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Vance Joseph to Denver

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...os-coach?campaign=fb-nf-sf50458842-sf50458842

Vance Joseph expected to be hired as Broncos coach
_Sessler-65x90.jpg

  • By Marc Sessler
  • Around the NFL Writer
  • Published: Jan. 11, 2017 at 02:18 p.m.
  • Updated: Jan. 11, 2017 at 02:24 p.m.

The Denver Broncos are about to have a new head coach.

NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported Wednesday that Vance Joseph is expected to be hired as Denver's new head coach by the end of the day, according to sources informed of the situation. Joseph spent the past season as defensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins.

Joseph staged his first interview with the club on Tuesday before returning for a second meeting on Wednesday with Broncos football czar John Elway. This time around, Joseph stayed.

"He has great leadership qualities and a strong vision of what it takes to win," Elway tweeted of Joseph on Tuesday.

Joseph replaces the retired Gary Kubiak, who he worked under for three seasons -- from 2011 to 2013 -- with the Houston Texans as a defensive backs aide. He played that same role the following two years in Cincinnati before Dolphins coach Adam Gase nabbed Joseph as his defensive coordinator in 2016.

"Going against him over the last few years, he was probably the one guy that would drive me nuts," Gase said of Joseph, per DenverBroncos.com. "I know he gave us tons of fits when we played him when we were in Houston. And then two years ago when he was in Cincinnati and we were in Denver, it was a tough matchup. I think his DBs picked us off four times.

"His knowledge of defense and what he brings to the table and his ability to really go after an offense, as far as really teaching his guys what's going on, it's very impressive."

Miami's defense struggled under Joseph down the stretch -- and collapsed Sunday against the Steelers -- but that failed to shake Denver's intense interest in the respected 44-year-old coach. Elway conducts his searches carefully and certainly leaned on Kubiak and former Broncos play-caller Gase for insight into Joseph's development and potential.

Seen by many as the NFL's premier vacancy, the Broncos give Joseph plenty to work with on defense. One season removed from Super Bowl glory, Denver remains a dangerous and disruptive unit on this side of the ball while anchored by All-Pro pass rusher Von Miller.

Also boasting a nasty secondary led by cornerbacks Chris Harris and Aqib Talib, Denver's roster puts Joseph in a position to win right away. The question is whether he can elevate this defense to the heights it reached under former coordinator Wade Phillips, whose contract has expired.

Joseph must also hire the right collection of offensive assistants to groom two young quarterbacks -- Trevor Siemian and Paxton Lynch -- who will battle all spring and summer for the team's starting spot under center.

Elway had plenty of quality candidates to choose from. After what he's pulled off during his tenure in Denver, the quarterback-turned-front-office-guru has earned our trust. This is Joseph's team now.

Redskins fans on McVay

Despite some of the negative comments the poll posted in the thread shows that fans wanting to keep him outnumber fans wanting him gone 73.2 percent to 26.8 percent. He must be doing something right.


http://es.redskins.com/topic/409531-do-you-want-mcvay-back-in-2017/



Renegade7[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

It wouldn't shock me if someone offered him a HC gig, and you know what, they can have him. I'm not 100% pissed at the guy, but I do believe he just loves the pass too much to grow out of it. I'd like to keep the same system in place, but it doesn't seem like Jay is able to reel him in and coach to his talent, especially in the redzone, still forcing stuff. Someone even pointed out Trent being upset how they don't run to the left enough. I don't know about all that, but I wouldn't fight to keep McVay here. Not if we're bringing Kirk back.


Warhead36[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

McVay has positives and negatives. I think he's a good designer of offense, at least passing plays, and we generally are able to move the ball.



But man his run game design is awful. Why do we always go jumbo 3 TEs and/or Nscitzhke as 6th lineman on run plays? Or the shotgun draws? Why can't we ever just do a normal under center 2-3 WR hand off?



I also don't think he utilizes the middle of the field enough, especially the seam routes. Reed should be a terror on those but its mostly just sideline stuff or something short to Reed and hope he makes three guys miss(he often can). And the redzone playcalling is atrocious.



I'm fine with McVay staying, but if some idiot team wants him to be their HC I laugh and drive him to Dulles myself.


Burgold[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

I think McVay is fine and I'm okay with him continuing to grow and get better with us. I'd be shocked if someone offered him a HC position.


Bacon[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

No. I think a completely average football mind could get our offensive talent to produce. McVay calls the offense like he's playing Madden. Jump ball to DJax from the 1! 40 yard pass attempt on 3rd and 1! And when he does run, the designs are completely unimaginative, telegraphed or outright illogical. Chris Thompson up the gut in a jumbo package, yeah!


Taylor703[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

No. His playcalling is a joke. He doesn't understand the situation and gets cute far too often.


GregW8705[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

No. His playcalling in the red zone is atrocious. His playcalling on third down is atrocious. His playcalling in big games is atrocious. He is atrocious.


Black Market Bully[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

A good offensive coordinator makes his money in the red zone.



McVay is too busy proving how "smart" he is to the rest of the league.



Get him out of here

LetThePointsSoar[/paste:font]
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Posted January 1

He's the one coordinator that I think has done enough he deserves the opportunity to keep getting better and improving his weaknesses (red zone, inconsistent play calling). On the other side of the ball, however....but I digress.


Posted January 2

yes, he needs to get the red zone woes fixed but aside from that he did a good job for year 2. dude is super young, did enough to warrant another year.

Taco Bell[/paste:font]
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Posted January 3 (edited)

Honestly, even more than Barry, I want Boy Wonder gone. I navigated this season without posting much, mostly because the Cousins narrative this year wasn't as interesting as previous years top stories, but if I would have been part of that conversation, my incessant input would have been this... Cousins actually does worry me now a bit the way his arm strength and decision making looked down the stretch this year, but his positives are still enough where I'm fine with the tag or long term deal at whatever price, whatever. But, our redzone issues in particular, I would say were 80-20 Boy Wonder's fault. Doing the 1 WR do or die passes over and over and other dumb stupidity was on him, and not on Cousins. We don't have Julio Jones to throw to on those, we were throwing to Desean or Crowder or whoever. Some of that I think is him lacking the aggression and killer instinct as an OC and him possibly trying to appease personnel (cough Desean cough) and other dumb back scratching. And not sure why, but we never really seem to just blatantly attack matchup issues against other team's defenses, while it's literally commonplace for other teams to just do it because, why not, on a per play basis, who cares if you are letting the whole world see that a team's 2nd CB is garbage and worth abusing. He's too nice or something. Or too young. That's the whole thing with him. I don't feel like giving excuses to a guy just because he's new or young. I'll gladly take a 50 year old pizza eating cigar smoking NFL lifer over Boy Wonder and dealing with The Wonder Years of him trying to "figure it out."



-----------------



I just saw the reference to Trent saying he wishes they would have ran left more... exactly, that type of thing. It's almost like he didn't do it on purpose, as if, it's a crutch to rely on matchups... That's the whole purpose of the NFL.

ExoDus84[/paste:font]
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Posted January 3

Some curious play calling aside, he's done an excellent job. We had one of the best offenses in football. We did struggle in the RZ this year, but our offense sure as hell was not the problem most of this year. We played a first place schedule and a hell of a lot of good to great defenses this year, yet we still produced. I'd like to see some more continuity here, as he's been a big reason for Kirk's development.

rdskn4eva[/paste:font]
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Posted 9 minutes ago

Man the Redskins front office is so effing dumb



We've already lost the best offensive coordinator in the NFL (Shanahan)



Now we are about to lose the best young coordinator with McVay



Kirk will leave to follow McVay where he will have a stud running back and 0 expectations in a weak ass division



And the Redskins will have to start from scratch because Jackson and possibly Garcon will leave if Kirk isnt here so we will need to rebuild the Defense AND the offense.



I hope I'm wrong but this is what it looks like



Thanks GSM

Wyvern[/paste:font]
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Posted yesterday at 07:19 AM (edited)

I think the Skins will be lucky to hang onto McVay for two years.



If the Skins can develop a decent running-back group, and improve the trouble spots with the O-line run-blocking (Lauvao mainly) -- the Skins could have another powerful offensive attack. That would draw even more attention to McVay, for the inevitable HC openings in 2018 -- and he'd probably get an offer.



I hope we can hang onto McVay this upcoming season, and I hope that Gruden is already considering who to groom as McVay's successor. (I'm still wondering about how well Callahan would be as an offensive coordinator/play caller -- he's good, but seems to be more 'old school'. And with the Skins complicated play calling structure, it's been hard to determine how well Callahan might do for the Skins offense needing to compete vs. defenses designed to play under the NFL-2018 rules.)

Garcon More Wine[/paste:font]
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Posted yesterday at 08:20 AM

my biggest question would be who is more responsible for our offensive system, jay or sean. i like mcvay a lot and its clear the NFL respects his talent especially if hes getting HC interviews at age 30, but i want continuity. if we are running jay's offense and mcvay is just calling plays for it, then im not as concerned. if this is a specific scheme that mcvay is in control of, id try harder to keep him here.



our offense works, last thing i want to see is lose continuity there.
wilco_holland[/paste:font]
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Posted 18 hours ago (edited)

You known what scares me.



This guy is 30 and impressed Cooley when he was his positioncoach at age of 24 or something. He is now doing great interviews. There is something special about him.



Let's say he gets the Rams job and becomes a great HC. This guy can then coach for 30 years easy!!! Thats just walking out our door.

Warhead36[/paste:font]
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Posted 13 hours ago

Coaching in LA is a different animal. That situation will eat McVay up. I don't think he's ready to be a Head Coach yet and will be an absolute disaster.



But hey, let them deal with it. I'd like to see what a more experienced veteran OC can do with this talent. I think McVay got too cute sometimes and didn't really exploit the middle of the field enough.
onedrop[/paste:font]
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Posted 13 hours ago

13 hours ago, Warhead36 said:
I think McVay got too cute sometimes and didn't really exploit the middle of the field enough.

