Monday, February 23, 2026

A Brief History of the Scouting Combine

NFL team decision-makers and 319 college prospects will be arriving in Indianapolis this week for the annual Scouting Combine.

The Scouting Combine has become an oddly big, televised event on the NFL’s offseason schedule. For younger fans that’s all they’ve known of the event. It wasn’t always like that. It used to be a very secret thing. There were no cameras and no news. It was as if draft prospects and team decision-makers disappeared into a black hole for a few days. That was a very different time. This is a brief look into the history of the Scouting Combine. 


Thanks to then Philadelphia Eagles owner Bert Bell, the NFL Draft was introduced in 1936. At the time, all of the best college prospects gravitated to the league’s best teams. The Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers, and New York Giants annually re-stocked and played for championships. The rest of the league’s teams collected the remaining players and hoped for the best. There had to be a better way of spreading the available football talent more evenly and more fairly across the league. Bell suggested the draft. George Halas, Curly Lambeau, and Tim Mara reluctantly agreed. For the first few decades, scouting for the draft was an afterthought. Today’s average fantasy football participant takes part in their drafts far more prepared than those NFL team decision-makers did for their real drafts. Coaches and owners would show up to the draft and just randomly pluck names out of a college football magazine. Maybe a few of them had hot tips from friends in the college coaching ranks. There were no scouts. The first true scouts didn’t appear until the late 1940s and 1950s. Ed Kotal is generally regarded as the first person in league history to travel, watch, and evaluate college football talent. He helped build the Los Angeles Rams into an annual contender and league champion in 1951. Dick Gallagher and Sarge MacKenzie helped stock the powerful Cleveland Browns. A little later, Jack Vainisi built the Green Bay Packers team that Vince Lombardi took to ridiculous heights in the 1960s. 


It’s difficult to imagine a time when football scouting was an afterthought. One of the hardships of football scouting, especially thorough scouting, is the size of this country and the number of colleges, at all levels, that pepper it. To cover it all seems impossible. With hundreds of colleges to visit and thousands of players to see and limited resources to cover them, NFL teams started to enter into partnerships to share the costs and labor. Imagine that. NFL teams working together, sharing resources and information in an effort to get better. It’s inconceivable. The first of these partnerships began in 1963. The Lions, Eagles, Steelers Talent Organization, or LESTO. The Bears joined in 1964 and LESTO magically became BLESTO. In 1964, the Baltimore Colts, Cleveland Browns, Green Bay Packers, and St. Louis Cardinals formed Central Eastern Personnel Organization (CEPO). The name was changed to United Scouting after the Atlanta Falcons, New York Giants, and Washington Redskins joined. In 1983, the name was changed to National Football Scouting. It’s now known simply as the National. In 1964, the Dallas Cowboys, Los Angeles Rams, and San Francisco 49ers formed Troika. The group became Quadra when the expansion New Orleans Saints joined in 1967. The Minnesota Vikings joined BLESTO in 1966 and BLESTO became BLESTO-V. Clever. Jerry Reichow insisted the team join as a condition of his becoming the team’s director of scouting. The Vikings are still with BLESTO and Jack Murphy is the team’s BLESTO scout. All of the NFL teams were part of some scouting partnership during the 1960s. 


Prior to the 1970s, NFL teams didn’t typically give physical exams to draft prospects. Medically, the teams had little to no knowledge of the players that they were selecting. During the 1970s, that started to change as teams scheduled individual visits with draft prospects to check them out physically and medically. In both time and money, it was a very costly process. As with most NFL business from 1960-89, Dallas Cowboys general manager Tex Schramm was in the middle of change. He proposed to the league’s Competition Committee holding a centralized event at which evaluations of the draft prospects could take place. In 1982, National Football Scouting, which had expanded to 16 teams after the merger of the NFL and AFL in 1970, held the first National Invitational Camp (NIC) in Tampa. This camp formed the foundation of all those that followed. BLESTO and Quadra held their own camps. 


