Offseason thoughts . . .
Just like that, there is a glimmer of hope that Hue Jackson
won’t construct the Browns’ offense and/or call plays in the upcoming season.
It’s all because Mike Mularkey, a well-traveled former
offensive coordinator/head coach, has become available, courtesy of some
interesting decisions by the Tennessee Titans.
Mularkey was hanging by a slender thread as the Titans’ head
coach as the 2017 season wound down. His job, it was reported, hinged on
whether the Titans made the playoffs. They did on the last Sunday of the
season. A reprieve.
Then it was reported he was gone if the Titans lost the
wild-card game. They didn’t, knocking off Kansas City, 22-21, their first
playoff victory since 2008. Soon after, word filtered down that the club wanted
to lock up Mularkey for five seasons as a reward.
Then came a 35-10 thrashing by New England in the division
round and all of a sudden, that five-year pact disappeared. So did Mularkey,
who reportedly mutually agreed with the team that it was time to leave.
And now, again reportedly, he is in the Browns’ crosshairs
for the ostensibly vacant job of offensive coordinator and, presumably, play
caller. Ostensibly because Jackson seems reluctant to give up the gig and
presumably for the same reason.
Mularkey checks all the boxes for the job and would be a
strong addition to the almost-dead Cleveland offense of the last two seasons. That, of
course, is assuming he doesn't hold out for the head coaching vacancy in Arizona.
He has authored offensive playbooks for Pittsburgh
(under Bill Cowher), Miami (under Nick Saban), Atlanta (under Mike Smith) and
for half a season in Tennessee before taking over midseason in 2015 for the
fired Ken Whisenhunt.
The Steelers were 23-8-1 in his first two seasons before he
departed to take the head-coaching job in Buffalo (succeeding current Browns
defensive coordinator Gregg Williams) following a 6-10 campaign with Pittsburgh.
His innovative and trick-filled offense in Pittsburgh
featured versatile players like Antwaan Randle El and Hines Ward, a couple of
collegiate quarterbacks who excelled as wide receivers in the National Football
League, It earned him the nickname Inspector Gadget.
Mularkey was quarterback Matt Ryan’s first coordinator with
the Falcons, who were 43-21 in his four seasons and earned him another crack at
head coaching in Jacksonville. The Jaguars were 2-14 in 2012, his lone season in north Florida.
If Jackson is serious about giving up all aspects of the
offense, Mularkey would be the perfect choice. He’s been around the NFL long
enough to have built up a solid résumé that has featured success wherever he
has coordinated an offense.
Even though head coach picks his coaching staff,
there has to be at least some input and influence by John Dorsey and owner
Jimmy Haslam III, to whom Jackson and the new GM report.
Late last month, Jackson rationalized handling the dual jobs
the first two seasons as the Browns’ head coach, saying, “I didn’t think it was
fair to give anybody that (OC) title and not have a football team that was
worthy of that guy to be the leader of it when I didn’t think it was where it
needed to be.”
Now that Dorsey is on board and the Browns will be much more
representative than they have been the last half dozen seasons from a talent standpoint,
that excuse, flimsy as it was, no longer holds weight.
If Mularkey is not at least vetted, the notion here that
Jackson’s search for an offensive boss is a charade becomes even more evident.
* * *
He won’t say it publicly, but Dorsey has to still be
agonizing privately over being handcuffed in selecting his own head coach. Six
teams initially created vacancies by firing their coaches with the Titans
making it seven a couple of days ago.
Chicago (Matt Nagy) and Oakland (Jon Gruden) have filled
theirs with Detroit (Matt Patricia), Indianapolis (Josh McDaniels) and New York
Giants (ex-Browns head coach Pat Shurmur) set after their respective current
teams complete their seasons.
There is a coach out there, however, who has received little
or no mention this season for a head-coaching job. He is not as high profile as
the others, but Dorsey knows all about him.
It’s strictly a guess, a hunch, but for some reason, don’t
go to sleep on Dave Toub, special teams coordinator for the last five seasons
in Kansas City and eight seasons before that with Chicago, achieving success at
both stops.
The Browns now have an opening on the coaching staff after Chris
Tabor, who has coached the Browns’ special teams the last seven seasons, took
his talents to Chicago a few days ago.
If Dorsey believes Toub, who has no head coaching
experience, is ready to make the leap, one way to get him to Cleveland to
replace Tabor without it being a sideways move would be to name him special
teams coordinator/assistant head coach.
That way, when – not if – Jackson self destructs, however
far into the 2018 season he makes it, Dorsey can elevate Toub to the top spot,
at least on an interim basis and have his man in place.
Of course that’s wishful thinking, pie in the sky, speculation
based mostly on a guess. At this point, though, the worst I can be is wrong.
With all these cast-off coaches being hired, it becomes quite evident that Jackson is stocking up his next herd of goats. Someone else to blame when the losses pile up! The Teflon Coach marches on.
ReplyDeleteUnless Coach Jackson Hires An Offensive Coordinator Who Truly Calls His Own Offense, I Do Not Trust The Coach's Sincerity.
DeleteIf the losses pile up, as you suggest, he won't be around for long.
DeleteNeither do I, Harry.
Delete