Bill Belichick joins loaded list of potential replacements for Pete Carroll

We may be about to see the wildest head coaching carousel in NFL history.

We may be about to see the wildest head coaching carousel in NFL history. This morning it was reported that the Patriots are parting ways with Bill Belichick, making for the third surprise head coach firing in this cycle. The Titans’ long-successful head coach Mike Vrabel has been dismissed and yesterday Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll joined the list, as well.

There are also several other hot candidates from around the league, including Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson and Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald. Jim Harbaugh is also expected to make the jump back into the NFL after winning a national title at Michigan. Cowboys defensive coordinator Dan Quinn is also among the early favorites for the job.

Belichick is in a league of his own, though – having won a total of six Super Bowl championships – more than any coach in history. The last few years there has been some debate over whether it was Belichick or Tom Brady who deserves the most credit for that run. Either way, no honest analyst would deny that Belichick is one of the greatest defensive coaches in the history of the sport.

As it happens, a defensive coaching upgrade is exactly what this team needs right now. While Carroll had a reputation as a great defensive mind, his defenses had been underperforming for several years – just a little too long for ownership’s taste. Subbing Carroll for Belichick alone should be enough to get this current roster back into the playoffs – even if they retained Shane Waldron and Clint Hurtt as coordinators (they won’t).

The question is if Belichick is still interested in coaching. If he is, the Seahawks job should probably be considered the most-enticing out of the eight head coach openings around the league. No other team in that group has a better roster and only one has a better quarterback than Geno Smith. Seattle’s new-look front office would be foolish not to interview Bill Belichick.

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Jaguars’ 2024 opponents finalized after 2nd place finish

The Jaguars’ list of 2024 opponents is officially set.

The Jacksonville Jaguars’ slate of 2024 opponents is officially set after the team finished second in the AFC South with a 9-8 record.

Next season, the Jaguars will play the entire AFC East and NFC North along with one opponent each from the AFC North, AFC West, and NFC East.

The entire schedule with the dates of those games won’t be announced until later in the offseason, as the NFL typically waits until May to reveal the entire slate.

It’s also a guarantee that the Jaguars will play at least one game in London. Last year, the league announced the list of teams that would play overseas in January, so it may not be long before Jacksonville can get the first puzzle piece in place for its 2024 schedule.

Here’s every team the Jaguars will face next season:

Report: A loss to Saints could prompt Falcons into pursuing Bill Belichick

Report: A loss to Saints could prompt Falcons into firing Arthur Smith, pursuing longtime Patriots coach Bill Belichick

Bill Belichick, head coach of the Atlanta Falcons? It’s more likely than you’d think. The New England Patriots appear to be poised for a divorce with one of the winningest coaches in NFL history, and NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport suggests the Falcons could pursue him if he becomes avaiable — and if they lose to the New Orleans Saints on Sunday.

That at least implies that Falcons head coach Arthur Smith (21-29, and 7-9 going into this Saints game) is on the hot seat and he’ll need a strong showing to save his job. But here’s what Rapoport had to say about the situation:

But a loss would drop Atlanta to 1-4 over its final five games of the regular season and ensure a third straight seven-win season, heightening scrutiny on the progress of the football operation at a time when there could be big-name coaches — including Patriots legend Bill Belichick, whose name has come up frequently in connection with Atlanta in conversations with league sources the past week — potentially becoming available.

Obviously competing with Belichick for a division the Saints haven’t been able to win with Dennis Allen at head coach is unappealing. But Belichick hasn’t found the same results since he split with Tom Brady. His record is 84-101 without Brady in his corner. Belichick was unable to find a worthy successor in New England, including first-round draft bust Mac Jones, and it’s unclear whether he could do so in Atlanta. The possibility is just one more thing to keep in mind at kickoff in New Orleans.

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Chargers head coaching candidate profile: Bill Belichick

Examining who Bill Belichick is, where he comes from and if he’d be a good choice to be the head coach of the Chargers.

Continuing in Chargers Wire’s head coaching candidate profile series, a name that is rumored to create a tectonic shift to the cycle is New England head coach Bill Belichick.

Belichick needs no introduction. The eight-time Super Bowl champion has coached for nearly fifty years in the NFL. Next season would be his 30th year as a head coach. 24 of those seasons were spent as the birther of the modern Patriots dynasty. With Tom Brady as his quarterback, New England won six Super Bowls in a two-decade span.

