Bears GM candidate profile: Get to know Reggie McKenzie

We’re taking a look at what Reggie McKenzie brings to the table in our Bears GM candidate profile.

The Chicago Bears fired general manager Ryan Pace after seven seasons, and they’ve wasted no time exploring candidates to replace him.

Chairman George McCaskey, President/CEO Ted Phillips, Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian, VP of Player Engagement Lamar ‘Soup’ Campbell and Senior VP of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tanesha Wade will conduct the search for Chicago’s next GM, a process which McCaskey promised would be “thorough, diligent and exhausted.”

The Bears have cast a wide net of GM candidates that they’ve extended interviews to, including Miami Dolphins senior personnel executive Reggie McKenzie, who interviewed for the job last week.

Let’s take an in-depth look at what McKenzie brings to the table in our Bears GM candidate profile:

Report: Bears to interview Saints DC Dennis Allen for head coaching vacancy

The Bears aren’t done interviewing head coaching candidates. They’re set to talk to Saints DC Dennis Allen.

The Chicago Bears are starting to schedule second interviews for their head coaching vacancy, but don’t appear to be done bringing other candidates in yet for their first round of interviews.

According to Nick Underhill of NewOrleans.Football, the Bears will be interviewing New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen sometime next week.

Allen has been the Saints defensive coordinator since 2015, slowly turning them from one of the worst defenses in the league, to one of the best over the course of seven seasons. He also spent time with the Saints in the mid-to-late 2000s as a positional coach on the defense, helping them win Super Bowl XLIV before getting his first crack as a defensive coordinator with the Denver Broncos in 2011.

After one season with the Broncos, Allen was hired as the Oakland Raiders head coach in 2012. He compiled a dismal 8-28 record in two and a half seasons, finishing 4-12 in both 2012 and 2013. After an 0-4 start in 2014, Allen was fired.

Allen’s candidacy for the Bears job is interesting, considering they have already interviewed current Saints college scouting director Jeff Ireland and Miami Dolphins senior personnel director Reggie McKenzie for the general manager job. Ireland currently works with Allen and McKenzie hired him in his first major move when he was the Raiders general manager in 2012.

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Bears complete interviews with Byron Leftwich, Reggie McKenzie on Thursday

Bucs OC Byron Leftwich and Dolphins senior personnel exec Reggie McKenzie interviewed for the Bears’ head coach and GM jobs on Thursday.

The Chicago Bears are in the middle of their searches for a new general manager and head coach following the firings of Ryan Pace and Matt Nagy last week.

Chairman George McCaskey, President/CEO Ted Phillips, Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian, VP of Player Engagement Lamar ‘Soup’ Campbell and Senior VP of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tanesha Wade will be conducting the GM search for the Bears, where they’ve been conducting interviews.

They completed two more interviews for their head coach job with Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich and for their GM job with Miami Dolphins senior personnel executive Reggie McKenzie on Thursday.

Leftwich has learned under one of the best in Bruce Arians and won a Super Bowl with Tom Brady. While many will be quick to point to Brady as the main reason for Tampa Bay’s success, Leftwich led a top offense with Jameis Winston back in 2019. Leftwich has called plays for the Buccaneers for the last two seasons, where he’s had a chance to build his offense. He started his coaching career with the Arizona Cardinals, where he served as quarterback coach (2017-18) and served as interim offensive coordinator (2018).

McKenzie boasts 27 years of NFL experience, where he’s served as a senior personnel executive with the Dolphins since 2019. Before that, McKenzie was the general manager for the Oakland Raiders from 2012-18. He got his start with the Green Bay Packers as a pro personnel assistant (1994-96) before being promoted to pro personnel director (1997-2007). He was Green Bay’s director of football operations from 2008-11.

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Why losing personnel executive Reggie McKenzie could be good for him and the Dolphins

There’s some benefit to losing executives.

With the 2021 regular season over, teams around the NFL have fired coaches and general managers in hopes to find someone better fit to run their organization.

On Sunday, the Chicago Bears put in a request to interview Dolphins senior personnel executive Reggie McKenzie for their open general manager position left after firing Ryan Pace, according to the MMQB’s Albert Breer.

The former NFL linebacker has been with Miami in this same role in 2019. Prior to joining the Dolphins, McKenzie was the Raiders general manager from 2012-2018.