From 1982-84, BLESTO, NFS, and Quadra held separate camps. To share costs, they decided to merge in 1985. They decided to COMBINE. This merging of the three scouting organizations is why the Scouting Combine is called the Scouting Combine. The first Scouting Combine was held in Phoenix. The second was held in New Orleans. In 1987, the event was moved to it’s, so far, permanent home, Indianapolis. This is the home city of NFS so it’s nice and convenient for them. 


The Scouting Combine did not allow media coverage for nearly two decades. It was a very secret event. It was secret to the extent of being somewhat suspicious. If not suspicious, it was definitely mysterious. Everything changed in 2003 when the NFL launched their own television channel, NFL Network. The 2004 Scouting Combine was the first to be revealed to the public. With each year, the television production and coverage has gotten bigger. Now, it’s a prime time event. The evolution from a very secret event to a very public event has been astonishing. It’s gotten to the point where the actual work being done in Indianapolis feels secondary to the coverage of it. 

The future of the Scouting Combine has recently been questioned. Initially, those questions arose because of players (mostly quarterbacks) opting not to take part in some of the testing (mostly throwing). More recently, a few head coaches have decided that it’s not worth their time and skip the event. I don’t really get that decision. If I was a college football prospect meeting with a team and my potential head coach isn’t even there, I’d have second thoughts about that team. My time isn’t worth his time? That’s pretty pathetic. The future of the Scouting Combine in some form should be secure. Perhaps some of the testing is a little too extra but the teams desperately need much of the information that’s gathered there. Less important but surely significant, the Scouting Combine has come to be the starting point of the NFL’s offseason. The couple of months prior to the NFL Draft wouldn’t feel the same without the strange event in Indianapolis that kicks it all off. I’d certainly miss it. 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

RIP Rondale Moore

This is supposed to be the time when we’re thinking about the Scouting Combine, that next mock draft, or your team’s new assistant defensive line coach. Silly, innocent stuff. Instead came the devastating news that Minnesota Vikings receiver Rondale Moore died from a suspected self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Statement from the Minnesota Vikings:

"We are deeply saddened by the passing of Rondale Moore. While we are working to understand 

the facts, we have spoken with Rondale's family to offer our condolences and the full support of 

the Minnesota Vikings. We have also been in communication with our players, coaches, and staff, 

and will make counseling and emotional support resources available to anyone in need. Our 

thoughts are with Rondale's family and friends during this devastating time."


Statement from Vikings Head Coach Kevin O’Connell:

"I am devastated by the news of Rondale's death. While Rondale had been a member of the Vikings for a short time, he was someone we came to know well and care about deeply. He was a humble, soft-spoken, and respectful young man who was proud of his Indiana roots. As a player, he was disciplined, dedicated and resilient despite facing adversity multiple times as injuries sidelined him throughout his career. We are all heartbroken by the fact he won't continue to live out his NFL dream, and we won't all have a chance to watch him flourish. My prayers are with Rondale's family, friends, teammates and coaches as we all deal with this tragic news."

Statement from Jeff Brohm, Moore’s college coach at Purdue:

"Rondale Moore was a complete joy to coach. The ultimate competitor that would never back down to any challenge. Rondale has a work ethic that was unmatched by anyone. A great teammate that would come through in any situation. We all loved Rondale and we loved his smile and competitive edge that always wanted to please everyone he came in contact with. We offer all of our thoughts and prayers to Rondale and his family, and we love him very much!!!"

Nothing feels right at times like this. Thoughts, prayers, condolences can’t bring someone back. My thoughts, prayers, condolences are with and for his family, friends, teammates, everyone that knew Rondale Moore. Considering the suspected nature of his passing, there’s the “why?” of it all. Of all the sentiments posted by teammates, Hollywood Brown’s perhaps stings the most as he said that Moore “just messaged me a few hours ago.” The moments, hours, days before a tragedy like this are times that we wish we had back. As many have said since Moore’s passing: “Check in.” Check in on your loved ones, even liked ones. 