The results haven’t been as great since Brady left for Tampa Bay and eventually retired. Belichick has just one winning season and playoff appearance in the last four years. With the Patriots’ loss at Buffalo last week, Belichick clinched the worst overall single-season winning percentage of his extensive head coaching career.

Reports have varied on Belichick’s job security throughout the year. Earlier this year, Ian Rapoport and other sources reported that Belichick signed a multi-year extension with New England. As the season’s results have worsened for the Patriots, though, confidence in the idea that he is safe has waned.

The rumors of a divorce between the two sides have only magnified.
That’s where things start to get complicated regarding a Belichick move. Does Robert Kraft simply part ways with Belichick outright as the Patriots move on? Perhaps. But, if the idea that New England signed him to a long-term extension is true, one has to wonder about the trade possibilities.

After seeing what Sean Payton fetched in return for the Saints last offseason, Kraft could easily get the Pats some draft capital by holding onto Belichick as an asset until his new employer trades for him.

It still needs to be fully confirmed that Belichick’s potential suitors must trade for him, but it seems unlikely that New England would let him walk for nothing.

Naturally, age has to be at least mentioned in the concept of his candidacy. Belichick would be 72 at the start of the 2024 season. Romeo Crennel, at 73 on an interim basis in 2020, holds the record for the oldest HC to coach a game in NFL history. It may not be a deciding factor from the Chargers’ standpoint, but how long Belichick wants to continue dual head coach-general manager responsibilities at an advanced age would have a massive impact on any franchise that hires him.

What does that look like if he’s only going to a new team for, say, one four-year contract? Who takes over as head coach after he leaves? What does the power vacuum at GM look like after Belichick hypothetically retires? These are all questions that at least have to be considered as the Chargers undergo a rebuild of an expensive, old roster around Justin Herbert.

As mentioned, Belichick has enjoyed both GM and HC responsibilities with the Patriots for 24 years. He even had de facto GM responsibilities during his Browns’ head coaching tenure in the 90’s. How much control the Spanos family is willing to give Belichick will likely decide whether LA is considered a possible destination.

In the macro of Belichick’s candidacy, his successes and failures with the Patriots can be broken down into two eras. With Brady and without. With Brady, he’s a six-time Super Bowl champion who may undeniably be the greatest coach of all time.

Without Brady, however, Belichick’s track record over the last four years has fallen off. He’s struggled in the draft for over ten years. Per Chad Graff of The Athletic in a recent piece, Belichick has not re-signed a top three-round Patriots selection in the draft since 2013 (Duron Harmon).

The current state of the Patriots is less defined by Brady’s departure than it is by what Belichick has done since. N’Keal Harry and Mac Jones were seen as first-round cornerstones for what the franchise would look like post-Brady—neither panned out. Draft misses like Tyquan Thornton have limited what the Patriots have gotten out of the draft and forced them to overspend on contracts in free agency. Belichick’s draft boards have also varied wildly compared to expert consensus regarding value.

Sure, all GMs have bad drafts as well as good ones. But for a Chargers organization in desperate need of young, cost-controlled talent, is Belichick the head of football operations they’d want after his struggles of roster building over the last ten years?

In summary, you can’t write a Belichick profile without saying he’s arguably the greatest head coach ever. He’s probably the best developer of defensive talent that the game will ever see. The resume, aside from the last four years, is impeccable.

But on the flip side, Belichick is 71. He’d probably cost draft capital to acquire. His coaching staffs of recent seasons and his draft prowess over the last decade have left a lot to be desired. In 2024, “The Patriot Way” is struggling. Is it wise for the Chargers to lean on the past and bet on Belichick? Or should they pass on him to find a new football future?

2024 NFL draft order: Where Chargers are projected to pick after Week 17

How the loss to the Broncos impacted the Chargers’ current draft positioning.

The Chargers fell to 5-11 after losing to the Broncos.

After the loss, Los Angeles is still projected to have the No. 6 overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft.