I never understood that either, especially when everyone and their mom was abusing us that way. Meanwhile he ran what amounted to a 3 yard out route that took a 20 yard pass at the flatest of angles to complete like his life depended on it.
rdskn4eva[/paste:font]
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Posted January 4

Excellent pass game coordinator



Running shotgun on 3rd and 2 is pissing me of tho
justice98[/paste:font]
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Posted January 5

I'm fine with McVay, and feel he's an asset. Just stop calling stupid plays in the redzone.
Peregrine[/paste:font]
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Posted Thursday at 02:55 PM

#3 in yards and you want to get rid of him. Oy. People dont know a good thing when they see it.



Plus, hes young, so hes making mistakes, which means he can learn, and get even better. Yes, hes messed up a few games, but, thats because he is inexperienced. Seriously, some of you dont deserve nice things.
abdcskins[/paste:font]
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Posted Thursday at 03:00 PM

Our offense was the best it has been in over a decade (2012 being the exception). Keep the guy. I think once we add a quality RB things will be even better. Kelley is serviceable but we could do much better.
abdcskins[/paste:font]
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Posted Thursday at 03:00 PM

Our offense was the best it has been in over a decade (2012 being the exception). Keep the guy. I think once we add a quality RB things will be even better. Kelley is serviceable but we could do much better.

Tre Mason arrested for minor incident

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/01/11/tre-mason-arrested-for-july-atv-incident/

Tre Mason arrested for July ATV incident
Posted by Mike Florio on January 11, 2017

499167934-e1484151964360.jpg
Getty Images

The troubling saga of Rams running back Tre Mason continues. Mason, who remains on the team’s roster after a season during which he did not report for duty, has been arrested in Florida as a result of an ATV incident that occurred in July, according to the Palm Beach Post.

Mason allegedly sped past an officer who tried to stop him while driving an ATV carelessly on July 27. A warrant for his arrest was issued in December, and he was finally taken into custody on Tuesday night.

Mason has been charged with fleeing and eluding without regard for the safety of others. He was released on $5,000 bond.

The third-round pick in the 2014 draft has had multiple off-field issues, and his mother expressed concern for his well-being immediately after the ATV incident.

“Tre is not himself at all,” Tina Mason told officers at the time. “He’s not making good decisions.”

Here’s hoping that Mason has since gotten whatever help he needs, and that he will continue to do so.

First yr dual threat QBs

I felt like this deserved its own thread if not merge it with the other one..

We were talking about simplifying things for Goff and @dieterbrock brought up Cam newton and Marcus Mariotta. I stated that it's easier to simplify things when you have a dual threat QB to work with instead of a pure passer like Goff.

Cam newton
Completion rate 60% 4051 passing yards 21 touchdowns 17 int.
Rushing
126 rushing attempts 706 yards 14 touchdowns

Marcus Mariotta
62.2%completuon rate 2818 yards 19 touchdowns 10 interceptions
Rushing
34 rushing attempts 252 yards 2 touchdowns

RG3
65.6% completion rate 3200 yards 20 touchdowns 5 interceptions
Rushing
120 rushing attempts 815 yards 7 touchdowns

Vince Young
2199 yards 12 touchdowns 13 interceptions
Rushing
83 rushing attempts 552 yards 7 touchdowns

When you think about it most of the dual threat qbs had success in their first yr because they represented a different aspect in that same token most of all the pure passers have struggled in their first yr like Manning and others.

The Falcons Are the New “Greatest Show on Turf”

https://theringer.com/atlanta-falco...o-jones-kyle-shanahan-557349d74cb6#.g5joz5vuh

The Falcons Offense Needs a Nickname
By balancing things out, Kyle Shanahan, Matt Ryan, Julio Jones, and Co. have created one of the greatest scoring attacks in NFL history
Danny Kelly/Staff Writer, The Ringer

1*epypZoBtqBg-uUaOMMfaoA.jpeg

(Getty Images/Ringer illustration)

The Falcons offense hasn’t picked up a catchy nickname that will help it live forever in NFL mythology, but when it posted a league-best 540 points this season, Atlanta matched the scoring output of the legendary Kurt Warner–led Greatest Show on Turf Rams from 2000. With deadly efficiency, the Falcons moved into a tie for the eighth-most prolific scoring offense of all time.

Matt Ryan put together an MVP-caliber season. Julio Jones continued to make defensive backs look like JV team backups, and Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman combined to provide an explosive run game. But that collection of talent alone wasn’t enough to make the Falcons one of the best offenses in league history.

It took the cunning of an excellent play-caller, Kyle Shanahan, to bring it all together and construct what looks like an unstoppable force as they head into their divisional-round matchup with the Seahawks. Shanahan utilized the full stable of talent at his disposal and deployed it shrewdly in his diverse, versatile scheme. Behind Shanahan’s instinctive play calling, the Falcons were the best offense in the NFL because they were also the most unpredictable.

Atlanta’s offense this year was much more balanced than it was in 2015. Jones was no longer force-fed the football in the passing game. His target share dropped from 33 percent last season to just 24 percent this year, as Mohamed Sanu, Taylor Gabriel, and a combination of tight ends and running backs inherited bigger responsibilities in the passing game.

In the Falcons’ Week 17 win over the Saints, which clinched the 2-seed, Ryan finished 27-of-36 (75 percent) for 331 yards and four touchdowns. Those four scores went to four separate players (Jones, Justin Hardy, Sanu, and Coleman), which highlighted a season-long willingness to spread the love around. Ten Falcons players finished with more than 10 catches and 200 yards receiving, and an NFL record 13 different players caught a touchdown.

Overall, the numbers speak for themselves: The Falcons scored 30-plus points 11 times this season (tied for fifth most in NFL history) and dropped 40 five times (the league record is six). They picked up a league-high 6.7 yards per play and finished second in total yards (6,653), tallying the third-most passing yards (4,725) and fifth-most rushing yards (1,928) in the league. The Falcons were also incredibly efficient — Ryan led the NFL with 9.26 yards per attempt and a league-best 117.1 passer rating — and the offense averaged 3.06 points per drive, which was another “best in the league.”

Shanahan’s offense gave new meaning to the idea of using the whole field. The run game in particular was pretty much devoid of tendency. Look at the play-direction report for their rushing offense, via NFL GSIS stats tracking:

1*OwZWNN7cfqF2RgzM8Flx8A.png


It’s rare to see the plot of run plays spread out so evenly across the offensive line over the course of a season. Most teams’ play-direction reports show huge spikes in one or two areas, whether it’s straight up the gut or off the right tackle. But against the Falcons, opposing defenses couldn’t favor a particular side because scouting wouldn’t show where they might run.

Even though Atlanta wasn’t as efficient in certain directions — off left tackle, up the middle, and off the right end — Shanahan stuck with his balance in order to keep defenses on their toes. The Falcons finished with 4.6 yards per carry (fifth), 20 rushing touchdowns (tied for third behind only the Bills and Cowboys), and 15 run plays of 20-plus yards (fourth).

The passing game utilized the entire field, as well. Shanahan was able to unlock all three levels of opposing defenses this year because Ryan was incredibly accurate in the deep-passing game. He racked up an NFL-best 136.1 passer rating on attempts of 20-plus yards down the field, connecting on 32 of 63 such throws for 1,149 yards and 11 touchdowns with zero picks.

With defenses forced to respect what Atlanta could do on long-ball passes to Jones, Gabriel, and Aldrick Robinson, there was more room to operate underneath. With that cushion, Ryan worked a robust intermediate passing attack out of shotgun looks, on dropbacks from under center, and on bootlegs, effectively mixing in short passes to the wings, quick slants over the middle, and dump-offs to running backs.

With his players executing across all levels, Shanahan’s play calling really shone through. A lot goes into the art of calling plays. An offensive coordinator has to do so many things simultaneously: take advantage of defensive vulnerabilities, mix run and pass plays, avoid patterns and tendencies, and react to adjustments, all while trying to build a rhythm for the quarterback.

The flow of the game becomes a chess match: Run one play to see how the defense reacts to it, then tweak it later to take advantage of any weaknesses the defense presents. Dial up deep shots often enough to keep the safeties and cornerbacks honest, but work the short and intermediate areas as well. Lean on the run — force the defense to make tackles — then run play-action to throw it over their heads when they start cheating toward the line of scrimmage.

Throughout the year, Shanahan, who’s going to be a head coach sooner rather than later, showed that he’s a master of play sequencing. Atlanta’s opening drive in Week 17 was a good example: On the Falcons’ first possession, Shanahan opens with a quick pass to Freeman, who motions out into the right slot, and the running back picks up 13 yards.(Click link above to watch video)

On the next play, Atlanta lines up in the exact same formation, except Ryan looks to his left and hits Justin Hardy on a slant. (Click link above to watch video)

Those two plays set up the third. The first two stressed the Saints defense laterally, and then Shanahan exploited the middle. All four receivers run routes from or toward the sideline, but Freeman leaks into the middle. He finds himself wide open, gaining 35 yards on the dump-off. (Click link above to watch video)

Then, on the next play, the Falcons do the opposite: With three receivers to the left, one route goes deep (a “clear out”), and the other two are in-breaking slants, drawing the Saints defenders into the middle of the field. The running back, Coleman, then releases out of the backfield into the left flat that the New Orleans defenders have just vacated. Coleman catches the ball and, with the help of a little screen by Jones on the linebacker, waltzes into the end zone. (Click link above to watch video)

While this was a scripted drive early in the game, Shanahan does this type of thing all game long, as he accounts for adjustments and defensive tendencies. His offense doesn’t rely on incredibly innovative plays, but the way he strings such varied looks together makes this offense so hard to contain. If this were boxing, Shanahan would be adept at mixing body shots with jabs, working his combinations with an eventual knockout punch in mind.

With Shanahan calling the plays and an unbelievably efficient Ryan executing them, the Falcons can beat you short or long, outside or in traffic, and with a run or a pass. If you have a vulnerability, they’ll look to exploit it, and when you adjust, they have a dozen counter-adjustments to work with.