RIP Rondale Moore. 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Minnesota Vikings Coaching Ledger

Another week. Another entry in the Minnesota Vikings coaching ledger. So far this offseason, the Vikings have seen eight coaches depart Minnesota. 

Mike Pettine: Assistant Head Coach - retired
Michael Hutchings: Assistant DB Coach - swiped by Cal
Chris Kuper: Offensive Line Coach - contract expired 
Marcus Dixon: Defensive Line Coach - contract expired
Daronte Jones: DB Coach/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Washington Commanders
Imarjaye Albury: Assistant DL Coach - swiped by Texas Tech
Tony Sorrentino: Assistant Receivers Coach - swiped by Arizona Cardinals
Brian Angelichio: Tight Ends Coach/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Pittsburgh Steelers

The coaches that were swiped by other teams left for career advancement:

Michael Hutchings - Cal DC
Daronte Jones - Washington Commanders DC
Imarjaye Albury - Texas Tech Defensive Line Coach
Tony Sorrentino - Arizona Cardinals WR Coach
Brian Angelichio - Pittsburgh Steelers OC

The coaches with expired contracts quickly found new coaching homes:

Chris Kuper - Philadelphia Eagles OL Coach
Marcus Dixon - Dallas Cowboys DL Coach

To replace some of the departed coaches, the Vikings have hired five new coaches:

Frank Smith - Assistant Head Coach
Gerald Alexander - DB Coach/Pass Game Coordinator 
Ryan Nielsen - DL Coach/Run Game Coordinator
Derek Warehime - Assistant Offensive Line Coach
Kyle Caskey - Offensive Assistant

To fill two of the holes that resulted from the departures, the Vikings promoted from within.

Keith Carter - OL Coach
Ryan Cordell - Tight Ends Coach/Game Management Coordinator

By my estimation, the Vikings still have at least three coaching vacancies to fill.

Assistant Receivers Coach
Assistant Defensive Line Coach
Assistant Defensive Backs Coach

Again, the best news of this edition of the annual Minnesota Vikings coaching churn is that defensive coordinator Brian Flores signed a new contract. While he deserves another head coach opportunity, the longer he stays in Minnesota the better. 



Friday, February 20, 2026

Minnesota Vikings Current Player Personnel Structure

Three weeks ago, the Minnesota Vikings fired general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah. The timing was odd as it was about three weeks later than changes of such significance are typically made. Finding a new general manager in February and getting that general manager up to speed with a new team in time for free agency and the draft is a difficult deal. Rushing any of those important processes can be crippling. Despite the timing of the move, it was still surprising to many that Vikings ownership decided to put off the search for a new general manager to after the 2026 NFL Draft. I wasn’t all that surprised. When ownership named their interim general manager, I wasn’t surprised at all.

Rob Brzezinski has been with the Vikings since 1999. He’s been the team’s salary cap wizard for nearly all of those years. He’s probably the most respected person in the front office. When asked, Mark Wilf said that Brzezinski will be considered for the permanent general manager job. I’d be very surprised if Brzezinski is even interested. He’s been crushing his full-time job for going on 30 years. If being a general manager was ever an interest, he probably would’ve expressed it long before the job was forced upon him. In my opinion, Brzezinski is simply stepping up at a time of great need. He’s doing what he must do for the team. I see Brzezinski’s temporary role at the top of the team’s personnel structure as a unifier, a consensus-builder, an argument moderator. From top to bottom, the Vikings have a bunch of skilled talent evaluators. They are the people that really do all of the grunt work. It’s the general manager that brings it all together. I’ve heard some pundits question why assistant general manager Ryan Grigson wasn’t tapped to lead after the Adofo-Mensah firing. Grigson has general manager experience with the Indianapolis Colts. Since it would’ve kept Brzezinski in his primary role, it did seem to be the easiest transition. For some reason, I’m more comfortable with Brzezinski leading the room than Grigson. I liked Grigson’s scouting background as a balance to Adofo-Mensah’s analytics but, for some reason, I don’t really want him at front of the room. It will be a challenging time but I believe that the Vikings have the people to handle it. 

