Report: Falcons expected to hire two defensive assistants

Two more assistant coaches were linked to the Atlanta Falcons staff on Tuesday.

Two more assistants were linked to the new Atlanta Falcons coaching staff on Tuesday.

As reported by NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the team is expected to hire Jon Hoke, the defensive coordinator at the University of Maryland, to serve as defensive backs coach and Ted Monachino, formerly a defensive assistant for the Chicago Bears, to be the linebackers coach.

Prior to his two seasons as Maryland’s defensive coordinator, Hoke served as a defensive backs coach with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Chicago Bears, Houston Texans, and was the co-defensive coordinator at South Carolina.

Monachino spent time with the Jacksonville Jaguars, Baltimore Ravens, and Indianapolis Colts, before serving as an assistant and linebackers coach for the Bears the past two seasons.

New Falcons head coach Arthur Smith has already hired 11 assistant coaches, including all three coordinators.

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Report: OLB coach Ted Monachino not expected to return to Bears

The Bears have another coaching vacancy to fill as outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino isn’t expected to return to the team in 2021.

The Chicago Bears already have several openings on their coaching staff on both offense and defense. And not long after promoting Sean Desai to defensive coordinator, they’ll now be looking to fill another vacancy.

Outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino isn’t expected to return to the Bears, according to the Chicago Tribune’s Brad Biggs.

Monachino served as outside linebackers coach for the last two seasons under Chuck Pagano, where he worked with Khalil Mack, Robert Quinn and Leonard Floyd among others.

That now leaves the Bears with three defensive coach vacancies to fill, as they need coaches for outside linebackers, safeties and defensive line, following Desai’s promotion and Jay Rodgers’ departure to the Los Angeles Chargers.

Chicago also has two spots to fill on offense as passing game coordinator Dave Ragone and running backs coach Charles London have left to join Arthur Smith’s staff in Atlanta.

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Bears OLB coach Ted Monachino challenges Robert Quinn to improve his performance

Bears OLB Robert Quinn hasn’t performed up to expectations this season. And the Bears coaches will be the first to admit it.

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Robert Quinn’s first play as a Chicago Bear was a memorable one — recording a strip-sack of New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones. But everything since then has been underwhelming.

Which normally wouldn’t be a problem considering how he’s been an overall asset for this defense. But the Bears inked him to a five-year, $70 million contract that demands more. It demands the 11.5 sack performance he had last season, not the single sack he notched eight weeks ago.

And the Bears coaches will be the first to admit it.

“I think with a player like Robert, we got to evaluate him based on the numbers,” Bears outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino said. “And right now, his numbers aren’t where he wants them, I want them or any of us in the city wants them.”

Quinn was brought in to take advantage of one-on-one opportunities opposite  star Khalil Mack, who demands double teams. But it hasn’t exactly worked out that way. There have been a lot of missed opportunities left on the field for Quinn, and his coaches know it.

“You’d like to think, and I know Robert would like to think, that anytime he’s singled is an opportunity,” Monachino said. “He’s had plenty and hasn’t been able to finish on some of the snaps that he could have. I will tell you this, the opponents that we play understand that we have two guys who are elite. They do everything they can to protect their quarterback. We, as a staff, got to figure out ways to beat those protections. As a player, and as a position coach, we’ve got to figure out ways to beat that individual protector. I think Robert has a real good idea and real good plan going into every week. He has missed some opportunities.

“He has to make a play. There’s no 28-point plays in football. You eat an elephant one bite at a time. He needs to start taking bites.”

When the Bears signed Quinn to a five-year, $70 million deal this offseason, everyone believed they were getting a clear upgrade over former first-round pick Leonard Floyd, who they released back in May.

But that same Leonard Floyd was just named NFC Defensive Player of the Week for his three-sack performance as a member of the Los Angeles Rams, which is enough to make you wonder if general manager Ryan Pace is already regretting the move.