The Falcons’ 27th-ranked defense by DVOA all too often allows opponents to stay in games, but if anyone’s going to beat Atlanta this postseason, they’re going to have to keep pace with a team whose offensive possessions produced touchdowns (58) almost as often as punts and turnovers combined (59). The Falcons force their opponents to defend the entire field on any given snap, and with Seattle still reeling from the loss of star safety Earl Thomas, the Legion of Boom is about to face its biggest challenge since they got the kind of nickname this Falcons offense deserves.

Rumor - Rams like McVay

http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2017/01/11/nfl-head-coach-vacancy-sean-mcvay-rams-mailbag

• Los Angeles.
There’s always a candidate that comes out of the blue. This year’s guy is growing on the Rams, and fast. The Rams are serious about 30-year-old offensive coordinator Sean McVay of Washington. (Well, he’s not so young. He does turn 31 in two weeks.) He was the play-caller in Washington the past two years under Jay Gruden, and the grandson of Bill Walsh’s director of football operations in San Francisco is well respected by his players. When the Rams interviewed McVay, they found a guy who was totally un-awed by the prospect of being the youngest head coach in the league. He’s been training for it under Gruden. “I’m sure,” Gruden told our Andy Benoit last summer, “he’ll be a head coach a lot sooner than people think.” If McVay’s the call over Houston assistant Mike Vrabel or Buffalo interim coach Anthony Lynn (the Rams loved Lynn when they spoke Sunday), he’ll have to build a veteran staff to help him negotiate the stuff he doesn’t know. But the prospect of McVay, who helped tutor Kirk Cousins into respectability, working with top 2016 pick Jared Goff might be most attractive to the Rams. Keep in mind that owner Stan Kroenke has to approve all hires, and he hasn’t met with the youngster yet. So set nothing in stone here.

OTC: Projecting the 2017 Compensatory Draft Picks

http://overthecap.com/projecting-2017-compensatory-draft-picks/

Projecting The 2017 Compensatory Draft Picks
Posted on January 7, 2017 by Nick

This article refers specifically to OTC’s projection for the 2017 NFL Draft’s compensatory picks. For details on the basics and methodology of projecting compensatory picks in general, please reference this article.

Furthermore, due to the complexity I have written separate articles on all possible compensatory pick scenarios on the Denver Broncos and Miami Dolphins. You may find the Broncos’ article at Thin Air, and the Dolphins’ article here at OTC.

The Projection
Team Round Compensated Free Agent APY Ranking
DEN 3 Brock Osweiler $18,000,000 19
MIA 3 Olivier Vernon $16,750,000 20
CAR 3 Josh Norman $15,000,000 22
BAL 3 Kelechi Osemele $11,200,000 31
LA (traded to TEN) 3 Janoris Jenkins $12,400,000 40
DEN 3 Malik Jackson $14,250,000 44
CLE (traded to NE) 3 Alex Mack $9,000,000 87
KC 3 Sean Smith $9,250,000 91
SEA 3 Bruce Irvin $9,000,000 95
NYJ 4 Damon Harrison $9,000,000 106
CIN 4 Marvin Jones $8,000,000 128
CLE (traded to PHI) 4 Tashaun Gipson $7,106,250 142
LA 4 Rodney McLeod $7,000,000 153
CLE 4 Mitchell Schwartz $6,512,000 174
IND 4 Coby Fleener $7,120,000 182
SF 4 Alex Boone $6,600,000 187
CIN 4 Mohamed Sanu $6,500,000 203
DEN 4 Danny Trevathan $6,900,000 210
MIA 5 Lamar Miller $6,500,000 216
ARI 5 Bobby Massie $5,868,750 222
KC 5 Chase Daniel $7,000,000 244
CLE 5 Travis Benjamin $6,000,000 256
GB 5 Casey Hayward $5,100,000 260
PIT 5 Kelvin Beachum $5,000,000 261
NE 5 Akiem Hicks $5,000,000 266
SEA 5 J.R. Sweezy $6,500,000 277
KC 6 Donald Stephenson $4,666,667 304
CIN 6 Reggie Nelson $4,000,000 317
KC 6 Tyvon Branch $4,000,000 381
LA 6 Nick Fairley $3,000,000 426
CIN 6 Andre Smith $3,218,750 471
DEN 7 Ryan Harris $1,950,000 672
Compensation over 32-pick limit; not awarded
GB 7 Scott Tolzien $1,750,000 694
PIT 7 Antwon Blake $1,500,000 722
ARI 7 Sean Weatherspoon $1,468,750 767
PIT 7 Will Johnson $1,150,000 845
ARI 7 Bradley Sowell $1,000,000 852
ARI 7 Corey White $840,000 966

Note that although there are 38 eligible compensatory picks listed in this projection, each year only exactly 32 picks are awarded. Therefore, the picks that rank 33rd and lower are not awarded, although the official release will typically acknowledge their presence, as this list does with strikethrough text.

This is also the first year in which compensatory picks may be traded. Before they have even been released, there have been four trades executed that include conditions on possible comp picks. I’m projecting that three of these four conditions will be fulfilled: Tennessee receiving Los Angeles’s 3rd round comp pick (as part of the Jared Goff trade), New England receiving Cleveland’s 3rd round comp pick (for Jamie Collins), and Philadelphia receiving the first of Cleveland’s 4th round comp picks (as part of the Carson Wentz trade). While I’m not projecting that the fourth condition will be met, in which Miami would send Minnesota a 4th round comp pick, there is a decent probability that I could be wrong about that (see below, and also see this detailed 2017 compensatory pick projection for the Miami Dolphins).

A few other notable observations:

  • This year should see a record number of 3rd round comp picks awarded. OTC projects it at nine, with a possibility of ten, but even if that is too generous, 2017 will almost certainly break the current record of six from 1997 and 2005. Not a single 3rd round valued CFA lost was cancelled out by a CFA gained.
  • OTC’s projection calls for only one 7th round comp pick, but that pick is very much on the bubble and may be pushed below the 32-pick limit. Last year witnessed the first time that no 7th round comp picks were awarded, and we may very well see that feat repeated in 2017.
  • This may also be the first year in which teams will lose out on more than one comp pick due to the 32-pick limit. Pittsburgh is projected to lose out on two eligible 7th round comp picks for this reason, and Arizona may lose out on three. Thankfully for the Steelers and Cardinals, both are still projected to earn a 5th round comp pick above the 32-pick limit.
  • I would also like to add that the extremely UFA-averse Packers are also projected to miss out on a 7th round comp pick for Scott Tolzien due again to the 32-pick limit. There’s been pressure in recent years on GM Ted Thompson to not be so miserly in the UFA market, and 2017 could have been a good year for him to make a rare splash in that market.
All in all, these observations continue to bolster the notion that more teams are becoming aware of how the compensatory draft pick system works. In addition to the usual suspects like Baltimore, Green Bay, New England, Denver, Seattle, and San Francisco showing up, there are teams like Miami and Cleveland that spent the 2016 offseason mindful of where they stood on their comp pick projections.
Cutoff Projections

Last year, it was suggested by the resolution allowing comp picks to be traded on December 2, 2015 that the cutoffs between each rounds and whether or not a player had an APY high enough to qualify was determined by a “rank[ing] against all players in the League who are on rosters at the end of the season”. For the 2016 projections, I conjectured from this evidence that the cutoffs were based on a percentile system. The official release of the 2016 comp picks strongly suggested that my conjectured percentile cutoff points were on the right track. Therefore, for 2017 I will use the same percentile system, with the specific percentiles adjusted based upon the results from 2015 and 2016.

At the end of the 2016 regular season, OTC’s database identified a total of 2098 players that were either on the active roster or reserve lists. As explained in the general methodology in the previous link, the cutoffs for each round and for qualifying as a compensatory free agent (CFA) have been established by this projection on certain percentile ranks of all players on the active roster and reserve lists at the end of the regular season, sorted by APY adjusted for snap counts in descending order and also represented by the player at the cutoff point. For 2017, these cutoffs are as follows:

Round Percentile Overall Rank Representative Player
3rd/4th Top 5% 105 Rodney Hudson
4th/5th 5%-10% 210 Danny Trevathan*
5th/6th 10%-14% 294 Leonard Williams
6th/7th 14%-23.5% 493 Patrick Chung
7th/Qualify 23.5%-47% 985 Sam Young*
*Make special note of these two players, as not only are they 2017 CFAs, but they are also critical to the projections of Denver and Miami, part of the reason why I have written separate articles for both the Broncos and Dolphins.

Qualifying Questions
This year, I foresee five players relevant to the comp pick projection being close calls as to qualification that could significantly change certain comp picks.



    • The Jets signed Jarvis Jenkins to a two year deal on March 16, and then cut him on Wednesday, November 9, in between the games of Weeks 9 and 10. There were two instances of potential CFAs cut within this time span close to the Week 10 cutoff that did not qualify. Bobby Engram was cut by the Chiefs on the Monday of this week in 2009, and Greg Favors was cut by the Colts on the Friday of this week in 2002. Because neither Engram nor Favors qualified, I am projecting that Jenkins will not qualify either, but because it’s close enough there’s a chance I’m wrong and he might qualify.
    • Kelvin Sheppard, formerly of the Dolphins, signed a one year, $840,000 deal under the minimum salary benefit with the Giants. Sheppard played 40.8% of the defensive snaps largely in a starting role for New York. Ranked 965th overall, I’m projecting that this is enough for Sheppard to qualify, but there is a very good chance that I may be wrong and he may not qualify.
    • Like Sheppard, Corey White and Robert Blanton also signed $840,000 MSB deals with the Bills, and respectively came in at 966th and 975th overall after playing 38.5% and 26.8% of the defensive snaps. I’m also projecting that Blanton and White will also qualify, but like Sheppard there is a chance they will not qualify.
    • Sam Young signed a one year, $910,000 deal with the Dolphins on March 9, $50,000 of which was a workout bonus that does not count in the compensatory formula. Young did not make Miami’s initial 53-man roster, but was re-signed on October 11 to the veteran minimum, a day after Week 5 ended. I have yet to find out if a qualifying CFA not on the roster for entire season also receives a docking to his APY in the compensatory formula. Even if his APY is a full $860,000, because he played so little (15.5% of the offensive snaps) he is right on the qualifying bubble as described above in the cutoffs table. I’m barely projecting that Young will qualify, but his qualification is the one I am the most uncertain about.
Valuation Questions
There are also four players relevant to the comp pick projection being close calls as to round valuation that could significantly change certain comp picks.