To further help Brzezinski for a couple of challenging months, the Vikings wisely hired recently-retired, former Seattle Seahawks cap guy Matt Thomas. With Thomas, Emily Badis, and whatever assistance they get from Brzezinski, the contract side of things will be in good shape. 

Every offseason is a challenging. The personnel structure tweaks that preceded this offseason make it even more challenging. Perhaps the timing could’ve been better but a change needed to be made. Better late than never. The Vikings can’t afford another unproductive draft. After a significant change, here’s a look at the Vikings current player personnel structure. 

Minnesota Vikings Current Personnel Structure 

Interim General Manager: Rob Brzezinski 
Senior Vice President of Player Personnel: Ryan Grigson
Vice President of Football Operations: Demetrius Washington
Director of Player Personnel: Ryan Monnens
Assistant Director of Player Personnel: Chisom Opara
Director of Pro Personnel: Sam DeLuca
Senior Personnel Executive: Jamaal Stephenson
Director of College Scouting: Mike Sholiton
Senior College Executive: Pat Roberts
National Scout: Sean Gustus
National Scout: David Williams
College Area Scout (Midwest): Jake Essler
College Scout: Blaine Gramer
College Scout: Matt Kelly
College Scout: Steve Sabo
College Area Scout (Northeast): Michelle Mankoff
College Scout/BLESTO: Jack Murphy
Pro Scout: Salli Clavelle
Pro Scout: Alex Dale
Pro Scout: Shane Normandeau
Senior Player Personnel Analyst: Taylor Brooks
Senior Football Operations Manager: Kaitlin Zarecki
Senior Manager of Football Administration: Emily Badis
Senior Manager of Family Engagement: Quinn Gjersvig
Football Quantitative Methods Senior Analyst: Chris French
Football Quantitative Methods Analyst: Cole Bransford
Director, Football Information Systems: Luke Burson
Database Administrator: Mike Desplenter
Football Information Systems Developer: Anthony Caron
Football Information Systems Developer: Derek McCormick
Football Administration Associate: Austin Lavitt 
Player Personnel Consultant: Paul Wiggin
Scouting Associate: Dabness Atkins
Scouting Associate: Brian Schnorr
Football Operations Associate: Jordyn Hall
Family Engagement Associate: Michela Brown-Mayfield
SQL Database Associate: Grace Liebi
Football Quantitative Methods Associate: Claire Morrison

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Throwback Thursday: Favorite Football Books

I bring this list back when I’m thinking about football books. Since I’m often reading a football book, I don’t actually bring it back as often as I’m thinking about them. I am this time. Here are 27 of my favorite football books. 

27. Namath: a Biography, Mark Kriegel, 2005
If you're at all curious about the Joe Namath legend this is the book to read.

26. Friday Night Lights, H.G. Bissinger, 1990
A football classic. As much sociological study as football book.

25. Going Long: The Wild Ten Year Saga of the American Football League in the Words of Those Who Lived It, Jeff Miller, 2004
Perhaps the best book on the wildly entertaining American Football League.

24. The Mannings, Lars Anderson, 2016
Any book about the Mannings that's still talking about Archie's football career 150 pages in is an entertaining read. Not to take anything away from the Manning kids but their careers are so fresh in our football minds. Archie was a very good quarterback on a very bad team. He was also one of my favorite non-Minnesota Vikings players of his era. He's a better dad. This book is as much, or more, about raising a family and relationships as it is about football. A great book.

23. About Three Bricks Shy of a Load, Roy Blount Jr., 1974
This book is an excellent season-long, inside look at the Pittsburgh Steelers just before the team took over the NFL.

22. Chuck Noll: His Life's Work, Michael MacCambridge, 2016
Blount's book took a close look at one season before the Steelers' dynasty. MacCambridge's book looks at the life of the man behind it. It's hard to imagine the Steelers being a laughing-stock but they were for nearly all of their first 40 years in the league. When Dan Rooney hired Chuck Noll in 1969 the Steelers started to change. Quickly. MacCambrige tackles one of the game's great coaches and perhaps least known.

