,” LaFleur said Sunday.

Aaron Jones, who scored three touchdowns on Sunday against the Panthers, wasn’t on the field.

Packers want to specialize role for MVS: Second-year receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling has just one catch for 4 yards over the last three games, and he was on the field for just 11 snaps during Sunday’s win over the Panthers.

LaFleur said Valdes-Scantling is still recovering from an injury suffered in a win over the Oakland Raiders on Oct. 20. But he also wants to refocus on finding specialized ways of best using his unique skill set.

“Number one, he has battled through a little bit of an injury, which definitely has slowed him down,” LaFleur said. “But we also have to look critically at ourselves and what we’re asking him to do and making sure we’re putting him in position to get some of those balls. He does have a great talent. He’s a guy that, when he rolls off the ball, he is tough to defend because he runs so well. We have to put him in position where he can use that to his advantage. You can’t coach or teach that speed.”

Valdes-Scantling’s one target against the Panthers was a deep shot from Aaron Rodgers on third down. It was thrown into double coverage, and Valdes-Scantling was unable to go up and make a play on the ball in the air.

Although there’s risk of tipping their hand with personnel, it’s possible the Packers will use Allen Lazard, Jake Kumerow and Geronimo Allison as intermediate receivers and Valdes-Scantling as the designated vertical threat over the final six games.

Sternberger earns trust: Rookie tight end Jace Sternberger might have earned himself a bigger role on offense after impressing coaches during a 15-play cameo against the Panthers on Sunday.

The Packers’ third-round pick didn’t have a catch or a target, but he handled his business as a blocker. At least twice, he cut off the backside on a split zone run. He also got to the second level and blocked Shaq Thompson on one explosive run from Jamaal Williams.

“We definitely had the intent to put him in the game. We had a couple of plays that were specifically for him. Some of the cross sifts and inserts. He did a nice job. He earned our trust. I’m excited about him for the future,” LaFleur said.

Sternberger could give LaFleur and the Packers offense an athletic move tight end to use over the final six weeks of the season.

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