This would be a great opportunity for McKenzie to get back into the top front office role that he’s probably deserving of another shot at. The Bears will have a second-year quarterback who was highly-touted coming out this past year in Justin Fields as well as many other pieces to build around.

For the Dolphins, if McKenzie were to be hired away, they would actually be compensated. The NFL has instituted a rule that teams that have minority coaches or executives hired from their staffs would receive two compensatory third-round picks, one in each of the next two drafts.

This hiring could work out well for both McKenzie and the Dolphins, as both sides would benefit in one way or another.

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Bears request to interview Dolphins’ Reggie McKenzie for GM vacancy

The Bears are looking to interview Dolphins senior personnel executive Reggie McKenzie for their GM vacancy.

The Chicago Bears fired general manager Ryan Pace last week, which finds Chicago searching for their next GM.

Chairman George McCaskey, President/CEO Ted Phillips, Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian, VP of Player Engagement Lamar ‘Soup’ Campbell and Senior VP of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tanesha Wade will be conducting the GM search for the Bears, where they’ve already started lining up interviews.

According to SI’s Albert Breer, the Bears have requested to interview Dolphins senior personnel executive Reggie McKenzie for their vacant GM job.

McKenzie boasts 27 years of NFL experience, where he’s served as a senior personnel executive with the Dolphins since 2019. Before that, McKenzie was the general manager for the Oakland Raiders from 2012-18. He got his start with the Green Bay Packers as a pro personnel assistant (1994-96) before being promoted to pro personnel director (1997-2007). He was Green Bay’s director of football operations from 2008-11.

The Bears have also requested interviews with Colts assistant GM Ed Dodds, Colts director of college scouting Morocco Brown, Steelers VP Omar Khan, Browns VP of Football Operations Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, Bills assistant GM Joe Schoen and former Texas GM Rick Smith among others.

Here’s a look at the complete list of head coach and GM candidates the Bears have requested to interview:

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Don’t forget Reggie McKenzie’s role in the Khalil Mack trade

Don’t forget Reggie McKenzie’s role in the Khalil Mack trade

Just as the Raiders had nearly put the Khalil Mack trade behind them, the deal that shook the NFL in 2018 returned like a bad habit.

A recent report from The Athletic brought the subject back to center stage. Word is, the Raiders tried to reacquire Mack via trade just before this year’s free-agent period began.

Coach Jon Gruden has caught a lot of grief from NFL observers for the original deal, which torpedoed his first season back with the Raiders. He likely would’ve been criticized for bringing Mack back, too. Some might have called it an admission of wrongdoing.

It’s not as though the Raiders received nothing for Mack, however. Running back Josh Jacobs headlines the trade on Las Vegas’ end. But even if you love the deal, the Raiders were essentially forced to trade Mack, a former NFL Defensive Player of the Year in his prime, just before the regular season began.

And whose fault was that? Looking back, the clear answer is former Raiders general manager Reggie McKenzie. According to a report by The Athletic’s Vic Tafur (the same report that unfortunately reintroduced this topic), Mack was already upset with McKenzie’s actions as GM well before Gruden arrived in 2018.

“Mack clearly was frustrated that the Raiders decided to extend quarterback Derek Carr and guard Gabe Jackson’s contracts — both fellow 2014 draft picks — before taking care of him. And they spent their 2018 budget on other players, leaving them enough cap space to only afford the $13.8 million that Mack was due to make on his fifth-year option.

“From that point on, (Mack) would not talk to anyone in our organization,” owner Mark Davis told ESPN in November 2018. “Not (general manager) Reggie (McKenzie), not Jon, not anybody. … Everybody thinks that Jon’s the one who wanted to get rid of him. Jon wanted him badly.”

Carr became the highest-paid player in the NFL when he signed his deal in 2017. He played well enough in 2016 to earn a hefty salary, that was clear. One week after Carr signed, former Raiders guard Gabe Jackson inked his own enormous 5-year contract.

Jackson had played extremely well, too. Put in isolation, those deals aren’t terrible.

But that McKenzie didn’t somehow, someway make sure he had enough cap room to give Mack his own large contract was an incredible blunder. If McKenzie had discussed his strategy (assuming he had one) with Mack, perhaps it would have worked. Whatever their level of communication was, it wasn’t good enough for the Raiders. Even during Mack’s holdout, McKenzie was nonchalant. And I think Mack was totally justified in standing his ground and knowing his worth.