    • Kelvin Beachum, formerly of the Steelers, signed a deal with the Jaguars on March 19 that was initially reported as a five year, $45 million contract for an APY of $9 million. However, the contract contained a team option on all but the first year. It is my belief (and one also held by Joel Corry) that for the purposes of the compensatory formula only the terms of the first year will count. With a base salary of $2.5 million, a $1.5 million traditional roster bonus, and $1 million in per game roster bonuses (for a total of $5M APY), I’m projecting that Beachum will be valued as a 5th rounder. But if I’m wrong and the entire contract is counted, Beachum will likely be valued as a 3rd rounder, subsequently raising Pittsburgh’s comp pick for him.
    • Very similar to Beachum, Russell Okung, formerly of the Seahawks, signed a deal with the Broncos on March 17 that was initially reported as a five year, $53 million contract for an APY of $10.6 million. However, like Beachum, the Broncos contain a team option on all but the first year. I’m projecting that his APY for the compensatory formula will be only $4 million ($2 million base salary plus a $2 million roster bonus, but not including a $1 million workout bonus) and thus Okung is projected to be valued as a 6th rounder. However, as with Beachum, if I’m wrong on Okung he will be valued as a 3rd rounder and impact comp picks for both Denver and Seattle.
    • During the 2016 NFL Draft, the Vikings and Dolphins made a trade that included a condition on a 2017 4th round pick. If the Dolphins are awarded a 4th round comp pick in 2017, the Vikings will receive that pick; if not, they will receive the Dolphins’ regular 4th rounder. I’m projecting that the Dolphins will not receive a 4th round comp pick, but their projected 5th round comp pick for Lamar Miller (ranked 216th overall) is close enough to the 4th/5th cutoff at 196 that there’s a chance that Miller could be valued as a 4th.
    • Similarly, the Patriots traded Jamie Collins to the Browns in exchange for either a 2018 regular 4th round pick, or a 2017 compensatory 3rd round pick if the Browns are awarded one. I’m projecting Cleveland will indeed get a 3rd for Alex Mack, but at a ranking of 87th overall he is close enough to the 3rd/4th cutoff that there is a chance he could fall on the other side.
Players On The Cutoff Bubbles
While it is my hope that my projection of where the cutoffs lie is correct, there is enough of a margin of error that the players that are very close to them may fall on the opposite side of where I have them projected. In most cases, if I’m wrong it means that the team in question will still get a comp pick for that player, but that it may be in a round higher or lower. But in a few cases (those are bolded), it could change cancellations, possibly taking away or greatly devaluing a projected comp pick—or possibly adding or greatly upgrading a comp pick.

3rd/4th



    • Alex Mack (Cleveland, traded to New England): #87
    • Sean Smith (Kansas City): #91
    • Bruce Irvin (Seattle): #95
    • Projected 3rd/4th cutoff: #105
    • Damon Harrison (NY Jets): #106
4th/5th



    • Mohamed Sanu (Cincinnati): #203
    • Danny Trevathan (Denver): #210
    • Projected 4th/5th cutoff: #210
    • Lamar Miller (Miami): #216
    • Bobby Massie (Arizona): #222
5th/6th



    • JR Sweezy (Seattle): #277
    • Rishard Matthews (Miami): #284
    • Projected 5th/6th cutoff: #294
    • Donald Stephenson (Denver): #304
    • Reggie Nelson (Cincinnati): #318
6th/7th



    • Projected 7th/Qualifying cutoff: #493
    • David Bruton (Denver): #500
7th/Qualifying



    • Kelvin Sheppard (NY Giants): #965
    • Corey White (Buffalo): #966
    • Robert Blanton (Buffalo): #975
    • Sam Young (Miami): #985
    • Projected 7th/Qualifying cutoff: #985
Possible Altering Scenarios



    • Arizona
      • If Corey White does not qualify, Arizona will not be eligible for a 7th for him.
    • Buffalo
      • If Robert Blanton and Corey White do not qualify, Buffalo will be eligible for a net-value 7th, but it will not make it above the 32-pick limit.
    • Cleveland
      • If Alex Mack is valued as a 4th, Cleveland will send the 4th round comp pick for him to Philadelphia, and retain their 4th for Tashaun Gipson.
    • Green Bay
      • Green Bay will get a 7th for Scott Tolzien above the 32-pick limit if one of the following scenarios happen:
        • Jarvis Jenkins qualifies
        • Sam Young qualifies, and Kelvin Sheppard does not qualify
    • Kansas City
      • If Sean Smith is valued as a 4th, Kansas City will get a 4th for Jeff Allen instead of a 3rd for Smith.
    • New England
      • If Alex Mack is valued as a 4th, New England will not receive a 3rd round comp pick from Cleveland in 2017, and will instead be owed a regular 4th round pick in 2018.
    • NY Jets
      • If Jarvis Jenkins qualifies, the Jets will not get a 4th for Damon Harrison, and will instead be eligible for a net-value 7th, but it will not make it above the 32-pick limit.
    • Pittsburgh
      • If the entirety of Kelvin Beachum’s contract is counted, Pittsburgh will get a 3rd for him instead of a 5th.
      • If Sam Young and Jarvis Jenkins qualify, and Kelvin Sheppard does not qualify, Pittsburgh will get a 7th for Antwon Blake above the 32-pick limit.
    • Seattle
      • If the entirety of Russell Okung’s contract is counted, Seattle will get a 3rd for him instead of a 5th for JR Sweezy.

Whicker: Rams' biggest stumbling block? Their offensive line

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/rams-740676-year-third.html

Whicker: Rams' biggest stumbling block? Their offensive line

By MARK WHICKER / STAFF COLUMNIST

Unless the Rams are using their head coaching interviews to ask how quickly this offensive line can be repealed and replaced, they might as well be playing gin rummy.

Perhaps you are only dimly aware of how poorly the Rams transported the football through enemy lines, or across yard lines. If so, try on these numbers:

• Next-to-last in the NFL in quarterback rating.

• Third-from-last in yards per pass attempt.

• Next to last in yards per rush.

• Last in third-down conversions.

• Last in touchdowns.

When the magic ran out for Case Keenum, we pleaded for the Rams to play Jared Goff. When Goff went winless and was lucky not to finish the season headless, we scratched our chins and said, “Hmmm, this offensive line has problems.”

“I watched them all year,” said Doug Smith, the center from the Eric Dickerson years, now an assistant coach at Orange Coast College. “I think they need more of a veteran presence, someone to provide some mentoring, like I got from guys like Tom Mack and Rich Saul.”

Perhaps. Rodger Saffold, who was the top lineman on the team according to Pro Football Focus, is a seven-year veteran, and center Tim Barnes has played five years. The others were second- and third-year players, including left tackle Greg Robinson, a former No. 2 overall pick who was benched for a time.

When the old Rams could do nothing else, they could always block. Jackie Slater had 211 NFL starts, Smith 160, Irv Pankey 122, Kent Hill 114 and Tom Newberry 143.

“When it was third-and-short we knew we were running behind Jackie,” Smith said. “Irv was that typical Penn State guy, highly intelligent and tough. Kent Hill could outrun some of the backs. I played with Dennis Harrah, too, and he’d be talking to himself during the games, telling himself to do it better. Me, I was more of a religious type. I was praying most of the time.”

Thanks to free agency, you can’t keep the band together. So the Rams either need an offensive line coach who doubles as an illusionist or a bunch of new players.

Because they gave up this year’s first- and third-round draft picks in the package for Goff, this will not be a turn-key process.

The Cowboys are the current template. They took left tackle Tyron Smith (USC) in 2011, center Travis Frederick in 2013 and Zack Martin in 2014, all in the first round. Now they can win with rookie quarterback Dak Prescott, who rarely needs Wisk to wash his jersey.

When A.J. Smith was putting together playoff teams in San Diego, he faced an OL makeover. He signed free agent left tackle Roman Oben and right tackle Mike Goff, used a third-round pick on center Nick Hardwick and a seventh on guard Shane Olivea. Then he took an ill-tempered defensive tackle and moved him to guard, and Kris Dielman became a Pro Bowl player. When Oben aged out, there was second-round pick Marcus McNeill.

Peter King: MMQB - 1/9/17

These are excerpts. To read the whole article click the link below.
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http://mmqb.si.com/mmqb/2017/01/09/nfl-wild-card-weekend-playoffs-steelers-packers-peter-king

Wild-Card Weekend: ‘It Must Be Scary Sight to Watch Us’
Randall Cobb’s self-assessment of the Packers applies to the Steelers as well, as both sizzling hot teams won easily to put fear in the foes awaiting next round. Plus more on Odell, coaching notes and a divisional preview
by Peter King

mmqb-cobb-rodgers.jpg

Photo: Mike Roemer/AP

So this is tricky. State Farm is a sponsor of The MMQB, and it feels a little cheesy to have a State Farm commercial in the lead of this column, but what would you do after watching football all weekend, and seeing the commercial with Randall Cobb scoring a touchdown in practice on a lovely throw from Aaron Rodgers, and Cobb calling to Rodgers, “Bro! Your stuff is on fire!”

Seeing it 10 times, minimum. And then actually being on the phone with Cobb after Rodgers continued the hottest streak of his life to beat the Giants in their wild-card game Sunday, throwing three of his four touchdown passes to Cobb.

“It’s a little weird to be talking to you now,” I began, “after seeing that commercial all weekend, and the reason I’m talking to you is that you guys are, well, pretty hot right now …”

“Hey, Aaron is definitely on fire right now,’’ Cobb said. “He’s on fire!”

