2021 NFL coaching changes: Pittsburgh Steelers

Matt Canada takes over as the offensive coordinator of a Steelers team that could look way different in 2021.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbacks coach Matt Canada was promoted to offensive coordinator, replacing Randy Fichtner after a three-year run.

Canada, eh?

For as tempting as it may be to fill the rest of this space with jokes about maple syrup and other fun references to north of the border, consider yourself spared from this point forward.

The 49-year-old has extensive history calling plays at the collegiate level, dating back to 1997 at Butler. He has coached running backs (Northern Illinois (1998-2000) and was even the interim head coach for Maryland in 2018. Predominantly, Canada coached quarterbacks and was an OC at eight schools.

The 2021 Steelers will look much different than last year’s version. In all likelihood, though, the offensive system may not be radically changed. Canada was the 2020 quarterbacks coach, which was his only season in the NFL as a coach.

Coaching tendencies

Canada is known for his creativity and radical presnap shifts. Another aspect of his play designs and calling is masking the same play with multiple looks. For example, he may see a matchup to exploit, such as a wide receiver screen, and dress up the presnap look multiple ways to attack the same weakness from very different formations.

The Steelers will work on emphasizing the running game in 2021 after a disastrous effort last season. Running back Anthony McFarland Jr. played under Canada at Maryland, and with impending free agents likely to exit, there’s an interesting opportunity for the 2020 rookie.

There will be certain aspects of Canada’s pro-style spread preferences that won’t apply to Ben Roethlisberger, assuming the quarterback returns for the 2021 season. General manager Kevin Colbert indirectly addressed this situation, transcribed via SteelersDepot.com:

“Coach and I talked about that, because I’ve asked coach Tomlin, with Matt taking over, will we be looking at different players differently? Coach is always going to talk about what we have and how we can adapt what they do to what we currently have.

Maybe as we move into the future, further down the road, and we’re deciding on a wide receiver type or a running back type or a quarterback type or an offensive lineman type, we may shift as we evolve and learn what coach Canada’s offense is about,” Colbert said.

Being flexible and adaptive right out of the gates will be what fantasy footballers observe from Canada’s offense, regardless of what happens at quarterback. In college, Canada coached a spread system with QB Chandler Harnish, went on to Wisconsin to implement a power-running system, and then tutored Jacoby Brissett into a quality spread quarterback.

The gist of Canada’s system — whenever we see it in full view — is to play fast and prevent players from having to think too much on the fly. Overcomplicating things isn’t his style, even though the presnap movement looks ridiculous at times. There’s a method to the madness, and it’s to tip off the quarterback about the defensive scheme, as well as make the opponent constantly guess.

Expect something that sort of resembles Sean McVay’s system after the snap with all of the jet sweeps and misdirections to get a defense to mentally lean toward a certain outcome.

Prior to the hiking the ball, Canada and McVay’s offenses are much different. McVay runs the same formation multiple times and forces defenders to guess which play comes next out of a look he has shown them several times.

The concept remains the same: constant manipulation of the defense’s attention,  ultimately in order to attack with fundamental plays at their core.

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Personnel changes

First of all, Big Ben’s contract is an issue. He’s willing to restructure and has said money is not an object to him. This situation is extremely fluid and could change by the time this sentence is finished being typed.

The Steelers will investigate all options, but financially, restructuring Roethlisberger and adding one year to his existing deal is the smartest approach for handling the salary cap (the reduced figure this year hamstrings Pittsburgh). Cutting Roethlisberger will save $19 million in cap space but also eat up $22.25 mill in dead money.

James Conner — a Canada running back at Pitt — is set to hit the open market. There’s little chance at this point he returns, but never say never. Look for the tandem of McFarland and Snell to shoulder the load.

At receiver, JuJu Smith-Schuster is a free agent in March, and there’s almost no chance he renews with the Steelers. The offense found a gem in rookie Chase Claypool last year, and Diontae Johnson could be poised for another step forward in his game.

