Dolphins hire two assistant coaches, working on deal with another

The Dolphins could have a quarterbacks coach with over 20 years of experience.

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After hiring Frank Smith to be their offensive coordinator on Monday, the Miami Dolphins had all three coordinator positions filled.

On Tuesday they continued to find coaches to be assistants on their staff. According to Jason Kendall of The Athletic, Miami hired Atlanta Falcons assistant offensive line coach Chandler Henley.

Prior to following head coach Arthur Smith from Tennessee to Atlanta for one season, Henley spent three seasons as the Titans quality control coach. Henley and Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel played together at Yale, explaining their relationship.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported that Miami is hiring Tyrone McKenzie to be their outside linebackers coach. McKenzie was a third-round pick by the New England Patriots back in 2009 and had a five-year career across three organizations, but he played in just 19 games.

McKenzie began coaching in 2017 with the Los Angeles Rams as the assistant special teams coach. He then spent two seasons as the Titans inside linebackers coach and one year as the Detroit Lions linebackers coach. McKenzie spent 2021 with the Indianapolis Colts.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler also reported Tuesday night that the Dolphins were “working toward” bringing in Darrell Bevell as their pass-game coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Bevell had served as interim head coach in Jacksonville after Urban Meyer was fired.

Bevell has over 20 years of NFL coaching experience, mainly as an offensive coordinator. He’s worked with Brett Favre, Aaron Rodgers, Russell Wilson, and Matthew Stafford, so the Dolphins may be hoping he can help get the most out of Tua Tagovailoa.

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How adding Jamie Collins impacts the Lions roster

Examining how agreeing to terms with hybrid linebacker Jamie Collins impacts the Detroit Lions roster.

The 2020 tampering period is just over a day old and the Detroit Lions have already agreed to terms with several players, including hybrid linebacker Jamie Collins.

Early predictions for where Collins will play in the Lions scheme are all over the map. And for good reason. Of the game film I studied when trying to ascertain where Collins would play, I arrived at one answer — everywhere.

Collins played for the New England Patriots last season, and because their scheme is as close to the Lions as there is in the NFL, it was easy to do an apples-to-apples comparison of how he would be used in Detroit.

In 2019, Collins lined up at all four of the Patriots linebacker spots, even shifting over the slot on occasion. In the games that I watched, he rarely lined up at the same position on back-to-back plays, illustrating his true versatility.

Collins is able to play at all these spots for three major reasons. He has a freaky level of athleticism, can effectively rush the passer, and is one of the better coverage linebackers in the NFL. This combination of skills makes him a unique player and one that fits the Lions like a glove.

Like in New England last season, I don’t expect Collins to stay put at any one position, and honestly, that will complement the way the other Lions linebackers are trending as well.

Lions LBs trending towards positional fluidity

After the conclusion of the 2019 season, I did a film study, examining how the Lions linebacker roles were changing. The results showed that while Jarrad Davis and Devon Kennard — who was released yesterday — held static roles, Jahlani Tavai and Christian Jones’ roles were more fluid.

Now the Lions have three fluid linebackers all signed to multi-year contracts. Collins just signed a three-year deal, Tavai’s rookie contract expires in 2022 and Jones got a mid-year extension that expires in 2021.

Meanwhile, the static off-the-ball linebackers that remain, Davis and Jalen Reeves-Maybin, are in the final year of their contracts. Reeves-Maybin has consistently made the final roster based on his special teams ability, while Davis began to expand his duties to the WILL position in the latter parts of the season, something he may need to do more moving forward.

Will the Lions add more LBs?

If they do, it will surely be a player who is positionally fluid so that they can mesh with the other linebackers currently on the roster.

The most obvious name remaining in free agency is Kamalei Correa, formerly of the Tennessee Titans, who was directly coached by new Lions’ linebacker coach Tyrone McKenzie over the last two seasons. Correa has experience playing the JACK linebacker role, can rush the passer and drop into coverage. He has been a career rotational player, but on the Lions roster, that’s what they likely need right now.

