Ranking Matt Patricia in the pantheon of terrible coaching hires

Matt Patricia made a recent list of top 10 worst head coaching hires of all-time, but did hiring Patricia really seem that bad back in 2017?

The good folks over at Pro Football Network recently ranked their top 10 worst coaching hires in NFL history. As expected, Matt Patricia represented the Detroit Lions on the list.

Patricia checked in at No. 7 overall on the list. He was the only Detroit coach in the top 10, though Rod Marinelli did manage an honorable mention. Here’s what they said about Patricia,

Many of Bill Belichick’s former underlings have attempted to instill the New England Patriots’ way of doing things with other organizations, and it typically hasn’t gone well.

Matt Patricia was no exception. The ex-Patriots DC’s reign as the Lions’ head coach featured one disaster after another. Patricia’s domineering approach backfired, leading to a toxic relationship with the Lions’ locker room.

This started the wheels turning in my mind…

I thought back to the aftermath of Jim Caldwell being fired for not being able to break through with a very talented, albeit thin and defensively challenged roster. In the process of hiring Patricia, he was widely heralded as a very solid choice — and not just by Lions sympathizers. His résumé as the architect of the great Patriots defenses under Bill Belichick was well-established.

Also well-established at that time was the fact PFN smartly led with: Bill Belichick proteges have made for spectacularly bad head coaches. There was some very real skepticism from many voices that the rocket scientist who nobody had ever heard talk before wouldn’t be an exception, even before he was hired. Some of us wanted Mike Vrabel, or a more experienced coach who had tasted some postseason success, to guide a Lions team that was poised to compete in 2017 but needed a lift.

But the fact remains that Patricia did have a strong enough track record and buzz in the NFL to merit a choice. On the surface, back when Martha Ford hired him, there wasn’t a lot of consternation that he was a bad choice. An iffy choice, maybe, but even the most hardened skeptics didn’t envision just how truly awful Patricia would be as a head coach and leader of men. Hindsight trumps the foresight after such a traumatic experience, but it truly was impossible to know just how terrible Patricia’s people-management skills and dictatorial style would turn out back in 2017.

And because of that, I don’t rank him nearly as bad of a coaching hire as many others, sone of whom made the list. The Jets hiring Adam Gase for a second go-around immediately after he napalmed the Dolphins organization stands out as a much worse hiring decision. The Brown hiring wildly inexperienced Freddie Kitchens to take over for a disastrous retread hiring of Hue Jackson–which I’d also rank worse than Patricia’s hiring in Detroit–is also much worse at the time of hiring than what Detroit tried. Those are No. 10 and No. 9 on PFN’s list, but I would elevate both of them above Detroit and Patricia both then and now. Jackson to Cleveland was No. 4 on PFN’s list and deservedly so.

I thought back to Rod Marinelli when he was hired in 2006. He had been a very successful and universally lauded defensive line coach for over 20 years. Marinelli had also been the assistant head coach for four seasons with the very successful Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He was a likable, cantankerous personality. That he turned out to be a truly awful head coach owed more to his aversion to caring about the offensive side of the ball as well as Matt Millen’s unspeakably bad player personnel decisions. Honorable mention seems right for Marinelli.

I would argue that the Lions decision to hire Marty Mornhinweg back in 2001 was worse than either of them. Matt Millen got a little too far ahead of the curve in hiring a 38-year-old coordinator with just six NFL seasons of experience. All of that experience came from organizations (Green Bay and then San Francisco) that had Hall of Fame quarterbacks and well-established systems largely on autopilot. When Steve Young left Mornhinweg’s 49ers offense in 1999, so did any evidence of success. That should have been a sign for Millen and the Lions that maybe the truculent Mornhinweg wasn’t all he was hyped to be.

This is not a defense of Patricia. He was probably a worse head coaching entity than any other person the Lions have hired in the Super Bowl era.

So Patricia gets the nod as the worst Lions coach, but not necessarily the worst Detroit coaching hire. He was more of a well-intentioned decision and thought process that simply failed spectacularly.

Matt Eberflus hints at bringing in outside staff to help with Bears defense

Matt Eberflus said they’re “having conversations” about possibly bringing in outside coaches and staff to help with the Bears defense.

The Chicago Bears are entering their first extended break of the 2023 season after a decisive 40-20 victory over the Washington Commanders, and it could be a golden opportunity for head coach Matt Eberflus to bring in some help for his coaching staff.