Starters left guard Matt Feiler and left tackle Alejandro Villanueva are free agents, too, and it remains unclear if either will be back. Center Maurkice Pouncey retired following the 2020 season, and that’s probably not a bad thing given his slumping play.

Pittsburgh is currently $6 million over a projected $185 million cap.

Fantasy football takeaway

Everything hinges on Big Ben’s situation. The Steelers have Mason Rudolph and Dwayne Haskins behind him on contract. Rudolph is a mildly better fit for the offense than a 39-year-old Roethlisberger, but Haskins doesn’t mesh.

McFarland’s utilization and corresponding fantasy worth will be hyped throughout the offseason. Keep tabs on news surrounding his expected touch share and how he fares in eventual on-field practices, COVID-19 willing. He could emerge in this offense as a regular fantasy contributor.

Both Johnson and Claypool will be surefire fantasy starters if Big Ben returns. In the event Rudolph or another guy is starting, each receiver’s ceiling is rather limited.

Tight ends were a staple of Canada’s system in college, and Eric Ebron could be a focal point of this offense in 2021. Multiple tight ends are common in Canada’s designs. Another boost for Ebron is longtime NFL tight end and mentor Alfredo Roberts was recently tabbed as the new tight ends coach. While Ebron’s durability limitations make him a risky fantasy option, there’s considerable potential here to find a value buy late in drafts.

A bunch of things will change as the coming months unfold, of course. The Steelers had a quality teacher in Fichtner who struggled as a designer and in-game playcaller (rewatch the first half of the playoff loss to Cleveland). Canada’s history shows he’s an exceptional architect of plays … we’ll see how he fares with when to call what in his first year as an NFL OC.

Pittsburgh Steelers oust coaches Shaun Sarrett and Tom Bradley

The Steelers choose not to renew the contracts of Shaun Sarrett and Tom Bradley.

In Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin’s season finale press conference on Wednesday, he intimated personnel changes were on the horizon. “We are just beginning the process of having those types of meaty discussions that usually produce changes or non-changes,” Tomlin said in his typical cryptic manner.

Those “meaty discussions” happened swiftly, as Pittsburgh chose not to renew contracts of offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner, offensive line coach Shaun Sarrett and defensive backs coach Tom Bradley.

Sarrett, who joined the Steelers as an offensive assistant in 2012, was promoted to assistant line coach in 2018 before being named offensive line coach in 2019.

Bradley has been Pittsburgh’s defensive backs coach since 2018.

Tomlin said in a statement via Steelers.com:

“I want to thank all three of the coaches for their commitment and dedication to the Pittsburgh Steelers. They have all played integral roles in our success and I am appreciative of their efforts. Personally, Randy and I have been in Pittsburgh since I hired him in 2007, but our relationship began well before that. He has been a friend of mine for years and I wish his family nothing but the best, and I am eternally grateful for our relationship both on and off the field.”

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An uncertain future for Steelers OC Randy Fichtner in Pittsburgh

With Randy Fichtner’s contract due to expire this offseason, the Steelers offense could have a new look next year.

The offense of the Pittsburgh Steelers could have a new look next year. The contract of Randy Fichtner, the team’s current coordinator, will expire at the end of the 2020 season.

The question becomes, will the Steelers offer an extension or send him packing?

Cleveland-born Fichtner has been in Pittsburgh nearly as long as Big Ben. In 2007, Fichtner hit the lottery when he came from the college ranks to coach a couple of NFL wide receivers named Hines Ward and Santonio Holmes. He retained the role for three seasons when, in 2010, he was promoted to quarterbacks coach.

As QBs coach, Fichtner formed a close relationship with Steelers franchise quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. So, in 2018, when offensive coordinator Todd Haley’s time was up in Pittsburgh, it was natural to promote Fichtner.

The offense has had its share of ups and downs under Fichtner’s direction.