21. Giants and Heroes: A Daughter's Memories of Y. A. Tittle, Dianne Tittle De Laet, 1998
A look at a football star from the rare perspective of his daughter. This book is simply wonderful.

20. Native American Son: The Life and Sporting Legend of Jim Thorpe, Kate Buford, 2010
This is the best book on one of America's greatest athletes.

19. Kassulke, Karl Kassulke, 1981
The former Vikings safety delivers the wildly entertaining characters on the Minnesota Vikings of the 1960s. It's a must for Vikings fans.

18. Paper Lion, George Plimpton, 1966
George Plimpton's writing. George Plimpton's football talents. The 1963 Detroit Lions. Fun times.

17. PB: The Paul Brown Story, Paul Brown with Jack Clary, 1978
From stories of his days attending San Francisco 49ers games at Kezar Stadium in the 1940s, my father introduced me to the coaching legend of Paul Brown. As a result those Cleveland Browns teams and their coach will always have a fond place for me.

16. A Civil War, John Feinstein, 1997
A terrific, intimate look into the incredible Army-Navy rivalry.

15. Dutch Clark: The Life of an NFL Legend and the Birth of the Detroit Lions, Chris Willis, 2012
This book would probably make the list simply because of the subject. Dutch Clark is one of the best, and one of my favorite, players of the NFL’s early years. His story has been woefully covered. Chris Willis uncovered him. 

14. Finding the Winning Edge, Bill Walsh, 1997
This is the coach's manual on how to run a football team.

13. Instant Replay, Jerry Kramer and Dick Schaap, 1968
Jerry Kramer's diary of the Packers 1967 season. There are a few season-long, peak-behind-the-curtains books on this list. This book is one of the first to be written and still one of the best.

12. Halas by Halas, The Autobiography of George Halas, George Halas with Gwen Morgan and Arthur Veysey, 1979
George Halas' story is the story of the NFL.

11. The Pros: A Documentary of Professional Football in America, Robert Riger with commentary from Tex Maule, 1960
This is a unique coffee table-type book. It presents the NFL to the reader through the fantastic artwork and photography of Robert Riger and commentary of Tex Maule.

10. Total Football/Total Football II, Bob Carroll, David Neft, John Thorn, and Michael Greshman, 1997/1998
You want a pro football encyclopedia? Here's your pro football encyclopedia.

9. Run to Daylight, Vince Lombardi with W.C. Heinz, 1963
Perhaps the first "inside look" football books. Vince Lombardi takes the reader through a week of preparation for a game during the 1962 season.

8. The Game That Was, Myron Cope, 1970
Some of my favorite football books are the oral histories of the early days of the game. Myron Cope reached many of the game's best in this one. Dutch Clark, Johnny Blood, Marion Motley, Bill Willis, Bulldog Turner.

7. The Pro Football Chronicle: The Complete (Well Almost Record of the Best Players, the Greatest Photos, the Hardest Hits, the Biggest Scandals), Dan Daly and Bob O'Donnell, 1990
As the title suggests the book has a lot of everything.

6. Education of a Coach, David Halberstam, 2005
What could be better than a book written by a writer like David Halberstam about a coach like Bill Belichick?

5. What a Game They Played, Richard Whittingham, 1984
This is probably the best oral history book on football. Whittingham brings the reader the voices and experiences of many of the greats that made football great. Mel Hein, Don Hutson, Sid Luckman, Sammy Baugh, and so many others.

4. Red Grange: The Life And Legacy of the NFL’s First Superstar, Chris Willis, 2019
This might be the most thoroughly researched and comprehensive book on an individual football player. And it’s a fun read. 

3. A Thinking Man's Guide To Pro Football/The New Thinking Man's Guide To Pro Football, Paul Zimmerman, 1970 and 1984
This book is so great that it had to be done twice. I only wish that there was a Newer... and Newest... editions as well. Zimmerman was probably the most knowledgeable football writer in the business. He could talk and write about the game like a coach.