Eberflus met with the media on Friday afternoon and was asked about the possibility of bringing in someone from the outside to help on the staff, specifically the defense. Eberflus gave a non-committal answer but left the door open so that such a move could be made. “Yeah, we’re having conversations on that,” Eberflus said when asked if they were considering looking at bringing in help for the defensive staff during the break. “If it works, if it’s right for us, that’s great. If it doesn’t, then it will be what it is. But we’re still looking at it; we have an open mind. There’s nothing wrong with bringing somebody in who can help that has a different perspective.”

Eberflus was also asked if he was still planning on calling defensive plays, and while he said it was the plan, that’s also up in the air depending on what happens over the next week or so. “We’ll see where it is. Right now, my plan is to do that. We’ll see where it goes.”

The Bears have been without a defensive coordinator for their last four games after Alan Williams missed their Week 2 matchup against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and resigned a few days later. Eberflus has been calling the plays since then, but he left the door open for help from someone on the outside.

An obvious candidate to come in is Rod Marinelli, the former Bears defensive coordinator who worked with Eberflus during their days with the Dallas Cowboys. Marinelli last coached with the Las Vegas Raiders from 2020–2021.

Denver’s defense knocks the 2008 Lions from the worst ever through 4 games

It’s hard to imagine anyone being worse than the 2008 Lions defense, but the 2023 Broncos are off to an even worse start

The 2008 Detroit Lions have been the gold standard of suck for 15 years. No team has ever sported a worse defense than Rod Marinelli’s winless, witless Lions.

They started with a brutal opening four games, losing them all badly:

  • Falcons 34-21
  • Packers 48-25
  • 49ers 31-13
  • Bears 34-7

That’s 147 points allowed, an average of 36.8. They allowed 429 yards per game. It was awful.

Somehow, the Denver Broncos’ defense in 2023 has been even worse to start a season. After Week 4, they’ve allowed 150 points and an average of 461.5 yards.

The raw stats are bad for Denver, but the advanced metrics and analytics are even worse. How bad are they? They’re officially worse than the 2008 Lions, according to the DVOA metrics from Aaron Schatz.

 

DVOA measures a team’s defensive success based on the down-and-distance of each play and calculates how much more — or less — successful they are compared to all other teams. The higher the number, the worse the defense. And until now, no team had ever earned a higher number through four games than the 2008 Lions.

The 2023 Broncos do have a feather in their cap that Detroit never claimed back in 2008: a win. Denver rallied to beat the Chicago Bears 31-28 on Sunday.

Former Lions head coach Rod Marinelli is retiring

Marinelli bombed as a head coach in Detroit but was a very successful defensive line coach and coordinator elsewhere

Rod Marinelli is set to hang up his coaching whistle after almost 50 years at the collegiate and NFL levels. Ian Rapoport of NFL.com reports the 72-year-old Marinelli is planning to retire and move to Texas.

Marinelli is best-known for the worst experience on his coaching ledger, his time as the Detroit Lions head coach from 2006-2008. His Lions went 10-38 and ended with the first 0-16 season in NFL history. It was Marinelli’s only head coaching experience.

Outside of Detroit, Marinelli has earned the reputation of being one of the greatest defensive line coaches of the Super Bowl era. A gifted teacher of technique with tough-nosed love for his players, Marinelli helped craft players like Warren Sapp, Tommie Harris and most recently Maxx Crosby–among many others–into very good NFL linemen.

He worked with Sapp as the DL coach and assistant head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1996-2005, when he was hired by Lions GM Matt Millen to take over a Detroit team that slumped to a 5-11 finish.

After his unsuccessful reign in Detroit, Marinelli went on to lengthy stints as the defensive coordinator and assistant head coach with the Chicago Bears and Dallas Cowboys. He was most recently working with the DL in Las Vegas.

Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli planning to retire

Legendary DL coach Rod Marinelli planning to retire after 25 years in NFL ranks

One of the most respected veteran assistants in NFL history looks to be calling it a career. Rod Marinelli is headed for retirement, according to NFL Media’s Ian Rapoport.

Marinelli spent the past two seasons with the Raiders. The longtime NFL defensive coordinator and defensive line coach came onboard in 2020 to coach the defensive line. Then with the firing of Paul Guenther late that season, Marinelli stepped in as the interim defensive coordinator.

Last season the Raiders opted to hire Gus Bradley as the new defensive coordinator and the one stipulation was that Marinelli remained at the D-line coach. And Bradley had no issue with that as Marinelli is the best in the business.

It was a similar situation in Tampa when Jon Gruden took over as head coach in 2002. Marinelli had been the D-line coach with the Buccaneers since 1996 and Gruden retained him in that role and added the title of assistant head coach.

In 2006 becoming an actual head coach came calling and he spent three years in Detroit coaching the Lions. Then it was on to Chicago where he began as the D-line coach and after one season took over as defensive coordinator.