McKenzie was a victim of his own success in the 2014 NFL Draft, to an extent. But looking at his three picks in question here, it’s clear which two are the top players. The Jackson deal was a head-scratcher, for that reason. Maybe McKenzie had a strategy to keep all three, but again, if he did, it didn’t work.

This doesn’t absolve Gruden, either. He was running the show when the Raiders were forced to deal. There’s probably more he could have done to get Mack on board. Though it’s hard to say what, other than less free agent spending in 2018, as Tafur mentioned.

Given the enormous impact that Mack’s departure had on Gruden’s first season, I’m sure he’d do more if he had another chance.

But it’s likely nothing would have stopped what McKenzie had already set in motion.

When McKenzie first arrived with the Raiders, taking over GM duties for the late Al Davis, he talked a big game. In many ways, he backed it up. As he slashed payroll to start his tenure — preparing for a massive team rebuild — McKenzie talked about “out of whack” contracts. And to be fair, many of the last deals made by Davis were just that.

But in the end, McKenzie’s judgment about how much to pay whom, not to mention when to pay them, was seriously out of whack in its own right.

Thank goodness Gruden and the Raiders have Jacobs. Cornerback Damon Arnette and wide receiver Bryan Edwards are part of the Mack trade, too. Plus, Las Vegas signed DE Yannick Ngakoue after failing to reacquire Mack. He and DE Maxx Crosby could form a potent pass rush in 2021.

So this can still be the year the Raiders finally forget about Mack. Pass rush is the only remedy. Of course, Mack and the Bears visit Allegiant Stadium Week 5. Ideally for the Raiders, this trade is an afterthought by then and rarely, if ever, brought up again.

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Miami Dolphins executive on shortlist for Falcons GM position

Dolphins’ executive on shortlist for Falcons GM position

The Miami Dolphins’ rebuild has been powered by the efforts of not just general manager Chris Grier and not just the coaching efforts of Brian Flores and his staff — but rather a talented group of evaluators who are also involved in Miami’s roster building efforts. Among them? Senior Personnel Executive Reggie McKenzie, who in the past has been charged with running the Las Vegas Raiders as their general manager from 2012 through 2018 before joining the Dolphins’ staff.

His experience in making personnel decisions has undoubtedly been a valuable piece of the puzzle for Miami — although his ability to provide the Dolphins key insights may be up in the air. Not because of any wrongdoing, but rather because McKenzie has been listed on a report from ESPN’s Adam Schefter notating members of the Atlanta Falcons’ shortlist to fill their own general manager vacancy.

“The Falcons’ list includes former Texans GM Rick Smith, Bears assistant director of personnel Champ Kelly, Rams director of college scouting Brad Holmes and former Raiders GM Reggie McKenzie, among others, according to league sources,” wrote Schefter in his report.

It isn’t very often that a general manager gets a second chance at running a team, so we aren’t sure that McKenzie should be considered the frontrunner for the position. Also notable? McKenzie is given consideration for the Falcons job presumably ahead of Miami’s own assistant general manager, Marvin Allen. But the six years of experience McKenzie offers running a team certainly brought some valuable lessons — and McKenzie’s Raiders were, at their peak in 2016 — a 12-4 team buzzing with a young quarterback in Derek Carr. That season folded in on itself when Carr was injured late in the season and never recaptured that initial magic.

But if the Dolphins survive this 2021 wave of general manager hirings, they ought to brace themselves for some attrition. If the Dolphins continue to trend in the direction they appear to be, it won’t be long before the rest of the league comes calling and wants a piece of Miami’s front office formula for themselves; be it from McKenzie or somewhere else.

Dolphins front office an advantage amid uncertain scouting in 2020

Dolphins front office an advantage amid uncertain scouting in 2020

The immediate future of football on all fronts could best be described as “to be determined”. The NFL appears aligned to have a season this fall and is laying the groundwork for what a return to action looks like with the NFL’s Players Association. There will be compromising and concessions to be made, but nevertheless there seems to be an agreement to be made between the two fronts.

As for college football, seeing a return to the field is much messier — considering the players do not have a union and they’re not paid professionals, how can the NCAA or individual conferences regulate a return to action? There’s no easy answer there and everything is on the table.

