June 19, 2013

NFL: Dolphins cut Chad Johnson following receiver’s arrest

f0689fe75861fd988c77976174011189 NFL: Dolphins cut Chad Johnson following receiver’s arrest
(By Steve Mitchell, US Presswire)

(PhatzRadio / ) — Released from jail earlier in the day, Chad Johnson now has been released from the , too.

insider first reported Sunday the team parted ways with the wide receiver, one day after Johnson was arrested on charges of for allegedly head-butting his wife.

The later announced the news via .

And just like that, Johnson’s in Miami is over in the most stunning of fashions.

Earlier in the day, Dolphins coach told reporters he had yet to speak with Johnson but planned on doing so sooner rather than later. No word on if that meeting took place or how Johnson was informed of the team’s decision.

Armando Salguero of the reports that the decision to cut Johnson was made by Philbin, who had the support of his front office.

Johnson was looking to bounce back from a dismal one-year campaign with the Patriots last season, and at least on the surface seemed headed in the .

Just two days ago, the 34-year-old veteran was sitting atop the Dolphins’ wide receiver . Now his career could very well be over.

This certainly will make for an intriguing episode this week on HBO’s Hard Knocks.

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NFL: Dolphins cut Chad Johnson following receiver’s arrest

NFL: Buccaneers hire Rutgers’ Schiano to take over as coach

e3f6de6276d5c121286883b9853360f4 NFL: Buccaneers hire Rutgers’ Schiano to take over as coach
Rutgers head coach waits to take the field against the Iowa State Cyclones in the New Era Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium on December 30, 2011 in the Bronx Borough of New York City.
(December 29, 2011 – Photo by Jeff Zelevansky/ North America)

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — The Buccaneers are counting on Greg Schiano to lead them back to respectability and transform Tampa Bay into consistent winners – much in the same way he made Rutgers matter again.

The 45-year-old former Scarlet Knights coach was hired Thursday, more than three weeks after the Bucs fired Raheem Morris following a 4-12 finish.

The team scheduled a press conference for Friday to introduce Schiano, who inherits a team that allowed the most points in the NFL this season.

“Coach Schiano is a bright, meticulous teacher who knows how to get the most out of his players,” general manager Mark Dominik said. “He built and ran a pro-style program at Rutgers, and he’s a defensive-minded coach whose teams have always been characterized by toughness and a physical style of play.”

Schiano was at Rutgers for 11 seasons, taking them from college laughingstocks to a program that has had winning records in six of the last seven years. He was an assistant coach in the NFL with Chicago from 1996-98.

The Scarlet Knights appointed Kyle Flood as while the school searches for Schiano’s replacement.

The Bucs fired Morris on Jan. 2 after Tampa Bay lost 10 straight to end the season, most of them by double-digit margins. The collapse following a promising 4-2 start came only a year after the NFL’s youngest team went 10-6 and narrowly missed the playoffs.

The Glazer family that owns the team interviewed at least 10 candidates for the opening, including Oregon’s , who was offered the position before turning it down earlier this week.

The Bucs also talked to former Mike Sherman, and Marty Schottenheimer; offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski; defensive coordinator Jerry Gray; defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer; Green Bay Tom Clements and former , who accepted the head coaching opening with the .

An 11th known candidate, ex-Dallas Cowboys coach and current Houston defensive coordinator Wade Phillips, canceled a scheduled interview with the Bucs that would have taken place while the Texans were in the playoffs.

Bucs co-chairman Joel Glazer said the club was thrilled to entrust the team’s rebuilding project to Schiano.

“During our thorough search, we met with numerous impressive candidates, but coach Schiano surely distinguished himself,” Glazer said. “From his leadership skills to his considerable track record, he is, simply put, the right man for the job.”

It’s not the first exhaustive search the Glazers have conducted for a coach.

The Bucs pursued Steve Spurrier before hiring Tony Dungy in 1996, then tried to lure Bill Parcells and Steve Mariucci to Tampa Bay before trading two first-round draft picks, as well as a pair of second-rounders and $8 million cash to the Oakland Raiders in exchange for the opportunity to negotiate a contract with Jon Gruden after the 2001 season.