We see. This was a strange weekend of playoff football. Four relatively non-competitive games (average margin: 19.0 points). Two teams looking like they’d put a scare into the great Belichick himself. And one team looking like its recent Super Bowl self. So there’s significant intrigue coming up this weekend in Atlanta, Kansas City and Arlington. (Three out of four ain’t bad.)

Two players owned wild-card weekend, and I found myself wondering Sunday night what was coursing through the minds of the Dallas Cowboys and the Kansas City Chiefs as they watched Sunday’s playoff games.

What was Andy Reid thinking watching Le’Veon Bell steamroll the Dolphins on 10 straight running plays in the first half of a 30-12 rout? What was Jason Garrett thinking as Aaron Rodgers lay waste to the stingiest defense in the league over the past six weeks, putting up four touchdowns in a much more surprising 38-13 romp?

“It must be a scary sight to watch us right now,” Cobb said. Green Bay has won seven in a row, and Pittsburgh eight. They’re both scary right now. As are Bell and Rodgers. In the 97th season of the NFL, with one of the biggest collections of shiny offensive stars ever populating the postseason, no back is playing better than Bell, no quarterback playing better than Rodgers.

Next Sunday, Bell goes to Kansas City and Rodgers to Dallas. That’s the Sunday doubleheader, and if recent form holds, it could be one of the best playoff days in the NFL in years.

Rodgers is on a sick 22-to-0 touchdown-to-interception streak since Nov. 20. Bell has rushed for 1,002 yards since Nov. 20. What they’ve done since Thanksgiving week is pretty absurd.

What’s compelling about each case: Opponents know each man is coming, and opponents can do nothing about it.

Take Bell’s game against the Dolphins on Sunday, and take his style of play. Watch the man. He’s got the oddest rushing style in football today. “The Great Hesitator,” Phil Simms called him on CBS, and that’s just about perfect. Usually, Bell lines up as the classic I-back, seven yards deep, and when he takes a handoff from Ben Roethlisberger, he’ll take a couple of jab steps toward a hole and almost stop in his tracks. Denver, under Mike Shanahan, had a one-cut running style; the back was told to hit up in the hole immediately—that charging into the hole was the one cut.

Most coaches decry what they call pussyfooting. You’ll hear coaches sometimes yell at their backs to hit it up in there, don’t wait, get what you can. But Bell figures he’s running behind such a great tactical line that eventually he’s going to see a good crease. So he waits longer than other backs. It’s working. His last seven games, on the ground: 146 yards, 120, 118, 236, 93, 122 and 167.

I find this amazing: Emmitt Smith, the all-time rushing king, gained 860 yards in his best seven-game stretch. That’s 142 yards less than Bell’s current seven-game run.

How does that factor in this weekend? Kansas City’s giving up 4.4 yards per rush this year, and they’re 26th in the league in rushing defense. So that’s why there might be some alarm bells in the Chiefs’ defensive meetings this week.

mmqb-le-bell.jpg

Photo: Don Wright/AP

Now for Rodgers. The Giants were stifling him and the Green Bay offense through the first 25 minutes (Rodgers: 5 of 13 for 38 yards, five minutes before halftime). Then he made one of the most Rodgers-like plays of his life. At the Giants’ five near the two-minute warning, he took a snap and bobbed and weaved against a three-man New York rush, with a fourth player, Damon Harrison, rushing from a contain spot late in the play. (Maybe the Giants should have sent four or five, but you pick your poison here; rushing more could well have given Rodgers less time to find a man but more space in which to throw a dart.)

Rodgers moved up, bounced in the pocket, jittered to the right, looked to his left. Three, four, five, six seconds. Now he began moving left, hounded by Harrison, and saw a sliver of space outside Davante Adams, covered closely by Giants DB Coty Sensabaugh. How’d he fit that ball into a tiny window three feet to the outside of a diving Adams? He just did.

Two minutes later, Pack ball at the New York 42. Last play of the half. Everybody knows the Hail Mary’s coming. Five Giants surround three Packers in the end zone, and Rodgers, as he does on these throws, heaves a moon shot. He said, “The high arc is by design. I want to make sure those guys have enough chance to get down there and jump for it.” Randall Cobb’s job, as one of the smaller guys, is to be the muscle for “the jumper”—Adams.

“I’m supposed to get in position to box out at least one guy and let the jumper be the jumper, give him a fairly clean place to jump.” Here came the ball, a little deeper than Adams and Jeff Janis and Cobb through it would be thrown. Right in the back of the end zone, in fact. Four Giants were clustered around Adams, and Cobb hung near the end line and had little competition for it.

“The ball comes down,” Cobb said, “and it’s right to me.” The Giants played it poorly, obviously, playing the men rather than the ball. But that deflated the visitors and inflated the Packers. Green Bay led 14-6 at the half, and the Giants never led again.

“A big part of our offense is simply extending plays,” Cobb said, “because we know if Aaron can stay active, he’ll eventually be able to fit a ball into one of us. Right now, it feels great. Aaron is trusting every receiver, trusting us to create separation and knowing all of us well enough to know he can make eye contact with us and we’ll both understand.”

Forty-nine years after the first Dallas-Green Bay game for the ages, the Ice Bowl, there could be another one in Texas late Sunday afternoon. In sports, we’re often victims to what we’ve just seen. We shouldn't necessarily think the Packers will own the day because we’ve seen them play so indestructibly lately. But Rodgers is so deft in the pocket right now, so confident, with receivers who know him so well. (That could be tested if Jordy Nelson is lost against Dallas with a rib injury suffered against the Giants.)

“We’re a very dangerous team right now,” Cobb said. Garrett and the Cowboys saw that Sunday.

* * *

Previewing Divisional Weekend

Every divisional round game is a rematch of a 2016 regular-season game. (By the by, will the NFL please fix that name? “Divisional playoff” is ridiculously drab and not enticing. Think, Park Avenue. Think!)

• NFC: Seattle (11-5-1, third seed) at Atlanta (11-5, second seed), Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET. America still doesn’t know these Falcons. Won a fairly weak division, lost to San Diego and Tampa Bay at home, handed Kansas City a win—also at home. But Atlanta scored 33 points or more in 10 of 16 games, Matt Ryan has so many weapons he doesn’t miss Julio Jones when he’s out, and the two-headed running attack (Devonta Freeman, Tevin Coleman) averaged 4.6 yards per carry.

When these two teams met in a thrilling October game (Seahawks 26, Falcons 24, in Seattle), the Falcons were a non-pass-interference call in the final minute from a good chance to win. The Atlanta Weaponry Factoid I like to use is that Taylor Gabriel out-touchdowned the great Julio Jones, 7-6, this year. So Seattle will have a tough time shutting down the league’s highest-scoring offense. My advice for the Seahawks: play clockball.

Try to keep Atlanta to eight or nine possessions by using Thomas Rawls as much as he was used in the wild-card win over Detroit. I like Atlanta in this first game of divisional weekend, but I could see Seattle continuing the momentum it started with the rout of Detroit.

• AFC: Houston (10-7, fourth seed) at New England (14-2, first seed), Saturday, 8:15 p.m. ET. This is the 14th playoff appearance for the Belichick/Brady Patriots, and they’ve played at home to open the playoffs every time. And only once (I’ve checked) has the matchup been more lopsided heading into game time—the 2011 divisional game against the 9-8 Broncos, quarterbacked by Tim Tebow. New England won that night, 45-10.

It’s so hard to envision the Texans making this a close game. Consider this: In Week 3, third-string Patriots quarterback Jacoby Brissett, a rookie, started his first NFL game, damaged a ligament in his throwing thumb in the third quarter, and the Patriots embarrassed the Texans and Brock Osweiler 27-0. Now? Osweiler has a tendency to try too hard to be perfect, on and off the field, and the good Osweiler showing up is the only slight prayer the Texans have. “The next opponent is going to be a tall task, which we understand,” Bill O’Brien said before he knew the matchup.

“Our MO is to make it a game in the fourth quarter. When we’ve done that, we’ve had a good chance this season.” Perhaps. But even facing a very good defense, the Tom Brady NFL Revenge Tour should have a comfy postseason debut at Gillette Stadium. Vegas agrees. The early line is New England by 16.

• AFC: Pittsburgh (12-5, third seed) at Kansas City (12-4, second seed), Sunday, 1:05 p.m. ET. In their first meeting this year, at Heinz Field in October, Kansas City went punt-fumble-interception-punt-punt-punt in its first six series. Pittsburgh’s first six: punt-TD-TD-TD-punt-TD. After 36 minutes, it was 36-0 Pittsburgh. “First game means nothing,” Steelers safety Mike Mitchell said Sunday. “We’re not booking this. They’re a two seed for a reason.” Sounds good, but we’ll see if the Steelers can believe it as the week goes on.

Sometimes when good teams play, the game can get away from one of them. And the Steelers’ first two touchdown drives in that October game—32 yards and four yards—were off turnovers. This time it’s going to be vital for Kansas City to possess the ball and have some long drives; the Steelers’ offense is so dangerous right now, and it almost doesn’t matter if they’ve got to move it throwing or running.

The Chiefs have held the ball longer than 34 minutes only three times in 16 games this year—and this week that could be the biggest factor of them all. Long Steeler drives, plus 11 or 12 possessions for them, could decide the game.

• NFC: Green Bay (11-6, fourth seed) at Dallas (13-3, first seed), Sunday, 4:40 p.m. ET. Good stat overnight from Pro Football Focus: When the Cowboys beat Green Bay at Lambeau in October, they did it in spite of a poor pass-rush on Aaron Rodgers—and, quite possibly, because Rodgers was playing poorly at the time. Dallas got pressure on just five of 45 Rodgers’ pass drops, according to PFF. If that happens this time, the pressure will be on Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott to own this game, or the Cowboys could have a stunningly early playoff exit.

The strategy for Dallas here would be the same as for Seattle. Control the ball and limit Green Bay’s possessions. The Packers’ offensive line has been terrific all season, and tackle Bryan Bulaga and David Bakhtiari are healthy and playing very well. I do not envy Cowboys defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli.