2018

  • Points: 6th; yards: 4th

2019

  • Points: 27th; yards: 30th

2020

  • Points: 12th; yards 23rd

In his first season as OC, Fichtner had the luxury of one of the best wide receivers to play the game in Antonio Brown. In his second season, Fichtner had the misfortune of conducting an offense without its franchise QB.

This season, Fichtner’s playbook is stale and predictable, much like it was in 2019, only for different reasons. While his gameplan was initially innovative, it’s clear Fichtner was not prepared for when the short passing game hit a wall, and now he’s back to the drawing board.

It doesn’t help that the offensive line is one of the oldest in the league and can’t run block to save their lives. But this is nothing new. The Steelers have been in the bottom half of the league in rushing since 2018.

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We’ll see if Fichtner can right the ship. But whether he does or not may not change his offseason status. The Steelers are a team of tradition, and even though they’re struggling offensively right now, I don’t see Fichtner going anywhere as long as Ben Roethlisberger is around.

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Steelers OC Randy Fichtner needs to put on his big boy pants and shoulder the blame for crumbling offense

There’s no question that Big Ben is part of the problem, but the solution starts with the man charged with calling those plays.

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Well, it broke officially around Week 12, and there’s no fix in sight.

For the second week in a row, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger takes all of the blame for the team’s offensive struggles. And, like their offense, it’s getting predictable.

“Offensively, we are not very good,” said Roethlisberger in a postgame press conference. “Right now, we are not playing good football, and that starts with me. We all need to look in the mirror, and, like I said, it starts with me.”

There’s no question that Roethlisberger is part of the problem, but the solution starts with the man charged with calling those plays. It’s offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner’s job to … coordinate the offense.

The quarterback’s job is to execute that offense — a tall task when what was once innovative is now unimaginative and lifeless.

A team is only as good as its ability to adapt. The Steelers aren’t adapting, so what does that make them? The loss to the Washington Football Team should’ve been a wake-up call to dig into the playbook and come up with a different approach. That never happened.

Roethlisberger is a sure-fire Hall of Famer, and for the first 11 weeks of the season, he was executing well an offensive scheme that was the opposite of everything he’d known for 16 seasons.

But it’s not working anymore and hasn’t been since Week 12. It’s beyond time for Fichtner to draw up something new that melds with Big Ben’s capabilities and that the offense can win with. If he can’t, Pittsburgh won’t see round two of the playoffs.

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An immediate advantage Steelers have over opponents this season

Experience wins (almost) every time and should provide the Steelers with leverage in 2020.

The Pittsburgh Steelers are in an ideal situation. Not only has there not been much player turnover, but their head coach and coordinators have been with the club for a combined 43 years.

  • Mike Tomlin (head coach) — 2007-current
  • Randy Fichtner (WRs/QBs, offense) — 2007-current
  • Keith Butler (linebackers, defense) – 2003-current

In a year where there were no minicamps or OTAs and training camp transitioned into the regular season without as much as one preseason game, having an experienced coaching staff is critical.

Three of the Steelers upcoming opponents welcomed new head coaches this season: Kevin Stefanski, Cleveland Browns; Mike McCarthy, Dallas Cowboys; and Joe Judge, New York Giants.

Stefanski and Judge have never coached an NFL game in their lives. McCarthy, however, was head coach of the Green Bay Packers for 12 seasons until he was fired in December 2018.

Typically, the NFL awards teams with a new head coach an additional minicamp, allowing extra time to install their systems and get to know players. That didn’t happen this year.

The Browns have hired a new head coach every 1.75 seasons since returning to Cleveland in 1999 (12 times), and the owners, unknowingly, couldn’t have picked a worse year to revamp. Stefanski and his staff were forced to develop the Browns Way 12.0 virtually.

The Bengals have second-year head coach Zac Taylor and rookie quarterback Joe Burrow. Because the pandemic delayed in-person player/coach unions, Taylor only just met his new quarterback face-to-face in July.