After four years in Chicago, he moved on to Dallas where he spent seven years (2013-19) as the defensive line coach and defensive coordinator.

Marinelli will be 73 in July and with the Raiders’ new coaching staff, it appears as if now is the right time to ride off into the Texas sunset.

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Former Bears players begging for Rod Marinelli as next defensive coordinator

Former Bears Lance Briggs and Charles Tillman want Rod Marinelli to return to Chicago as Matt Eberflus’ defensive coordinator.

The Chicago Bears have found their new head coach in Indianapolis Colts defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus, which means there are some big changes coming to Chicago.

Not only is a defensive scheme change on the way — as the Bears will transition from a 3-4 to a 4-3 base defense — but it’s about getting the right coaching staff in place.

As Eberflus prepares to assemble his coaching staff, there are some names that are already being floated around in connection with him, including Colts linebackers coach Dave Borgonzi, who Eberflus is believed to be taking with him to Chicago.

Eberflus previously worked with Rod Marinelli for five years during his time with the Dallas Cowboys. So it’s an easy assumption to make that Eberflus could try to lure Marinelli from Las Vegas to Chicago.

It’s also something that former Bears players Charles Tillman and Lance Briggs are begging for.

Marinelli is currently the defensive line coach in Las Vegas, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Marinelli perhaps return to the Bears, this time under Eberflus.

Marinelli was Chicago’s defensive coordinator and assistant head coach from 2010-12, which is when Tillman and Briggs played for the Bears.

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Daniel Jeremiah and Bucky Brooks stumble upon ‘secret sauce’ to Raiders newfound pass rush

Daniel Jeremiah digs up stat that suggests Raiders newfound pass rush is no fluke

Over the first couple weeks of this season, some interesting stats show the Raiders are getting some extraordinary pressure. If you’d like to pump the brakes, it’s easy enough to say that it’s been just two games. Or you could listen to Daniel Jeremiah and Bucky Brooks whose recent show seems to have stumbled upon a formula that the Raiders have which suggests these first two weeks are no fluke.

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CULZWPOBkQE/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

The thrust of the show was analyzing ‘get-off’ as it relates to great pass rushers. Which is how much time from the ball coming off the ground on the snap to when the defender’s shoulders come across the line of scrimmage. And it appears as if there is a near perfect correlation between the two.

Jeremiah lists off names of the players in the top ten in get-off time last season and this season. And there are some elite pass rushers at the top of it. For instance, he mentions the top five last year being TJ Watt, Bud Dupree, Carl Lawson, Yannick Ngakoue, and Myles Garrett.

That’s a hell of a list. One of whom — Ngakoue — joined the Raiders this offseason, and instantly we see an improved pass rush.

“We’ve talked about maybe the most improved defense in the NFL through two weeks, the Raiders,” Jeremiah said. “You’ve got Ngakoue, who for the second year in a row — obviously last year he wasn’t with the Raiders — he’s in the top five. So, he’s proven what he does getting off the rock. So, Ngakoue’s up there, he’s number three. Maxx Crosby’s number seven. So, you’ve got two rockets coming off the edges there for the Raiders.”

The play of Crosby and Ngakoue has a trickle down effect. A high tide raises all boats, if you will. Carl Nassib has been adding pass rush as well and the interior guys have been given some chances too due to the outside pressure. For instance, last week Solomon Thomas had his first ever two-sack game.

Bucky Brooks takes it a step further, mentioning that having an outstanding defensive line coach is also crucial to helping these players find their game.

“I think you have to pay a premium for the positions that we say are vital when it comes to coaching. Not only paying for pass rushers and offensive linemen, but if i’m a head coach in the National Football League, the first couple areas that I’m taking care of are the offensive and defensive line. . . I am investing in those guys, because I think there’s the secret sauce to being able to be a great defensive line coach.”

Brooks could be onto something, and Jon Gruden would seem to agree. We already know that when Gruden came back to coaching in 2018, he made Tom Cable a top priority to coach the Oline. And last year, he was able to get longtime well-respected Dline coach, Rod Marinelli onboard as well.

Maxx Crosby is entering his second season under Marinelli, who Gruden held onto even with the change at defensive coordinator and overhauling most of the rest of the defensive staff. And clearly we’re seeing the benefits of that time they’ve had together.

It’s weird and foreign to be talking about the Raiders as having a good all-around pass rush. They’ve had the league’s worst pass rush over the last few years since trading away Khalil Mack. And seemingly overnight, they are discussed among the best in the league. Now we know why.

Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli wins PFWA Paul “Dr Z” Zimmerman Award

That annual Pro Football Writers of America awards are trickling out. Monday they announced the winners of the the Paul “Dr Z” Zimmerman Award, given for lifetime achievement as an assistant coach. Each year there are two recipients of the award. …

That annual Pro Football Writers of America awards are trickling out. Monday they announced the winners of the the Paul “Dr Z” Zimmerman Award, given for lifetime achievement as an assistant coach.

Each year there are two recipients of the award. And one of the winners is Raiders defensive line coach, Rod Marinelli.

The longtime NFL defensive assistant was in his third year as a finalist for the award.

Marinelli is entering his 26th year as an NFL assistant coach and his second as the defensive line coach for the Raiders.

Prior to joining the Raiders last year, Marinelli was the defensive coordinator for the Cowboys for six years. He had one stint as a head coach for the Lions over three seasons from 2006-08. He got a Super Bowl ring with the Buccaneers in 2003 under Jon Gruden.

The other assistant to take home the award is 49ers running backs coach Bobby Turner.

Turner is also entering his 26th season as an NFL assistant coach. He has spent the past four seasons in San Francisco. Prior to that he spent two seasons in Atlanta, and five seasons in Washington. But he’s most well known for his 15-year stint with the Denver Broncos (1995-2009). He has coached three of those teams in the Super Bowl, getting two rings with the Broncos.

Other finalists on the ballot were Bob McKittrick (49ers, Rams, Chargers), Floyd Peters (Giants, 49ers, Lions, Cardinals, Vikings, Buccaneers, Raiders), and John Teerlinck (Browns, Rams, Vikings, Lions, Broncos, Colts).

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Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli finalist for PFWA Paul ‘Dr. Z’ Zimmerman Award

Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli finalist for PFWA Paul ‘Dr. Z’ Zimmerman Award

For the third straight year, longtime NFL coach Rod Marinelli has been nominated for the Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman Award. The award is given out annually by the Pro Football Writers of America for lifetime achievement as an NFL assistant coach.

Marinelli is heading into his 26th year as an NFL assistant coach and his second as the defensive line coach for the Raiders. Last season he stepped in as the interim Defensive Coordinator for the final three games after the firing of Paul Guenther.

Defensive coordinator is a familiar position for Marinelli. Prior to coming to Las Vegas, he had held that position for six years, pulling double duty as the defensive line coach.

Marinelli entered the league as a defensive line coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1996 where he would eventually coach under Jon Gruden for three seasons. There he won a Super Bowl and went on to be the head coach of the Detroit Lions for three seasons (2006-08) — his only time a head coach. From there he went on to be the DL coach, DC, and Assistant Head Coach in Chicago for four seasons. He’s arguably the most respected current longtime assistant in the NFL.

Other finalists on the ballot are Bob McKittrick (49ers, Rams, Chargers), Floyd Peters (Giants, 49ers, Lions, Cardinals, Vikings, Buccaneers, Raiders), John Teerlinck (Browns, Rams, Vikings, Lions, Broncos, Colts), and Bobby Turner (Falcons, Washington, Broncos, 49ers).

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Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli finalist for PFWA Paul ‘Dr. Z’ Zimmerman Award

Raiders DL coach Rod Marinelli finalist for PFWA Paul ‘Dr. Z’ Zimmerman Award

For the third straight year, longtime NFL coach Rod Marinelli has been nominated for the Paul “Dr. Z” Zimmerman Award. The award is given out annually by the Pro Football Writers of America for lifetime achievement as an NFL assistant coach.

Marinelli is heading into his 26th year as an NFL assistant coach and his second as the defensive line coach for the Raiders. Last season he stepped in as the interim Defensive Coordinator for the final three games after the firing of Paul Guenther.

Defensive coordinator is a familiar position for Marinelli. Prior to coming to Las Vegas, he had held that position for six years, pulling double duty as the defensive line coach.

Marinelli entered the league as a defensive line coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1996 where he would eventually coach under Jon Gruden for three seasons. There he won a Super Bowl and went on to be the head coach of the Detroit Lions for three seasons (2006-08) — his only time a head coach. From there he went on to be the DL coach, DC, and Assistant Head Coach in Chicago for four seasons. He’s arguably the most respected current longtime assistant in the NFL.

Other finalists on the ballot are Bob McKittrick (49ers, Rams, Chargers), Floyd Peters (Giants, 49ers, Lions, Cardinals, Vikings, Buccaneers, Raiders), John Teerlinck (Browns, Rams, Vikings, Lions, Broncos, Colts), and Bobby Turner (Falcons, Washington, Broncos, 49ers).

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