Gruden led the Bucs to their only Super Bowl title the following season, but Tampa Bay hasn’t won a playoff game since. The Glazers fired him three weeks after the Bucs lost the final four games of 2008 to miss the playoffs, and promoted Morris as his successor.

Tampa Bay went 17-31 under Morris, who served as his own defensive coordinator. The Bucs allowed a franchise-record 494 points in 2011, including 31 of more in seven of the last eight games.

In addition to fixing a defense that’s been rebuilt over the past two drafts, getting young quarterback Josh Freeman back on track will be a priority this offseason.

Freeman threw for 25 touchdowns and just six interceptions in 2010, his second year in the league and his first as a full-time starter. The 24-year-old passed for 16 TDs vs. 22 interceptions this season.

The timing of the move could put Rutgers in a bind with national signing day less than a week away. This is a pivotal time in the recruiting process, with coaches locking up commitments from high school prospects who make those agreements official by signing national letters of intent starting Wednesday.

Schiano’s contract with Rutgers runs through 2016 and pays him around $2.35 million per year.

He played linebacker at Bucknell, but never in the NFL. His first big break in coaching came at Penn State, where Joe Paterno hired him to coach defensive backs in 1991. He was at Penn State through 1995, before being hired by the Bears.

Because of his success at Rutgers, there had often been speculation for years about Schiano possibly replacing Paterno when the Hall of Famer was done coaching. But when Penn State was looking for a replacement after firing Paterno amid a child sex-abuse scandal involving one of his former longtime assistants, the school hired Patriots offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien.

Schiano has been courted by several other colleges during his time at Rutgers, most notably Miami in 2006 and Michigan in 2007.

“I’ve had several opportunities over the years and none of them felt right,” Schiano told The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J., as he left Rutgers’ football facility Thursday night “This time, this one felt right.”

Schiano’s first four seasons at Rutgers produced losing seasons, but the program he took over was practically at rock bottom in major college football. Before he was hired, the Scarlet Knights played in only one bowl game in their history.

Schiano brought structure and discipline to a program that sorely lacked both on every level. Not only has Rutgers become a consistent winner in the Big East, but the Scarlet Knights have regularly been among the top teams in the country when it comes to graduating players. He also encouraged the school to secure funding for multimillion dollar upgrades to Rutgers’ facilities, including a major stadium renovation.

In 2005, Rutgers went 7-5 and the next season the Scarlet Knights were 11-2. They played in six bowls under Schiano, winning five, including a victory over Iowa state in the Pinstripe Bowl to cap a 9-4 season in 2011.

NFL: Buccaneers hire Rutgers’ Schiano to take over as coach is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Buccaneers hire Rutgers’ Schiano to take over as coach

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NFL: Keeping Giants pass-rush from Brady is Pats’ tough task; mail

8698e5443ad03e71f056d84eab917cac NFL: Keeping Giants pass rush from Brady is Pats’ tough task; mail
#12 of the dives into the end zone to score a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the during their at on January 22, 2012 in Foxboro, Massachusetts.
(January 21, 2012 – Photo by Al Bello/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / SI) — Early storyline for the Super Bowl: Can the Patriots protect better in this Super Bowl against the Giants than they did the last time they played?

Conventional thinking says yes. Anytime is presented with a problem, you expect him to be able to solve it. In the Super Bowl in 2007, the Giants held a New that averaged 32 points a game during the season to just 14. They did that by hounding Tom Brady all day. Brady was sacked five times in the game — twice by Justin Tuck, who played all over the line, and once each by Jay Alford, and Kawika Mitchell. But it wasn’t just the sacking. It was the hitting. The Giants knocked Brady down eight times. They batted two passes down.

When I saw , a middling edge rusher, beat right tackle Nate Solder in the for a sack of Brady, I thought it was the kind of vulnerability quick rushers on the Giants could exploit in the Super Bowl. Then again, the Ravens are a very good pressure team, and they finished the game with only that one sack and — according to the tape study by ProFootballFocus.com — just six quarterback pressures. That’s a good job by the line. And the line will have its hands full against a very good Giants defensive line on Feb. 5.