The Bengals, Browns, Cowboys and Giants could surprise us all and actually have their house in order come game time.

We’re about to see just how extensive the advantage of team loyalty is and if it translates to winning games. But I’m betting that experience wins out.

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Chase Claypool quickly fitting into the mold of Steelers greats

Steelers rookie wide receiver Chase Claypool is walking the walk in Pittsburgh.

When Chase Claypool was drafted this spring, it was by an organization renowned for its lineage of hard-working and productive wide receivers.

Aside from his physical traits of frame, speed and catching radius, the Steelers were attracted to Claypool’s work habits.

In his senior year, Claypool earned the University of Notre Dame Monogram Club Most Valuable Player, which honors a student-athlete who displays a strong work ethic and commitment to the team before self.

Steelers offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner is excited to see that work ethic Claypool displayed at Notre Dame hasn’t missed a beat in Pittsburgh.

“That’s exciting because that isn’t an easy thing to do early for a young wide receiver,” Fichtner said. “We’ve had many really, really great wide receivers come through here and he’s right in that same mode of work-work-work, shut up. That’s how he attacks his day.”

The “great wide receivers” Fichtner is referring to are Hines Ward, Mike Wallace, Antonio Brown and JuJu Smith-Schuster, all of whom Fichtner has coached over the years.

 

Hines Ward

Ward embodied the work ethic and toughness that the Steelers stand for. It’s part of what made him one of the league’s best possession receivers and blockers in the league.

He prided himself on hard work, whether it was in the film room, the weight room or on the field, and it showed in every game.

Mike Wallace

Wallace had the luxury to watch and learn from Hines Ward. With that, Wallace took the work habits that already existed in him and built upon it. Up until his unreasonable contract demands sent him packing out of Pittsburgh, his exemplary penchant for grinding was a trait the Steelers loved about him.

Antonio Brown

We can all knock Brown on his immaturity and how it ruined his (what could’ve been legendary) career. But one thing was for certain in Pittsburgh, Antonio Brown was a hard worker.

His incessant, near-OCD approach to note-taking, studying film, and keeping in football shape is part of what made him one of the best receivers in the NFL. Even with all of the receptions, all of the yards, all of the touchdowns, Brown never rested on his laurels. He possessed a constant drive to outdo himself.

JuJu Smith-Schuster

“I learned it by watching you!” Just like the Ward-Wallace mentorship before, Smith-Schuster had with Brown. His work ethic is so litty that he practices after practice, and if he messes up a set off the Juggs machine, he starts all over again. He walks that fine line between light-hearted and serious and never stumbles.

The standard…

As we know, “the standard is the standard” in Pittsburgh.

When asked to explain what his oft-used phrase means, Tomlin responded, “I don’t know.” Perhaps he’s keeping the meaning of his team’s recipe for success a secret. The phrase is important enough for the organization that it’s proudly displayed in steel on the walls of their facility.

And Chase Claypool caught on very quickly to “the standard”. Right along with his Steelers teammates, he lives it, breathes it and shows it. As long as Chase continues to do so, it needs no explanation.

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Steelers OC Randy Fichtner points to special things from WR Chase Claypool

Steelers rookie wide receiver Chase Claypool has been impressing his new team at training camp.

It seems that every time someone from the Pittsburgh Steelers talks, they have something good to say about rookie wide receiver Chase Claypool. Ever since the Steelers drafted the tall, athletic pass-catcher out of Notre Dame, the hype around him has been real.

The cat has been out of the bag since padded practice began that Claypool is going to be a problem for defenders this season. His quarterback, Ben Roethlisberger told the media on Thursday, “It doesn’t look like he’ll be able to sneak up on anybody now.”

Steelers offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner told the media on Thursday, “[Chase] hasn’t missed a snap; he’s willing, he’s conditioned, he’s physical, he is intelligent. It gives him a chance to get even more action, more opportunities.”