To win the Super Bowl, he might have to beat three of the top five candidates for the 2016 MVP: Rodgers in the divisional round, Matt Ryan in the NFC title game (if the favored Falcons win this weekend) and Tom Brady in the Super Bowl (if the Patriots come out of the AFC). Suppose the favored Ryan wins this year’s MVP. Think of that: Has any team ever beaten three current/former MVPs to get to the Super Bowl?

* * *

On Coaches, MVPs and More

mmqb-anthony-lynn.jpg

Bills interim coach Anthony Lynn has impressed teams during the interview process.
Photo: Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images


Events percolating over the weekend:

• I’m hearing the Bills and Rams were feeling good about the prospects of Buffalo interim coach Anthony Lynn. Organized and a commanding presence, I heard from one club official after his interview. Lynn’s best chance might be if Bill O’Brien stays in Houston and Buffalo ownership gives a shot to a coach universally liked and respected in the building.

• On Saturday, New England offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels interviewed with the Jaguars at 7 a.m. in Foxboro, the Rams at noon in Foxboro, and the 49ers at 4 in Foxboro. For some teams in the process, it seems like McDaniels is the No. 1 guy on their list. But we’re still early in the process. Very early. There’s no coach out there whom teams are racing to hire. But McDaniels had a good Saturday. Teams came away impressed, particularly the Jaguars.

• I’ve heard good things about the 49ers in their interviews. Why? Because they’re willing to import a coach who would be in charge of reinventing the culture in San Francisco. And they’re willing to be patient. By patient, I mean willing to give a long-term contract to a coach, listen to his recommendation for GM, and steel the locals that this is going to be a significant rebuild. Smart. There’s no other way to do it and to have a chance.

“We took two kickers instead of Tom Brady. That’s why I’m no longer in this business.”

—Jon Gruden on the ESPN telecast of Oakland-Houston Saturday. In 2000, Gruden’s third year as Raiders coach, Oakland drafted Sebastian Janikowski in the first round and Shane Lechler in the fifth round. That’s the year New England took Brady in the sixth round.

• Re the MVP: The MMQB’s awards had Matt Ryan winning. We polled media and football lovers (like John Legend) and asked for their top five at MVP. Ryan ended up with 17 of 31 first-place votes. Tom Brady was next with six. I had my top five this way: Ryan, Derek Carr, Tom Brady, Dak Prescott, Aaron Rodgers.

• Really enjoyed talking to Paul Richardson, the miracle catcher of the Seahawks, after his three-catch tour de force Saturday night. Most interesting thing he said: “I don’t like catching the ball one-handed. You’ve got a better chance to catch it with two hands. I don’t practice one-handed catches.” On his touchdown catch, the one-handed job with a Lions cornerback hanging on him, Richardson said: “All I saw is the ball coming, and, you know, you just react.”

* * *

What we learned from the teams whose seasons ended this weekend:

New York Giants: Odell Beckham dropped one pass and didn’t catch two others that were in his hemisphere in Green Bay. We saw. But I simply do not correlate it to watching the sun come up on a party boat in Miami six days before the game. It’s a lazy story angle, to me. Would I prefer that every night during the week Beckham be in bed at 11?

Yes. Do I want to control the off-days of 24-year-olds? No. The Giants lost because Aaron Rodgers is playing out of his mind, because vital cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie got hurt early and was a non-factor—and maybe next is the fact that Beckham should have been better. …

Eli Manning turned 36 six days ago. Clock is ticking on his life in football. The 2017 season is a vital one, with this defense growing into a very good one, for Manning. It might be his last, best chance to win a third ring. … Giants have devoted a lot of draft capital to the offensive line recently. But they’ve got to find a tackle in this draft, or in free agency. They’re too shaky on the edge.

Miami: Defensive coordinator Vance Joseph is a candidate for multiple head-coaching jobs, and there’s no question he’s got a real shot to be the Broncos’ next coach. But he followed up a year in which the Dolphins were 29th in the league in team defense with this clunker: allowing the Steelers 90-yard, 85-yard and 83-yard touchdown drives in the first 20 minutes at Pittsburgh. … Matt Moore, you have my admiration. …

Amazing to me with a Dolphins front anchored by Ndamukong Suh that the Steelers can shred it for 286 first-half yards and essentially end the game … All in all, a very good year for Miami, and the Dolphins found the right coach in Adam Gase. But the team has a way to go to be a serious challenger for AFC East supremacy.

Oakland: Now you know why I voted Derek Carr second on my MVP ballot. It’s not about the weakness of the backups, nor is it about stats—it’s about his meaning to the team and the importance of his presence … Offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave did Connor Cook no favors early in Houston, all but telegraphing to the Texans defense: WE’RE ONLY THROWING SCREENS AND CHECKDOWNS BECAUSE THE ROOKIE QUARTERBACK IS SCARED, AND SO ARE WE.

First three passes: short left incomplete, short left gain of one, screen left batted and picked off by Jadeveon Clowney. If Connor Cook’s in the lineup and he’s playing quarterback, let him play quarterback the way he was raised to play …

No Raider fan should be discouraged this morning. Every arrow is pointing up for this franchise right now. Carr would have won that game (at least it would have been a shootout) and would have given the Raiders a good chance in any game they’d have played this postseason.

Detroit: “Some things are inexplicable,” coach Jim Caldwell said after the 26-6 loss to Seattle, referring to the dropped passes, the Anquan Boldin meltdown and the general poor game the Lions played. It doesn’t reflect well on the coach, and the coaching staff, to see that level of play in the biggest game of the year, but GM Bob Quinn has announced that Caldwell will return in 2017. Quinn may not have fired (and maybe should not fire) Caldwell.

Maybe Quinn should have just said, With Matthew Stafford hurt, it’s all a mulligan now anyway. But why make that call after backing into the playoffs, losing three vital games in a row down the stretch—and before an awful-looking playoff performance? …

So strange to see a rock-solid guy like Anquan Boldin go nuts the way he did. For his sake, I hope that’s not his last game … We never talk about Glover Quin as a top safety, but he saved a touchdown with an end-zone pass deflection and played very well on the back end.

* * *

The Award Section

OFFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Le’Veon Bell, running back, Pittsburgh. The most unique back in football—for years, perhaps—patiently gouged the Dolphins again and again and again in the 30-12 wild-card win, rushing 29 times for 167 yards and two touchdowns. No Steeler back since Franco Harris 42 years ago has had such a prolific playoff game. “That kind of blew me away,” said Bell. “It’s really humbling. It goes to show how good this team is.” Well, it goes to show a lot of things, most notably that Bell’s a very dangerous offensive weapon, with the league’s most unique running style.

Aaron Rodgers, quarterback, Green Bay. That 38-13 win over the Giants was a ridiculous game. How do you figure, particularly against a team with the kind of defensive fortitude and cover ability as New York, that Rodgers is going to have four touchdowns, no picks, no turnovers and throw for 362 … after struggling for the first 25 minutes? We are watching one of the great quarterbacks of our lives, with the kind of pocket presence and feel for the rush and touch on his throws that are second to none in football today—which is saying something, because Tom Brady is still playing, and playing remarkably well.

Justin Britt, center, Seattle. This is not to diminish the great game of Thomas Rawls (27 carries, 161 rushing yards). The interior Seattle line, as embattled a line as there is in football, was superb in opening holes and driving the Lions off the ball in their 177-rushing-yards performance in Seattle’s dominant win. Britt made the key block on three big Rawls runs, and was aided by two big clear-out blocks by left guard Mark Glowinski.

This is the formula Seattle used in the Marshawn Lynch Era—win time of possession (Seattle had the ball for 36:39), give Russell Wilson enough time to make plays (mostly, he had that time), and don’t turn it over. Of all the teams that won this weekend, the single most surprising element, in a positive way, was the performance of the Seattle offensive line. Britt, the Seahawks’ second-round pick in 2014, was huge in that performance.

DEFENSIVE PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Jadeveon Clowney, defensive end, Houston. He is looking like everything he was drafted to be. It took three years to say that, but he’s a game-wrecker. His athletic tipped interception on the Raiders’ third pass of the game turned out to be the biggest play of the Texans’ 27-14 wild-card win over Oakland, and his scary sideline-to-sideline play makes the Texans not miss J.J. Watt nearly as much as we thought they would. Did you see the play when he roared into the backfield and collided with Latavious Murray, causing him to get stuffed for a six-yard loss?

“Clowney’s so productive against the run and the pass, and he showed that today,” coach Bill O’Brien told me post-game. “He’s been doing it all year. Clowney led the league in tackles for loss. He’s really a complete player.” He showed that in wrecking the Raiders. (As asterisk here to Whitney Mercilus, who had two sacks. “Probably the most improved player in the league,” O’Brien said.)

SPECIAL TEAMS PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Matt Prater, kicker, Detroit. He kept it a one-score game at halftime in Seattle (10-3) with a 51-yard field goal late in the second quarter, then kicked a 53-yarder in the third to cut the Seahawk lead to 10-6. Not an easy night to kick, with 33-degree wind chill and a fairly rock-hard ball in the conditions. The Lions easily could have been zipped in the 26-6 loss without the leg of Prater.

COACH OF THE WEEK

Tom Cable, offensive line coach, Seattle. All season I (and many of my peers) have derided the front five of the Seahawks. Not this weekend. The Seahawks offensive line opened holes for 177 rushing yards and largely protected Russell Wilson (except for three sacks on 36 pass drops) and in general repaid the faith that Cable has shown in this group all season.

Particularly notable was the work of center Justin Britt and left guard Mark Glowinski, who both should get a large chunk of the headlines that will go to Thomas Rawls for his 161-yard rushing game. Excellent work by Cable and the Seattle offensive staff.

GOAT OF THE WEEK

Bobby Rainey, kick returner, New York Giants. With 18 minutes left at Green Bay, and the Packers kicking off after taking a 21-13 lead, kicker Mason Crosby booted one toward the left pylon of the end zone. Rainey inexplicably caught it and lunged out of bounds at the 3-yard line. Had he let it go, the Giants would have had the ball at either the 25 (touchback) or at the 40 (out of bounds). The Giants went three-and-out and the Packers responded with a short-field field goal and then a touchdown on their next series. Ball game over.