2. When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi, David Maraniss, 1999
The best football biography that I've read. There were a handful of years in which I had to re-read this book prior to the start of the NFL season. Just to get ready.

1. America's Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation, Michael MacCambridge, 2005
Michael MacCambridge tells the story of the NFL since World War II through a focus on the Browns, Chiefs, Colts, Cowboys, Raiders, and Rams. Well researched and very well written. If you want one book on the history of the NFL to read, this is it.


Wednesday, February 18, 2026

It’s Tagging Time

The window for NFL teams to use the franchise tag on one of their soon-to-be free agents opened yesterday. It closes on March 3. The franchise tag is a desperate tool to inhibit the movement of a prized free agent. There are two versions of the franchise tag. The “exclusive” tag prevents the tagged player from negotiating with another team. Unless the tagged player is traded, he’s staying put if the exclusive tag is slapped on him. The “non-exclusive” tag allows the tagged player to sign with another team. The player can sign with another team if that team is willing to pay the steep cost of two first-round draft picks. There’s also the rarely used transition tag. There was a time when the lesser tag was occasionally used. The transition tag simply gives the tagging team the right of first refusal. Essentially, a team is allowing another team to do the negotiation for them. Anyway, it’s tagging time.

If a player does get slapped with a tag, team and player have until July 15 to come to an agreement on a long-term deal. If not, the player gets a single-season, guaranteed deal that represents the average of the top-five salaries at each position.

Franchise Tag Numbers:
QB - $47.4 million
WR - $28.0 million
OL - $27.8 million
LB - $27.6 million
DT - $27.4 million
DE - $26.7 million
CB - $20.8 million
S - $20.8 million
TE - $16.0 million
RB - $14.2 million
K/P - $6.8 million

There’s so much that’s messed up about the above numbers. To start, the offensive line should be broken down by position. The geniuses do that with the defensive line. Speaking of the defensive line, since the big contract numbers on defense go to the pass rushers, defensive ends should be combined with 3-4 outside linebackers to form an edge rusher group. Further, combining 3-4 outside linebackers with the off-the-ball linebackers is absurd. Finally, I can’t imagine the incredibly coincidental math that shoots out the same tag numbers for corners and safeties. 

There once was a time when running back was right behind quarterbacks in offensive importance and compensation. That time wasn’t all that long ago. With that in mind, it’s stunning to see running backs ahead of only specialists in terms of compensation. 

The teams love the franchise tag. Players hate it. Teams love it because it’s another tool to restrict player movement. Since 1920, owners have loved controlling players. Players hate it because it keeps them off the open market. If the tag doesn’t lead to a long-term deal and they play the season on the franchise tag, the player sees no signing bonus. They get the great, one-year, guaranteed deal but they don’t see the much greater signing bonus. 

The franchise tag has been around since the 1993 birth of NFL Free Agency. For most of that time about a dozen players were tagged each season. Those numbers have dwindled in recent years. Only two players (Trey Smith and Tee Higgins) were tagged last season. We’ll see if more than two players are slapped with the tag this year. Here are some of the contenders for the 2026 Franchise Tag,

George Pickens, WR, Dallas Cowboys
Daniel Jones, QB, Indianapolis Colts
Alec Pierce, WR, Indianapolis Colts
Kyle Pitts, TE, Atlanta Falcons
Kenneth Walker III, RB, Seattle Seahawks
Trey Hendrickson, DE, Cincinnati Bengals 
Breece Hall, RB, New York Jets
Odafe Oweh, Edge, Los Angeles Chargers

A team can use only one tag so the Indianapolis Colts might have a decision to make. 







Tuesday, February 17, 2026

League’s Roster of Offensive Coordinators

The NFL’s annual head coach churn gets the attention. Makes sense. It’s the top coaching job in professional football and there’s only 32 of them. It’s an under-the-radar coaching churn but the annual shuffling of offensive coordinators can be interesting as well. There’s also only 32 offensive coordinator jobs. All of the league’s coaching changes start with the new head coaches. There were ten this year.