Fichtner also has been witness to the great rapport building between Claypool and Big Ben. Let’s hope it translates to the field in games this season.

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Who is Matt Canada and is he being groomed to succeed Randy Fichtner?

The Pittsburgh Steelers have some new faces on staff, among them Matt Canada. Steelers Wire looks into what he could bring to the offense.

After 24 seasons, Matt Canada said goodbye to college football in 2018. Although he was offered coordinator positions, Canada chose instead to spend some downtime with his family at their beach house on North Carolina’s Topsail Island.

He did remain active watching and studying game film and visiting college and pro teams before returning to the grind that is football — this time in the NFL.

As one of the first orders of business in 2020, the Steelers hired Canada for his first-ever pro league endeavor.

“I think Mike and I both felt it was an opportunity that we had and good to add somebody to the staff that can help with the young quarterbacks as well as help with the offense,” Rooney said in an announcement. “We’re happy someone like Matt, who we knew from down the hall here [at Pitt] and liked some of the work he’s done. We’re happy to have him on board.”

Canada’s extensive resume includes several roles at Northern Illinois and Indiana, and offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Wisconsin, NC State and LSU.

Except for Northern Illinois and Indiana, Canada never remained at any school long enough to get comfortable yet just long enough to make a mark.

In 2012, the Wisconsin Badgers finished No. 12 nationally in rushing, and Canada helped lead them to a Big Ten Championship and Rose Bowl appearance.

Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

Pitt Panther fans may remember Canada as the coordinator who installed a record-setting offense in 2016. With a school-record average of 42 points per game, the Panthers had the No. 10 scoring offense in the nation. That offense averaged 448 yards per game and scored 35+ points in all but two games. Canada’s effort earned him a nomination for the Broyles Award, an honor presented annually to the top assistant football coach.

During the 2017 season, under Canada’s guidance, LSU quarterback Danny Etling finished with 16 TD (two interceptions), and the Tigers finished No. 1 nationally with fewest turnovers. The team won six of seven SEC games,  posted a 9-4 overall record and made it to the Citrus Bowl.

After LSU, Canada headed northeast to Maryland, where he began as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach in 2018. That fall, he was named Maryland’s interim head coach after the Terps’ head coach, D.J. Durkin, was terminated soon after the heatstroke death of offensive lineman Jordan McNair.

Among the quarterbacks that Canada has developed are former NC State quarterback and New England Patriots third-round NFL Draft pick Jacoby Brissett who threw 42 touchdowns to 11 interceptions in two seasons at NC State, first-team All-MAC quarterback Chandler Harnish (Northern Illinois), two-time honorable mention All-Big Ten quarterback Ben Chappell (Indiana) and second-team All-Big Ten quarterback Kellen Lewis (Indiana). He also coached Pitt’s own Nathan Peterman, who threw for 27 touchdowns to seven interceptions during Canada’s renowned 2016 season.

Canada in Pittsburgh

While Canada is new to the Steelers, he’s surrounded by plenty of familiar faces. Since Pitt shares the UPMC Rooney Sports Complex and Heinz Field with the Steelers, Canada got to know Rooney, Mike Tomlin and offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner during his time with the Panthers.

“I knew Randy a little bit when I was at Pitt across the hall there,” said Canada during a press conference last week. “I came over and visited with him a couple times.”

“Certainly, enjoyed getting to know our system, and he has done a great job bringing me up to speed with that,” he said. “It has been great with him and our entire staff.”

Additionally, running backs coach Eddie Faulkner spent five seasons under Canada at three different schools.

Mandatory Credit: Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports

The familiarity continues with players, as well. Canada has coached running backs James Conner (Pitt) and Jaylen Samuels (NC State) and fullback Derek Watt (Wisconsin). The Steelers also drafted Maryland running back Anthony McFarland and safety Antoine Brooks in 2020, as well as offensive lineman Derwin Gray in 2019.