* * *

Chris Simms on his year as a coaching assistant in New England, and on Bill Belichick: “I was doing all the dirty work, breaking down all the film, supplying the coaches with information to start their game plan. And then I was in charge of northeast scouting, making tapes. People think I don’t like New England, but you are critical of the teams you like the most, right? I am a huge New England fan. It was a great experience being there, and I learned so much and I got an inside look of why they are the greatest franchise in the last 20 years and maybe in the history of the NFL.

“Bill is one of the smartest individuals you can be around. If he went to Wall Street, I think he would be running Wall Street as the head of Goldman Sachs and making $100 million there. He is so smart, so tactical. Everything is about supplying information to Bill so he can make the decisions … There is never a day off with Bill Belichick. Oh, it's March 23? No, we're working hard and going to be detailed as s--- today no matter what.

Bill was the kind of … It's Saturday and we're in a coaches meeting and he goes, Alright, I'll see you guys in here tomorrow at 10:30. And we’d say, you know coach, tomorrow is Mother's Day. And he’d say, Man, okay, I didn't realize it was Mother's Day, I'll see you guys Monday. He is football all the time and it's where his mind is and it’s not even a grind for him. It’s just his life.”

* * *

Things I Think I Think

1. I think these are my quick notes of analysis from wild-card weekend:

a. Seems like a never-ending tradition: The early Saturday game feels like the JV game.

b. Despite the Giants’ surrendering 38 points Sunday, highlighting some depth issues in the secondary, GM Jerry Reese had one of the best free-agency seasons in history in 2016.

c. Of every team left in the playoffs, the Steelers are best suited to win on frigid days, with a strong-armed quarterback, a patient and broiling running back, and more than one reliable receiver. (I’m counting Eli Rogers).

d. I am 59 years old; I was 6 months old when the Lions won their last road playoff game. I don’t think that says good things for the Detroit football club.

e. Looks like it’s over for new Seahawk Devin Hester. The greatest punt-returner of our day, 34, signaled for a fair catch and caught a first-quarter punt at the Seattle 12-yard line with the two closest Lions each eight yards away.

f. I was one of those, incorrectly, with a shovel, throwing dirt on Jadeveon Clowney’s career last summer.

g. I disagree with Cris Collinsworth on his people-didn’t-appreciate-Marshawn Lynch-enough point Saturday night. People appreciated him plenty and miss him very much.

h. It’s just not acceptable, and should be cause for Seattle GM John Schneider to bring kicking competition to training camp next year, for Seattle kicker Steven Hauschka to miss seven extra points—seven 33-yard field goals—in 17 games.

i. The Dolphins are two corners away from being a threat to win multiple January games, but they’re not the only team that can say that.

j. Every time I watch Bobby Wagner play (I sound like a broken record), I’m impressed with his instincts and his Ray Lewis-like sideline-to-sideline intelligence and athleticism.

2. I think I like the Gregg Williams hire as defensive coordinator for Hue Jackson and the Browns. It’s not just because the Rams were ninth in team defense this year, because they had some awful games. But it’s because Williams is not going to stand for 4.6 yards per rush (Cleveland’s porous defensive number this year) or 36 passing touchdowns (which Cleveland allowed this year).

He’s going to make mediocrity uncomfortable. He’ll fire people (if he can), or at least bench them. If Jamie Collins re-signs, Williams will challenge him to get the lack of discipline out of his game. Good pick by Hue Jackson.

3. I think I’m sure Tampa Bay coach Dirk Koetter won points in his own locker room by saying the team would have competition for second-round kicker Roberto Aguayo in training camp next summer. GM Jason Licht traded into the second round to pick Aguayo, and he was the worst kicker in the league (among kickers who played the full season with their teams); he was a 71-percent kicker, and hit just four of 10 from beyond 40 yards.

“Our field-goal percentage this year was not good enough,” Koetter said last week. “Jason [Licht] and I have talked, and I think it’s already proven that we have no problem moving on from a draft choice and playing someone who wasn’t drafted.” Good lesson for Licht: Let’s say the four best kickers of the current era (just my opinion) are Adam Vinatieri, Dan Bailey, Stephen Gostkowski and Justin Tucker. One was drafted. You can find kickers—and great kickers—on the street, or late in the draft. You certainly shouldn’t trade up to pick one in the second round.

4. I think owner Bob McNair tried to put out the fire of the tenuousness of Bill O’Brien’s job (“There’s nothing to it; I’m not going to fire him”) Saturday evening, and assured Houston reporters that O’Brien will return for his fourth season in 2017. I asked O’Brien about it after the game. “I don’t know where it’s coming from, honestly,” he said. “That’s probably a question for someone else. All those things out there, I’m not familiar where they’ve originated from, and I certainly want to finish what we started and bring a championship to Houston. That’s why I came here.”

No one knows exactly what the tenor of feelings is inside the building in Houston, but when I think about the Texans and the culture led by owner Bob McNair, I think of civility and utmost respect. I think how well Gary Kubiak must have fit in there, and how comfortable McNair and GM Rick Smith must have been with him. O’Brien’s got a bit of a growling side, a tough edge, and he’s going to sometimes rankle people if getting along is of paramount importance. In my opinion, losing O’Brien would be a huge mistake.

5. I think O’Brien would be a strong candidate in at least two of the six current openings. But as one coach-seeking team decision-maker told me Saturday: “Obviously that’s an interesting candidate, but we’d want to know why that thing blew up, if it does. We’d want to know what he [O’Brien] is like to work with.” I’ll tell you what he’s like, according to those who work with him: He’s going to make it unpleasant if you lose, or if you’re not playing well.

6. I think this doesn’t speak volumes; it shouts volumes. Christian Hackenberg was the 51st pick in the 2016 NFL Draft, 84 spots (and almost three full rounds) in front of Dak Prescott. And Jets GM Mike Maccagnan was asked Thursday if Hackenberg has developed enough in 2016 to compete for the starting job in 2017. Now, Maccagnan was not asked if Hackenberg was the starter entering 2017, or whether he expected Hackenberg would start in 2017.

He was asked if Hackenberg “has developed enough to compete for the starting job” next season. Maccagnan said: “From where he was initially, he has made progress. He has improved. This will be a big offseason for him and we’ll probably have a better feel for that when we go into training camp next year.” Man, has Hackenberg learned how to put on a helmet yet?

7. I think Brian Costello of the New York Post had a pretty good rejoinder after the Maccagnan briefing: “Maccagnan is irrationally afraid to say anything that might tip off the competition. (Psst, rest of NFL: The Jets need a quarterback. You didn’t hear it from me.)”

8. I think you don’t win starting quarterback jobs in the NFL during January press conferences. And Hackenberg obviously will sink or swim on his own starting in the Jets’ offseason program in April. But some quarterback prospects during their first year or two engender comments about looking good in practice, and pushing for playing time. I never heard once all season about how impressive Hackenberg looked.

9. I think Nick Saban won’t be going to Indianapolis. Makes a lot of sense on the surface, but it doesn’t look like the Sabans will be moving to central Indiana, regardless of outcome in Tampa tonight.

Playoff divisional round is gonna deliver this year

Pittsburgh's OL ran a clinic today vs that Dolphins front, and they're gonna be a great matchup vs the Chiefs next weekend. That game is going to be a classic.

Still awaiting that last game, but either way we already have a great matchup of contrasting strengths with Seattle vs Atlanta. Dallas vs either Green Bay or New York will be a good one.

Only dud will be Houston vs New England. Really like the way this is shaping up.

AFC Playoffs: Dolphins @ Steelers GDT

For those wagering ROD $ it looks to be cold and windy in Pittsburgh today. The wind may play a factor.


"Miami Dolphins (10-6) at Pittsburgh Steelers (11-5) at 1:05 p.m. EST Sunday

Cold, breezy weather will be on tap in the Steel City on Sunday as the Steelers host the Dolphins at Heinz Field.

A high of 15 is forecast for Sunday, but a northwest breeze of 12-25 mph will make it feel like below zero, according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Maggie Samuhel. Skies will be mostly cloudy.

While it won't make much of an impact, there could be a passing snow shower during the game, Samuhel said."

http://www.accuweather.com/en/weath...-green-bay-for-nfl-wild-card-weekend/70000472

Kevin Demoff wrong about Rams; they are a rebuild.

http://cover32.com/2017/01/07/kevin-demoff-rams-rebuild/

Kevin Demoff gets it wrong when he said the Los Angeles Rams aren’t a “rebuild.”

They are.

But Demoff has never been a guy to let the truth get in the way of a self-serving narrative. Especially one he is trying to sell to an already skeptical fan base.

To his credit, he isn’t wrong when he says the Rams have talent on this team. As they move forward towards 2017, and more importantly, as they search for a successor to Jeff Fisher, there’s upside to the franchise that is attractive. They have a very good defense with a bonafide star in Aaron Donald, and punter Johnny Hekker is the best in the league at his position.

They also have a running back that has more upside than not in Todd Gurley.

But offensively, they have no identity, no run game, and are stark at the receiver position.

Add to the above that hey may have, and I stress, “may have” a starting quarterback in Jared Goff.


However, what this team is absolutely devoid of is leadership both on and off the field.

While Kevin Demoff may have a different view on whether the Rams are in a rebuild or not, he’d have a difficult time defending the state of the organization as anything other than dysfunctional. A look at the last five weeks of the season uncovered how deep that dysfunction goes.


Los Angeles suffered targeted leaks that had Demoff, GM Les Snead, and Jeff Fisher playing defense. It’s also hard to ignore the accusations from inside the locker room that some players had prematurely cashed in on the season.

Kevin Demoff himself even tried to rationalize the mounting losses by his head coach who was represented by his father.