10 New Head Coaches
New York Giants: John Harbaugh 
Atlanta Falcons: Kevin Stefanski
Tennessee Titans: Robert Saleh
Miami Dolphins: Jeff Hafley
Baltimore Ravens: Jesse Minter
Cleveland Browns: Todd Monken
Las Vegas Raiders: Klint Kubiak
Arizona Cardinals: Mike LaFleur
Buffalo Bills: Joe Brady
Pittsburgh Steelers: Mike McCarthy

Because the NFL is such a pass-centric league, teams looking for a new head coach are often looking at the hot offensive playcallers. Of the ten teams looking for a head coach, four hired a coach that worked as an offensive coordinator last year.

Todd Monken
Klint Kubiak
Mike LaFleur
Joe Brady

Only two of those left the team that employed them. 

Klint Kubiak
Mike LaFleur

Todd Monken was the offensive coordinator for John Harbaugh with the Baltimore Ravens. Monken lost his job when Harbaugh was fired. Joe Brady was the offensive coordinator for the Buffalo Bills and promoted to head coach after Sean McDermott was shockingly fired. 

Because of the head coach churn, 10 teams were looking for new offensive coordinators. The Seattle Seahawks and Los Angeles Rams were also looking for new offensive coordinators because Klint Kubiak and Mike LaFleur were taken from them. Another nine teams were looking for a new offensive coordinator this offseason because they weren’t satisfied with the results of last season. In total, 21 of the league’s 32 teams were looking for new OCs. About 65%. That feels like a lot.

Teams with New Offensive Coordinators
Tennessee Titans: Brian Daboll
Los Angeles Chargers: Mike McDaniel
Kansas City Chiefs: Eric Bieniemy 
Detroit Lions: Drew Petzing
Miami Dolphins: Bobby Slowik
Washington Commanders: David Blough
Atlanta Falcons: Tommy Rees
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Zac Robinson
Baltimore Ravens: Declan Doyle
Buffalo Bills: Pete Carmichael 
Philadelphia Eagles: Sean Mannion
Cleveland Browns: Travis Switzer
Denver Broncos: Davis Webb
New York Giants: Matt Nagy
New York Jets: Frank Reich
Arizona Cardinals: Nathaniel Hackett
Pittsburgh Steelers: Brian Angelichio
Chicago Bears: Press Taylor
Las Vegas Raiders: Andrew Janocko 
Seattle Seahawks: Brian Fleury
Los Angeles Rams: ?

For most of the above, the changes are just a shuffling of offensive coordinators. Brian Daboll and Mike McDaniel were head coaches last year. 14 of the 21 offensive coordinators in new places were either offensive coordinators elsewhere last year or recently. Only six of the above are first-time NFL offensive coordinators. When Sean McVay finally makes his decision (Nate Scheelhasse?), there could be a seventh. 

David Blough
Sean Mannion
Travis Switzer
Davis Webb
Brian Angelichio
Brian Fleury

Perhaps the most interesting thing about the above six newbies is that David Blough, Sean Mannion, and Davis Webb played quarterback in the league in the 2020s. With the thousands of football coaches that have done the grunt work for decades for a head coach shot, it’s shocking how quick some of these offensive-centric coaches get to this level of the football-coaching world. Blough, Mannion, and Webb are probably only a year or two from their own shots at the top job. Webb even interviewed for a couple this year. 

One of the great coaching mysteries of the NFL is how Eric Bieniemy has never gotten a head coach opportunity. He was Andy Reid’s right-hand man for the early years of the great run of the Kansas City Chiefs. He had some interviews but never offered a job. Perhaps to pave his own path to his own team, he left Kansas City after a second Super Bowl win. He even went back to college football for an assistant head coach job. Still, nothing. Now, he’s back with the Chiefs as Reid’s offensive coordinator. I’ll bet Blough, Mannion, AND Webb get a head coach job before he does. Wonder why?