Here is a look at the top 10 selections after Week 17:

1. Chicago Bears (from CAR, 2-14)

Panthers’ strength of schedule: .518

2. Washington Commanders (4-12)

Strength of schedule: .515

3. New England Patriots (4-12)

Strength of schedule: .518

4. Arizona Cardinals (4-12)

Strength of schedule: .562

5. New York Giants (5-11)

Strength of schedule: .514

6. Los Angeles Chargers (5-11)

Strength of schedule: .526

7. Tennessee Titans (5-11)

Strength of schedule: .529

8. New York Jets (6-10)

Strength of schedule: .507

9. Atlanta Falcons (7-9)

Strength of schedule: .423

10. Chicago Bears (7-9)

Strength of schedule: .463

Bills’ Micah Hyde makes decision on Rasul Douglas: ‘We won the trade’

#Bills’ Micah Hyde makes decision on Rasul Douglas: ‘We won the trade’

The Bills defeated a chippy Patriots team 27-21 in Orchard Park on Sunday, extending their win streak to four straight contests.

Buffalo will head into next week’s regular-season finale against the Dolphins in Miami for the AFC Championship.

Sunday’s win could be the final AFC East meeting between defensive head coaches Sean McDermott and Bill Belichick, whose future with the Patriots organization is unclear.

And it was McDermott’s defense, for whom he is the primary play-caller, that shone, holding New England to only 294 total yards.

Buffalo caused four Patriots turnovers, including a pick-six by trade deadline acquisition CB Rasul Douglas.

Douglas tipped a pass by Patriots QB Bailey Zappe earlier in the game, which was then caught by teammate DT Ed Oliver for his first career interception, thanks to some single-handed acrobatics, before the cornerback reeled in two picks of his own.

All in the first half.

“That should have been another pick by me,” Douglas mused during his postgame media availability. “I should have had 3, honestly, cause I knew it was coming. I read it, but I was on the right side of the tight end and he kind of threw it to the left. So, I had to go around him and deflect it up and then I seen Ed diving for it, I was just happy that he caught it.”

Douglas has been a huge addition defensively in general, not to mention in the wake of another season-ending injury to CB Tre White.

“I don’t know what we gave up to get him… but we won the trade,” S Micah Hyde said about the Bills’ corner, per ABC 13 WHAM. 

Hyde’s comments were backed by their head coach, who noted the team’s resilience.

“They’ve been very resilient. And just the things that they’ve learned, I think, through the journey that have gotten us to here and then using them week to week to find a way to win games,” McDermott said to the press. “Today we knew wasn’t going to be easy and I thought that their resilient nature was on display in the second half.”

New England’s defense was still stingy despite their offense’s shortcomings, but it was Buffalo’s defensive group that won the day. The offense will look to bounce back and the team will aim to keep rolling into the win column next week in Miami.

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Bills’ Josh Allen on rocky Pats game: ‘One of the longest quarters I’ve ever been part of’

#Bills’ Josh Allen on rocky Pats game: ‘One of the longest quarters I’ve ever been part of’

The Bills beat the Patriots at home 27-21 on Sunday, as the team continues to win games, even when the win is an ugly one.

And it’s paid off.

The Bills’ overall offensive performance wasn’t the smoothest, however, as both OC Joe Brady and QB Josh Allen and his receiving targets, who struggled with completions and capitalizing on several Pats turnovers, expressed visible frustration at times.

Allen finished the day with two rushing TDs and 213 total yards of offense, though he struggled a bit in the passing game putting up only 45 total yards with an interception near the end of the first half.

“That was one of the longest quarters I’ve ever been a part of,” Allen said during his press conference. “Three possessions down there in the first quarter and we only scored one touchdown. That’s not good enough on our end. We got to be better prepared to go and get six and seven there. We lucked out. Our defense played a heck of a game and we got to just try to find a way to win.”

He quickly surpassed that first-half number on the first drive of the second half hitting  TE Dalton Kincaid for a 51-yard reception, a career-long for the Bills first-year tight end.

In the contest, Kincaid finished with 87 yards and set a new franchise record for receptions by a rookie with 62 catches on the season.

“We’re playing a pretty good team so just glad we came out with the win,” Kincaid said to the media.

“Each game’s been you know the most important game and now that this game passed you know next week’s the most important game for us, so looking forward to that.”

The Bills offense was a little bit of history repeating in some ways, as Kincaid led the way in receiving yards and Allen scored multiple TDs in their last meetup too.