For what it’s worth, Floyd’s production had dipped over the last three seasons with Chicago, where he had a career-low three sacks with the Bears just last season. But in nine games with the Rams, Floyd already has a career-high seven sacks.

The Bears parted ways with Floyd because they couldn’t justify paying him $13.22 million. But it’s hard to justify shelling out $70 million for a pass rusher with one sack in nine games this season.

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Here’s how often you should expect to see Robert Quinn on the field every game

Bears OLB coach Ted Monachino says Robert Quinn’s reps this season are based on production and health, not just the playing time.

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The Chicago Bears shelled out a ton of money — $70 million over five years, to be exact — to add some more talent to their pass rush in veteran Robert Quinn, who was coming off a 10.5-sack season with the Dallas Cowboys.

The combination of Quinn and Khalil Mack was enough to make many Bears fans drool. And yet, it feels like we haven’t seen the full extent of what this duo could do together on the field. Mostly because Quinn’s snap counts have hovered around 50% through these first five weeks.

Quinn was dealing with an ankle injury that kept him sidelined for the season opener, but he made his debut against the New York Giants the following week, where he recorded a strip-sack on his first play as a Bear.

Since then, Quinn’s snap count has slowly increased from 38% in Week 2 to 58% in Week 5. And according to outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino, that’s about the full extent that we’re going to see Quinn on the field.

“We know where he plays best,” said Monachino. “So we are going to try to keep his numbers around that number [58 percent]. It’s somewhere just north of half the snaps. That’s where we are trying to keep him.”

The immediate reaction is why did they shell out a ton of money for a player they’re not going to use more than 60% of the time? But Monachino says that it’s about production, not just the playing time. Also making sure Quinn stays healthy throughout the course of the season.

“We are keeping very close track of his rep count and trying to keep him as fresh as we can,” said Monachino, “so if we do run into two-minute situations at the end of a game, he and Khalil [Mack] are as fresh as possible.”

 


 

Khalil Mack has something to prove, which should worry the rest of the NFL

The last thing that opposing quarterbacks want to see is an angry, more motivated Khalil Mack. But that’s what they’re going to get.

The last thing that opposing quarterbacks want to see is an angry, more motivated Khalil Mack. But that’s exactly what they’re going to get this season as Mack has something to prove in 2020.

Mack has already made it clear that he wasn’t happy with his performance last season, and he’s approached this offseason with plenty to prove. Which is good for the Bears, but not-so-good for Chicago’s opponents.

“Motivation is not an issue with Khalil; never has been,” Bears outside linebackers coach Ted Monachino said, via the Chicago Sun-Times. “But what I’ll tell you is that he has approached this offseason with something to prove — and that’s something that I think we all can be encouraged by.

“I think that that’s something that’s exciting, when a player of his caliber approaches his work the way he has approached it.”

This offseason has been different from others amid the coronavirus pandemic, which has restricted on-field offseason programs at Halas Hall. Still, Mack has continued to prepare for when the Bears next take the field at training camp.

“He’s training like I have never seen anybody train before,” Monachino said .

The 2019 season was a disappointment all around for the Bears, who finished 8-8 after many had them pegged for a return to the postseason before the season started. Even their star player struggled. In 2019, Mack had a career-low 47 tackles and his 8.5 sacks and 14 quarterback hits were his lowest since his rookie season.

When it comes to Mack’s impact on the field, the box score doesn’t tell the whole story. But, ultimately, it’s Mack’s job to get after the quarterback. And he didn’t do that as often as he’s done in the past.

“I just think that this is a special guy that has something to prove and has approached the last several months with a chip on his shoulder,” Monachino said. “And I think that’s good for everybody.”

Mack will certainly be helped by the return of defensive tackle Akiem Hicks, who’s an invaluable part of Chicago’s pass rush, as well as the free-agent acquisition of edge rusher Robert Quinn, who is coming off a 11.5 sack season with the Dallas Cowboys last season.

And following a disappointing season, you know Mack is going to come out angry and determined to wreak havoc on the opposition.

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