If the Lions look to the draft, there are four top-100 players they are surely watching. Zach Baun (Wisconsin) is an off-the-ball linebacker who has shown a knack for rushing the passer. Josh Uche (Michigan) is lightning quick off the edge and can drop into coverage better than most JACK linebackers. Bradlee Anae (Utah) is primarily a pass rusher but has shown the ability to win from his feet. While Curtis Weaver (Boise State), who at 6-63, 265-pounds, is physically as close to a Dont’a Hightower clone as you will find. Weaver is a junior, but Baun, Uche, Anae were all on the North roster at the Senior Bowl and were coached by the Lions staff.

Adding any one of these players would give the Lions front a significant boost in 2020, even if they are in a limited role to begin the season.

UC Bearcats DC Marcus Freeman reportedly turned down offer from Titans

MMQB’s Albert Breer reported the news first via Twitter on Tuesday afternoon.

The Tennessee Titans’ search for a new linebackers coach continues after the team’s offer to Cincinnati Bearcats defensive coordinator Marcus Freeman was turned down.

Freeman would have been the replacement for Tyrone McKenzie, who came to the mutual decision to part ways with the team earlier this month to join Matt Patricia and the Detroit Lions.

MMQB’s Albert Breer reported the news first via Twitter on Tuesday afternoon.

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The 34-year-old has been with the Bearcats since 2016, joining the staff just days after Luke Fickell was named to the head-coaching position.

Freeman also coached at Purdue, Kent State and Ohio State, where he too the field for then-Buckeyes assistant Fickell from 2004-08.

The Titans certainly have some voids to fill as the offseason continues, but have already addressed some.

Former Houston Texans secondary coach Anthony Midget replaced Kerry Coombs last month, leaving Tennessee potentially on the hunt for a new defensive coordinator and someone to take McKenzie’s place.

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The former may come from within, as multiple reports of coach Mike Vrabel having a heavier hand in the defense this year have emerged since Dean Pees’ departure.

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Decision for Titans, ILBs coach Tyrone McKenzie to part was mutual

Decision for Titans, ILBs coach Tyrone McKenzie to part was mutual

It’s already been quite the offseason for the Tennessee Titans, with the latest departure from the coaching staff being inside linebacker coach Tyrone McKenzie.

It was unclear as to why McKenzie’s name was removed from the online coaching staff list earlier in the week — a situation that became much less muddy when it was announced on Wednesday that McKenzie was leaving Mike Vrabel’s squad for a position with Matt Patricia and the Detroit Lions.

This makes sense, with the connection between the two back in McKenzie’s days with the Patriots.

As to why the Titans and McKenzie chose to go their separate ways was still in question early Wednesday, but it seems the decision was a mutual one.

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Wednesday night, ESPN’s Turron Davenport reported that McKenzie was not fired by the team.

McKenzie really gave the Titans no reason to want him gone, given the strong performances of the position group he coached on a season in which the Titans saw their first AFC Championship Game appearance since 2002.

Players like Jayon Brown, David Long and Rashaan Evans were a large factor in Tennessee’s defensive success, and continually improved throughout the year.

McKenzie originally joined the Titans in 2018.

Titans inside linebackers coach Tyrone McKenzie joining Lions staff

It’s already been an interesting offseason for the Tennessee Titans.

It’s already been an interesting offseason for the Tennessee Titans.

Now, as of Wednesday, inside linebackers coach Tyrone McKenzie is parting ways with the team.

The Athletic’s John Glennon reported the news, and it has since been confirmed by several other reporters, despite the team not yet announcing it.

With this, the Titans are in the market for their next defensive coordinator and inside linebackers coach.

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McKenzie will be joining the Detroit Lions’ coaching staff, as reported by 104.5 The Zone’s Brent Dougherty.

McKenzie has a connection to the Lions already, as Matt Patricia was his first position coach back when he was drafted by the New England Patriots in 2009.

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Most could agree that McKenzie did a solid job in Nashville since joining the staff in 2018, with continually strong performances from players like Jayon Brown, David Long and Rashaan Evans.

Why McKenzie and the Titans went separate ways and what the decision ultimately came down to remains unclear.

McKenzie’s name was removed from the team’s online list of current coaches earlier in the week.

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