What has been different about these past couple of matchups with New England has been the usage of WR1 Stefon Diggs, who was quiet these several games, even not taking any offensive snaps on Buffalo’s opening scoring drive at the start of the 2nd half.

Before this season, he had been the leading receiver in several matchups against New England, and while he had a TD in their last meeting and a shot at deep ball on Sunday night, his role has been different,

Diggs often commands double teams, and the coverage he and WR2 Gabe Davis require of opposing defenses creates openings for other targets like Kincaid, WR Khalil Shakir, and receiving RB James Cook.

In the quest for the Buffalo offense to become more multi-dimensional under new offensive coordinator Joe Brady, the captain has sacrificed to help his team win.

And win they have.

The Bills were at 6-6 and on the outside looking in at the playoffs, and have since rattled off four victories and a shot at their fourth straight AFC East crown in next week’s season finale against the Dolphins in Miami.

“I obviously would love to have a home game in the playoffs,” Allen added. “Would love to get in the playoffs, so that’s first and foremost. [We’re] just doing whatever we can do to give ourselves a chance of getting in.”

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Alabama QB Jalen Milroe says former OC suggested he switch positions

Former Alabama OC Bill O’Brien told Jalen Milroe he couldn’t play QB for Alabama

Aside from the game itself, a lot of things go into making the College Football Playoffs a great experience. The players get a week’s vacation to a cool bowl site as well as being gifted all sorts of things ranging from memorabilia to video game consoles and so much more. For people in the media, the week leading up to the game is content heaven because of how much more access they have to the players compared to a typical game week.

One of the biggest jaw-dropping statements from media week so far was when Alabama quarterback [autotag]Jalen Milroe[/autotag] revealed that former offensive coordinator [autotag]Bill O’Brien[/autotag] had suggested he switch positions. O’Brien didn’t gain much popularity during his time in Tuscaloosa, but even for him, that is a pretty insane statement.

Especially in hindsight considering that Milroe will be starting in the Rose Bowl in four days and will likely enter the 2024 season as the Heisman Trophy betting favorite. As for O’Brien, he was responsible for one of the worst offenses in the NFL this season as the offensive coordinator of the Patriots. He essentially ruined whatever was left of Mac Jones career as a starter in the league.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Sam Murphy on Twitter @SamMurphy02.

2024 NFL draft order: Where Chargers are projected to pick after Week 16

How did the loss to the Bills impact the Chargers’ current draft positioning?

The Chargers fell to 5-10 after losing to the Bills.

After the loss, Los Angeles is projected to have the No. 6 overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft. This comes a week after being slotted to have the 8th pick.

Here is a look at the top 10 selections after Week 16:

1. Chicago Bears (from CAR, 2-13)

Panthers’ strength of schedule: .522

2. Arizona Cardinals (3-12)

Strength of schedule: .561

3. Washington Commanders (4-11)

Strength of schedule: .518

4. New England Patriots (4-11)

Strength of schedule: .522

5. New York Giants (5-10)

Strength of schedule: .514

6. Los Angeles Chargers (5-10)

Strength of schedule: .525

7. Tennessee Titans (5-10)

Strength of schedule: .525

8. Chicago Bears (6-9)

Strength of schedule: .467

9. New York Jets (6-9)

Strength of schedule: .514

10. Atlanta Falcons (7-8)

Strength of schedule: .420

Loss to Rams continues an unfortunate trend in the Dennis Allen era

Right when you begin to believe, the Saints snatch away any optimism. Lack of consistency is the calling card of the Dennis Allen era:

What is the statement win of the Dennis Allen era? It’s hard to point to any one, because every impressive win was followed by a disappointing loss. Maybe you point to the 34-0 shutout of the New England Patriots earlier this season. That was followed by back to back losses where the first half deficiencies of the offense became apparent. Last year, the Saints shut out the Raiders then lost two games in a row as well.

The victory over the New York Giants had a “statement win” feel, but we saw what happened Thursday night. More than statement wins, the Allen era has statement losses. These losses snatch away any momentum the Saints have built. New Orleans has struggled to maintain consistency by taking one step forward followed by two steps back.

Right when you start to feel positive about the Saints, a game like Thursday night happens. New Orleans can put it together, but they can’t keep it together. That’s the true issue over the last two seasons. It’s why Allen has a 14-18 record as their head coach.

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