Canada’s concepts

It’s been two seasons since the Steelers had a coach dedicated entirely to the quarterbacks. Fichtner handled dual duties of quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator in 2018 and 2019. With a stable of relatively inexperienced quarterbacks behind Ben Roethlisberger, it was evident that a coach to focus on guiding Mason Rudolph, Devlin Hodges and Paxton Lynch was sorely needed.

“They don’t have as much helmet time and playing experience,” Canada said. “I am working with everybody, but there is certainly a difference [between Ben and younger guys]… I am just kind of coming in to facilitate what I can in any way with [Ben] and then also with the younger guys.”

“I’m letting Ben — you know, Ben does have way more experience than I could ever imagine in the NFL,” Canada continued. “So, I’m listening. We’ve talked reads, concepts, and those things — how he’s done it and what he’s done.”

Canada understands the distinction between college and the NFL, and he’s embracing it.

“I think football is football, but it is a different game… There are different parts of it that I have tried to learn, and I certainly have a long way to go, and that is why I am excited with where I am at. I am in a position to learn and assist Randy in any way I can, to assist the quarterbacks in any way I can, and just be part of the group.”

Fichtner is looking forward to incorporating some of Canada’s fresh concepts.

“It’s one more opportunity to throw ideas around,” Fichtner said. “It’s a big job. I believe it’s a fun job. It keeps communication at a premium. I also know when it comes to ideas when it comes to thoughts, things you can bring to the table, things he can bring that are different than me, are fun to see and develop. I’m really excited about it.”

What are some of those different things Canada can bring to the table? Canada’s offensive concepts have been called intriguing, creative, and even revolutionary by college football experts. Offenses he’s previously installed manipulate defenses with presnap motions and shifts. His systems have been anchored by fly sweeps, reverses to tackles, shovel passes to tight ends, misdirections, and inverted triple options enough to drive defensive minds mad.

Whether Canada is being groomed to eventually take over as offensive coordinator is something you’d have to be a fly on the wall to know. While Canada maintains the title of quarterbacks coach, it appears he’ll be more than just that.

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3 things Steelers OC Randy Fichtner must accomplish during training camp

Randy Fichtner has too many weapons to not be a better coach.

Last season the entirety of the Pittsburgh Steelers offense fell apart when quarterback Ben Roethlisberger went down with an elbow injury in the second week of the season. No one is saying it is easy to win without your franchise quarterback but the turmoil — and offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner’s response — really highlighted just how heavily Fichtner relied on Roethlisberger to make him look smart.

Here are three things Fichtner needs to figure out this training camp so as not to repeat last season.

Run the football

When you have a quarterback like Roethlisberger it is easy to let the run game slide and just lean on your franchise quarterback. But Pittsburgh completely gave up on the run game last season. Fichtner has plenty of talented running backs. The notion this group couldn’t muster more touches in 2019 for as close as the defense kept games is unacceptable.

VIDEO: First glimpse of Ben Roethlisberger throwing at training camp

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger threw some passes at training camp on Monday.

The footage that Steelers fans have been longing to set their eyes on since Week 2 of the 2019 season is here. Ben Roethlisberger began throwing at training camp on Monday, and as the Steelers said, “It’s a beautiful sight to see!” Indeed.

Expectations for Big Ben are high this season as the offense fell apart without him last year. Under Mason Rudolph and Duck Hodges, the Steelers struggled mightily, finishing 31st in passing yards.

“Normalcy now becomes Ben Roethlisberger back in the huddle,” said Steelers offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner last week on a conference call with reporters.

“What Ben brings to the table is so unique,” he said. “The experience he has in the red zone, which we so sorely missed last year, obviously, with the young quarterbacks. He has so many in-helmet perspectives. You’re not going to fool him. He’s going to throw a touchdown where you say, ‘Wow.’

As Steelers fans and Big Ben backers, we’ll be holding our breath as Roethlisberger drops back to sling that first pass Monday, Sept. 14 versus the New York Giants.

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