Including possibly playing football in the spring instead of in the fall.

And if it comes to that, how NFL teams choose to attack evaluating players for the NFL Draft will be fascinating to watch. Will players play the start of the season and withdraw to prep for the Draft? Will players skip out on the season all together and bank on their previously existing game tape? Is there another avenue that’s not been previously thought of? Evaluating players will become the “wild, wild west” where everyone is going to have a different approach — and those teams with the best scouts will stand apart when it comes time to actually make decisions.

Which is why Dolphins fans should not lose sleep at night over the potential of drafting in 2021. The Dolphins’ front office boasts plenty of experience and plenty of valued minds across the league.

General manager Chris Grier is front row and center — although his two drafts as the unquestioned leader in Miami still need time to develop before we can make any firm decisions. But Miami’s front office leadership extends well beyond just Grier.

The Dolphins also have Reggie McKenzie on staff, the architect of the Raiders’ turnaround in the 2010s — who serves as a Senior Personnel Executive. Miami’s assistant general manager is Marvin Allen, who spent 16 years within the Patriots organization as a scout from 1993-2008 and also got a taste of building a winner in Kansas City as the Chiefs’ director of college scouting for four seasons.

Should the Dolphins have to place the trust in these men to get the choices right with some of their critical selections, they’ve got a great group to do the job right. Remember, Miami owns two picks in each of the first two rounds of the 2021 NFL Draft. But assuming they don’t have the answers they need, the alternative option for Miami isn’t all that bad, either. Trade back in the draft, add picks for a more traditional cycle in 2022 and reload for next season all over again.

6 Shrine Bowl prospects who would be great fits for the Dolphins

Yesterday marked the end of the 2020 East/West Shrine Bowl. The Dolphins would be wise to target these players from the game.

The first of the NFL’s premiere all-star events is in the books — the East/West Shrine Bowl was played yesterday on NFL Network. And unlike many exhibition games, this contest did not disappoint! The East squad pulled out a 31-27 victory, providing a plethora of players with a showcase of their skills.

Not everyone thrived, but there are certainly a number of draft prospects who caught the eye of the Miami Dolphins — and the team would be wise to target in the late rounds of the 2020 NFL Draft.

Here are the top 8 prospect fits from this past week’s Shrine Bowl for the Dolphins:

OL Michael Onwenu, Michigan

Onwneu is a massive man — he checked in this week at the weigh ins at a whopping 362 pounds. But don’t let that size fool you, he’s fluid and with long arms is a persistent puncher to maintain space as a blocker. Onwenu was largely considered one of the winners of the week.


WR Binjimen Victor, Ohio State

The Dolphins offense already has plenty of size at wide receiver but Victor brings pretty sharp route running skills to compliment his 6-foot-4 frame. Never really given the chance to shine at Ohio State due to depth at wide receiver, Victor is about as slept on as you can be for a prospect from a national championship contender. He’s a good football player, first and foremost.


CB Nevelle Clarke, UCF

The Dolphins covet passion for the game and you’ll have a hard time finding someone who had more fun on the field this past week than Clarke. A long, productive corner with a nose for the football, Clarke would provide Miami with positive energy and a much needed boost to their lean cornerback room.


DE Alex Highsmith, Charlotte

Highsmith is the rare Shrine prospect who may get drafted in the top-75 to 100 picks. So if Miami wants to target him, they’re going to have to take him at 56, 70 or manufacture more picks. Either way — Highsmith is an explosive athlete off the edge who found himself at Charlotte as a late bloomer. There’s no questioning his fit for the pros now, though.


DE Kendall Coleman, Syracuse

Coleman is a little one dimensional as a pass rusher but had a strong showing throughout the course of this past week at Tropicana Field. Miami’s needs on the edge will require a lot more than just one added body — and Coleman figures to be in play in the third day of this year’s draft as a developmental pass rusher. He’s got the quickness on the edge to beat tackles at first contact.


RB James Robinson, Illinois State

The Dolphins need someone who isn’t afraid to run with a little attitude in their backfield. Robinson fits that bill quite well. A condensed runner with over 220 pounds on his frame, Robinson has rumbled for over 3,000 rushing yards and 30 touchdowns at Illinois State over the past two seasons. Robinson was one of the stars of yesterday’s Shrine Bowl and helped his stock as much as anyone who played.

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