Now he wants to sell that he’s a piece or two away on offense to change this team’s trajectory. He offers this assessment with no head coach, a General Manager who may OR may not be part of the mix, and a number #1 draft pick who is the starter designate in 2017 at the most critical position in professional football, quarterback.

That quarterback is also 0-7.

The Los Angeles Rams are in pieces as an organization. Demoff may believe he is best served to offer a more positive narrative, but the record in not just this season, but going back to the last four in St. Louis shows an organization who just doesn’t get it.

Yet, he’s tasked to fix it.

Fans can make their own assessment as to the state of this team. But I’d guess it doesn’t dovetail with the same line that the Rams COO is peddling.

Which in and of itself speaks to the relative delusion this organization continues to operate under.

It also doesn’t bode well for 2017.
********************************************************************************************************************

Gonna have to disagree with writers assessment.While I will be first to admit we are in dire
need of help on the oline and WR positions.That in itself does not constitute a Rebuild.

The bigger need in my opinion is hiring of a HC and coaching staff with a vision that
our guys can believe in.A vision that inspires.I am aware of the "perfect world " mind set
that these guys are professionals and should be self motivated.

But the truth is, this is not a perfect world and It can be damn near impossible to
be motivated playing under a system that inspires no one.Many of us complain about
the lack of creativity,lack of adjustments and just a lack of simple soundness of the
offense that we have been forced to watch.The complaints are not unfounded.

If we have a hard time dealing with these things,how can we blame the players
who are generally more knowledgeable and see these things on a daily basis.
How can a player perform to best of his ability when he knows the system
and the coaches pushing this system are faulty at best.The bottom line is
these guys didn't believe in what they were being sold and it showed.

I guess my point as it pertains to the article is,You give these guys a coach
that they can believe in ,a vision that inspires them and you will see a different
team on Sundays.I am not saying that all of sudden everyone on the team
is going to be playing lights out,because there are talent deficiency's.What
i am saying that you will see players playing inspired football and some
will be playing at a higher level than many of us expected.

I welcome any feedback you guys may have.

Dead Horse Post of the Week (part 2) - HC Search

As the speculation mounts, the desire to repost the same things over and over again has necessitated another DHPotW.

For millennia, we have assigned random events significant meaning in order to make sense of things.

"That comet overhead is an ill omen. Quick! Sacrifice a virgin so that the gods will be appeased and our crops will be spared!"

Which leads us to Asshole Face (the pedantic side of me insists I mention it's Payton, not Peyton. That's Manning. Manning is EY. The coach, Sean is AY...Payton. Anyway...I did say it was pedantic).

He's made some moves, firing Joe Vitt and others. What does it mean???

No one knows. We know he's openly considered leaving NO last year and there are some good coaching slots opening up this year. As well, if Payton WAS considering leaving Nawlins, he wouldn't be a quick hire which means that once he did finally leave, any new coach would either be stuck with his guys or more likely, let his guys go with little chance of getting work. So, the firing of those guys really doesn't tell us anything.

Now... if Payton starts HIRING guys... that's the slam dunk that he's staying in Nawlins because you don't hire guys who have to move families and all that if you have even an inkling that you're about to bounce and all those guys are likely to be dismissed.

So unless Payton hires anyone to replace those fired (I hadn't heard if he has or hasn't), then we know exactly as much as when this coaching carousel started. Nothing.

Now... As for the coaches...

My Pattern-o-meter (I need a better name)...

Asshole Face would BY FAR be the best coach for the Rams. It's not close. Asshole Face took a bust of Kerry Collins and essentially revived his career in NY. The same Kerry Collins became the ONLY pocket passer Fisher ever had and I kept trying to say Fisher had NOTHING whatsoever to do with Collins' development. And he didn't. It was Payton. Payton also worked with rookie Romo and very much sped up his development.

Drew Brees had a VERY good year and a couple of good years in SD, but he wasn't even overall a top QB. So much so that SD at the top of the draft...drafted a QB to replace him. He played really well, then had the really bad injury to his throwing shoulder. Saban at Miami wanted him, but Miami wouldn't clear him medically. Nawlins did and Payton tailored an offense around Brees' strengths. Now, we have the only QB in NFL history to throw for multiple 5k yard seasons (this was his 5th when no other in history has done it more than once...and if you look at either his running game, OL or receivers, NONE are stellar...NONE are All-Pros.

All that shows that multiple times throughout Payton's career, he's significantly developed a QB. Well, the Rams have gone all in on Goff. Unless, they are rethinking that bet, not wanting to throw good money after bad and they just want to let the bet ride, they will support Goff with perhaps the best QB whisperer of our generation. The fact that he's available at the exact moment that we need someone to develop our Franchise QB is not just fortuitous...it's Serendipity...

I know he had issues on the defensive side of the ball, but we didn't seem to have any trouble with Williams, the guy who he won the SB with. So, no. I think we'll find that right combo and with our D talent, this would have all the makings of something truly special.

Other HC candidates. (not gonna cover them all cuz as Demoff said, some of them are about learning about the team, free research...) In order of my preference.

Sean McVay: The other Sean. Apparently, he had an amazing interview and I'm completely not surprised. Unfortunately, health issues have made me tardy in doing all the homework on these candidates, but the more input I put in on McVay, the higher he rises...so much so that I feel pretty confident putting him at #2. Why? Several reasons. He's got Kirk Cousins, a QB of limited raw talent, playing at a pretty high level. He's keeps finding ways of reviving the run game when teams take it away. Most importantly, even as young as he is, guys swear by him. He already has the presence and the loyalty of players. A HUGE part of the alchemy of winning is getting players to actually all play at that 100% threshold. He's able to get guys on that level. That will be critical for the once again young Rams team.

Kyle Shanahan: His most impressive stop wasn't this year with Matty Ice. It was the year he spent in Cleveland. THAT was some Coaching Kung Fu...and his Kung Fu is strong. At ever stop, he's had amazing production as a teacher/coordinator. Thing is, we need an HC and that's my hesitation. Unlike McVay, he's rubbed some people the wrong way. Then again, maybe those people don't need to be there with all that production. His pedigree, experience and production are certainly worthy of the chance. He's another QB whisperer as well, which is something Goff needs. Badly. Goff has produced at historically low levels, but he's not historically bad. Something has to give.

Matt Patricia: The first non-QB whisperer on the list. Patricia has worked both OL coaching as well as several spots on D before becoming DC. One of the benefits of Patricia coming is that he'd likely bring the EP which I've stated UNEQUIVOCALLY, would be the best offense for Goff. However, as multiple articles have also pointed out, the more developed it gets, the harder it is to find receivers to run it (which is why I think we see so few implementations of it). IF...IF, IF, IF you can find the smart receivers, it's almost stupid easy. I mean, with decent play calling, NE went 11-5 with Matt Cassel. And they didn't have a great D that year. What Matt Patricia brings is an appreciation for winning in the trenches and smart, tough, disciplined play.

Josh McDaniel: He's better than he's been given credit around here. His play calling is good enough that Brady doesn't have to check out of plays all that often. He's simply amazing at finding the mismatches and designing plays. He's extended the EP substantially, beyond even Weis. If he can install it in layers and not overwhelm a young QB, while bringing in smart WRs, this team would be well on the way to dominating. He's been very public about his faults, number one being not listening enough. His talent isn't in question. A more limited HC role like the Rams may be ideal where he doesn't have to deal with total control may actually suit him better than a place like the 9ers where he'd ask for whole enchilada an could be overwhelmed...again.

Honorable Mention:

Jim Bob Cooter: Was instrumental in Peyton Manning's record breaking years in Denver and Matt Stafford having an MVP season in Detroit. Guys get past the Redneck-est name ever in a minute...because... TOUCHDOWN. I just can't get past that the DC from there is on the interview list, but the OC who should be considered isn't. That's just...wrong.

Vance Joseph: How he wasn't in the mix when he nearly got the Denver job 2 years ago is beyond me. He got Suh to buy in and produce and has that D clicking. He may actually be the favorite for the Denver job now, even with Kyle Shanahan being available. I'm still shocked he wasn't even on the interview list.

Dave Toub: He's been getting notice...and he should. His special teams work is phenomenal. Philly and KC in particular. The difference between Toub and other guys from Belichick, Tomlin and John Harbaugh was that they spent time on ST before coaching other units. They didn't go from ST to HC. The last coach to go from ST to HC didn't fare well and front offices have deep memories. If Toub really wanted to eventually be an HC, he'd switch to either OC or DC and put that out there. If he did well there, that'd be all that teams needed to see. Still, I dunno that anyone can question that he's likely the best ST coach in the NFL (Bones would be either 1a or 2, depending on criteria).

So...

I look at who we have and who's likely to stay... and why... and that changes a little depending on which coaches come (like if Kyle Shanahan is the HC, Quick might stay, but if Payton, Patricia or McDaniel comes, he goes). And that changes our draft needs a little... But I also look at what we already spent.

Asshole Face is the best for Goff and the Rams by far and it's not close. I've pounded the table so much, my hand looks like a catcher's mitt.

To not pick Payton is to not maximize the investment in Goff.

The Rams can't express ANY interest in Payton during the first round of interviews because once they've entered into negotiations for compensation, they're likely to see cancellations. After the first round of interviews, they'll have TONS more information.

And who knows, someone like McVay may blow them away and they may see the next Adam Gase and not want to miss out.

That said, we'll know nothing about any Payton interest until after all the initial interviews. At the earliest.

I'm still plugging more info into the ol' Pattern-o-meter (lord, do I need a better name... and no "-inator" names... for any Phineas and Ferb fans...LOL) so I see guys rise and fall.

One thing that hasn't changed since before the season is that the best system for Goff is the EP (but we may not be able to supply him with the WRs to run it...) and the WCO exception to that is the Asshole Face WCO. It just so happens that Asshole Face is the best QB whisperer of our generation.

If Payton either starts hiring people in Nawlins or the Rams emphatically put Payton out of the running, then I'd have to go with McVay.

He has the right combination of offensive chops AND leadership necessary to be the kind of HC I see being successful IN THIS SET OF CIRCUMSTANCES.

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