According to ProFootballFocus, the Giants’ front four players had 19 pressures of in the . And that’s continued a late-season trend that shows when the Giants D-line is healthy, which it is now, they are a huge handful.
NFL Podcast with Peter King
Baltimore Ravens center joins the show to discuss the Ravens, his relationship with new Philbin and his future. Draft guru Gil Brandt stops by to share his encyclopedic knowledge and insight on the 2012 draft. Peter also looks back on conference championship weekend and gives a very early preview of Super Bowl XLVI.

More Peter King | Find on

You can bet each team in the endless hype of the game over the next 12 days will be saying, “We’re not the same team as we were four years ago.” Well, let’s see. The two coaches are the same. The quarterbacks are the same. The left tackles are the same. For the Patriots, the left guard (Logan Mankins) and the offensive line coach (Dante Scarnecchia) are the same. For the Giants, though defensive coordinators have changed (Steve Spagnuolo then, Perry Fewell now), the design of the defense is the same: The front four is so good, let them create havoc in the opposing backfield, and let the back seven stay in Brady’s passing lanes and make sure he sees lots of different coverage looks.

It’ll be a great chess match. And in my opinion, regardless of what’s said over the next week and a half, the same kind of chess match it was four years ago in Arizona.

Now onto your email:

GOOD QUESTION. “Is there any chance that the Competition Committee looks at the QB sneaks like the one Tom Brady scored on during the AFC Championship Game? From my perspective, I view these types of plays the same as when a runner/receiver reverses his direction and loses yards. In those situations, forward progress is not awarded. Why should a touchdown be awarded when a ball carrier INTENTIONALLY pulls the ball back into the field of play? I’m a Cowboys fan so I don’t have anything for or against the Pats or Ravens, but it seems wrong that Lee Evans can have possession of the ball in the endzone longer than Tom Brady and not score a touchdown. Thanks for all the great information and your support for those in uniform.”
– Jason Cochran, of Stephenville, Texas

You’re welcome. Jason, When Brady puts the ball over the imaginary plane and into the end zone, he has pierced the goal line with possession of the ball and it’s automatically a touchdown. My problem is when it’s done in the field of play, as Drew Brees did it this season against Detroit, and then pulled back quickly without being forced backward by a defender. When it’s in the field of play, the ball should be played where it is when he is first pushed back by a defender. I do hope the Competition Committee looks at that this offseason.

I DO THINK CAM MAY BE ON THE HOT SEAT. “Huge fan of the column. I consider it required reading before my classes at the University of Maryland every Monday. I want to get your opinion on the situation in Baltimore. Cam Cameron has taken a lot of heat from fans the past few years and with the AFC Championship Game coming down to the wire yesterday, there have been some hard looks at a few questionable play calls (despite most people heaping the blame on Evans and Cundiff). Is it finally time for Cameron to go and see what Joe Flacco can really do (which I think he showed a lot of yesterday) or is the controversy just being fueled by a tormented fan base?”
– Steve, of Baltimore

I think John Harbaugh is going to look hard at the apparent disconnect on offense, because the Ravens should be more productive than they are. It’ll be interesting to see what decision he makes, because the offense clicked well against the Patriots, and if Lee Evans hung onto that ball, they’d likely be going to the Super Bowl. What Harbaugh has to measure is whether Cam Cameron is maximizing the talents of Joe Flacco, and if the team should switch either to a different offense, or to an offense that would be more multiple than the one Cameron runs.

NO. “I watched six playoff games the last two Sundays and only saw three offensive holding calls. Are refs told not to call them, are playoff teams just better, or am I just watching too many Raider games?”
– Brian Heimbecker, of San Mateo, Calif.

I have noticed overall that officials let more go than I usually see, particularly when players squared off against each other and did some pushing and shoving. How, exactly, was Michael Boley not given 15 yards for ripping Anthony Davis’ helmet off in San Francisco? But I’m sure they were not told to make fewer holding calls.

YOU’RE ON IT. “Is there a good reason that the overtime period in playoff games is timed? The only good reason I can think of would be that the teams would switch sides after 15 minutes. With the new rules, it wouldn’t matter if the first team to get possession slowly marched down the field in a clock-eating drive–the second team would still get full opportunity to match the score, regardless of how much time remained in the quarter. Correct?”
– Eric, of Grand Rapids, Mich.

