Jim Irsay made Jeff Saturday interim head coach against advice from Colts’ brass

Senior executives in the Colts’ building had serious concerns about Jim Irsay’s decision to make Jeff Saturday interim head coach.

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay has certainly been going with his gut lately. It was Irsay’s decision to recently fire head coach Frank Reich and offensive coordinator Marcus Brady, to bench veteran quarterback Matt Ryan in favor of second-year man Sam Ehlinger, and to hire former Colts center Jeff Saturday as interim head coach in a press conference that was all kinds of “interesting.”

The most bizarre parts of the Colts’ Jim Irsay/Chris Ballard/Jeff Saturday press conference

According to Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network, Irsay made the Saturday hire against the objections and concerns of his closet confidants in the building.

Colts president Pete Ward and general manager Chris Ballard, among others, spoke with Irsay and expressed their reservations, sources say. The Colts have former head coaches John Fox and Gus Bradley on staff, as well as a rising star in special teams coordinator Bubba Ventrone. But sources say Irsay was hellbent on hiring Saturday, who revealed that Irsay called him during a last Sunday’s loss to the Patriots to ask about Indianapolis’ problems on the offensive line.

Moreover, Irsay named 30-year-old pass game specialist/assistant quarterbacks coach Parks Frazier, who has never called plays at the NFL level, to replace Brady as offensive coordinator. This despite the fact that the Colts had a more experienced option on staff. Per Rapoport, quarterbacks coach Scott Milanovich was offered the position with no revision to his existing contract, so he declined the offer.

The lack of coaching experience seems to be in line with Saturday, who becomes the first NFL head coach with no college or professional coaching experience since the Minnesota Vikings hired Hall of Fame quarterback Norm Van Brocklin to be their first head coach in 1961. The Vikings were an expansion team, Van Brocklin was known around the NFL as a coach on the field, and with all that, Van Brocklin’s tenure as Minnesota’s head coach was flawed at best — especially when he made the situation so toxic with quarterback Fran Tarkenton, that Tarkenton demanded a trade after the 1966 season.

Eventually, the Vikings replaced Van Brocklin with CFL legend Bud Grant, who would take the team to four Super Bowls — including three with Tarkenton, who was traded back to Minnesota in 1972.

Experience matters.

Saturday, while a smart player and a fine analyst for ESPN in recent years, has no such “coach on the field” history, and the Colts are far from an expansion team, though they’re looking more and more like it every week.

The Colts travel to Las Vegas to take on the Raiders on Sunday afternoon in Saturday’s first game as head coach.

Josh Allen is on pace to smash the NFL’s single-game passing yards record

Josh Allen is on pace to absolutely smash the NFL’s single-game record for passing yards.

One of the weirder statistics in pro football is Norm Van Brocklin’s pro football record of 554 passing yards in a single game. Not that it’s odd that Van Brocklin would set the record — the man is a Pro Football Hall-of-Famer, after all. The surprise is, with all the advancements in the passing game, and with all the benefits given to offenses in general with rules in the last few decades, that Van Brocklin accomplished this feat for the Los Angeles Rams against the New York Yanks on September 28, 1951.

At the half of the Buffalo Bills’ game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, Bills quarterback Josh Allen is on pace to not only break, but to smash, Van Brocklin’s record.

In the first half of Buffalo’s romp Steelers, Allen completed 14 of 24 passes for 248 yards, four touchdowns, one interception, and a passer rating of 125.0.

We’ll see how much Allen will play in the second half with the score 31-3 at the half, but given what Allen’s already done to this usually great defense, it’s time to do a bit of record-watching.

Go out fighting! How Norm Van Brocklin offered to fight reporters before he got fired

Hall of Fame quarterback Norm Van Brocklin wasn’t quite as effective as a head coach. It may have had something to do with his temper.

Norm Van Brocklin was one of the greatest quarterbacks of his era. “The Dutchman” made the Pro Football Hall of Fame for his work with the Rams and the Eagles from 1949 through 1960, and that led to his time as a head coach for the expansion Vikings from 1961 through 1966, and for the Falcons from 1968 through 1974. Van Brocklin was not the greatest coach for young teams (the Falcons came into existence in 1966) because he was famously impulsive and impatient. He was also famous for throwing together epic sentences of profanity, and he was not at all happy with quarterbacks who did not do things the way he had done them.

This led to a legendary logjam with Fran Tarkenton, who the Vikings selected in the third round of their first-ever draft in 1961. Tarkenton was a scrambler at a time when that was seen as a negative (Van Brocklin would likely lose his mind in today’s NFL), and it got to the point where Tarkenton had no desire to play for Van Brocklin. This led to the Vikings trading Tarkenton to the Giants, and the Vikings moving on from their mercurial coach in favor of Bud Grant. Eventually, the Vikings reversed Van Brocklin’s error by re-acquiring Tarkenton in 1972, and Grant led Minnesota to three Super Bowls.

Van Brocklin had a 29-51-4 record with the Vikings, and things didn’t go much better in Atlanta, where he put up a 37-49-3 mark over seven seasons. Halfway through the 1974 season, the Falcons lost 42-7 to the Dolphins, which led to quite the exchange between Van Brocklin and one Atlanta sports reporter.

Per Bob Rodman of the Albany Democrat-Herald:

“You’re damn right I’m a fighter,” Van Brocklin said in response to a question about whether the coach was still a fighter. “Are you a fighter? Do you want to fight me? Anyone who wants to fight, stand up!”

There were no takers, and Van Brocklin was fired the next day.

Ah, the NFL’s halcyon days, where coaches could threaten to fight everybody in a room before getting canned. You just don’t see that anymore.