That’s right. At the end of the first overtime, if the score is tied, the teams switch sides and continue playing a sudden-death game.

I PILED ON KYLE WILLIAMS. “Wow Peter. Nothing like being the prisoner of the moment and piling onto Kyle Williams. Maybe if the 49ers had converted at least one of the 0 for 13 3rd downs during the game, we never would have heard the name Kyle Williams.”
– Shawn, of Montgomery Village, Somewhere

In a three-point game, when the winning team scores 20 points, how possibly could you not make a big deal out of a muffed punt that led to a 29-yard touchdown drive in the fourth quarter, and then fumbling a punt in overtime that led to the winning chip-shot field goal in the NFC Championship Game? I don’t work for Don’tPickOnTheGuyWhoCostHisTeamTheGame.com. I work for SI.com.

YOU’VE GOT A POINT THERE. “Thank you for another great column… you consistently provide one of the 2 or 3 must-read NFL columns every week. However, do you not believe that supporting Justin Smith’s ‘order’ to his team that they play through injuries and the overall media celebration on the tough players who play hurt, put additional pressure on players to take painkillers like Toradol?”
– Brad, of Vancouver

I like your point. I really like it. Players are always going to feel pressure to play hurt, and I hope Andrea Kremer’s report tonight on HBO “Real Sports” is seen by players and coaches and NFL executives. It’s a constant battle, to have players know exactly what that fine line is between playing hurt and not playing.

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NFL: Dolphins tab Philbin as new coach

b30537f32f00703ef53d36b1f16286ec NFL: Dolphins tab Philbin as new coach

MIAMI (AP) — A month of wrenching emotion for offensive coordinator Joe Philbin took another turn Friday when he landed the ’ head .

The deal was sealed less than two weeks after Philbin’s 21-year-old son drowned in an icy Wisconsin river. The confirmed the hiring in a news release and plan a news conference Saturday.

Philbin, who has never been a head coach, first interviewed with Miami on Jan. 7. The body of son Michael, one of Philbin’s six children, was recovered the next day in Oshkosh.

After spending a week away from the Packers, Philbin rejoined the team last Sunday for its divisional playoff loss to the New York Giants.

Philbin has been with Green Bay since 2003, serving as offensive coordinator since 2007. McCarthy called the plays, but Philbin put together the game plan for one of the ’s most prolific offenses.

The Dolphins’ top choice, , turned them down a week ago to become coach of the . Miami owner and general manager Jeff Ireland then conducted a second round of interviews this week with Philbin, offensive coordinator Mike McCoy and , the Dolphins’ at the end of the season.

“Joe has all the attributes that we were looking for when we started this process,” Ross said in a statement. “Jeff Ireland and I felt Joe was the right choice to bring the Dolphins back to the success we enjoyed in the past.”

The Dolphins are coming off a third consecutive , their longest such stretch since the 1960s. Even so, Philbin called them “one of the premier franchises in professional sports.”

“The Dolphins have a strong nucleus to build around,” he said in a statement. “And working with everyone in the organization, I know that together we will return the team to its winning tradition.”

Ross fired last month with three games to go in his fourth year as the Dolphins’ coach. When the search for a new coach began, Ross said he would like to give the franchise much-needed stability by hiring “a young Don Shula.”

Instead he chose the 50-year-old Philbin, who has 28 years of coaching experience, including 19 years in college.

With Philbin’s help, the Packers have ranked in the top 10 in the NFL in yardage each of the past five seasons, including third in 2011. A year ago they won the Super Bowl.

“A huge congratulations to Joe Philbin,” Green Bay tight end Jermichael Finley tweeted. “No one deserves it more than this guy. The Pack will miss him!”

The hiring might give the Dolphins an edge if they decide to pursue Packers backup quarterback Matt Flynn, who becomes a free agent this offseason. Flynn set Packers records with 480 yards passing and six touchdowns in their regular-season finale. Philbin played a major role in the development of Flynn and Pro Bowl quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

“Worked five years with Joe Philbin,” former Packers executive Andrew Brandt tweeted. “Calm, cerebral, humble and a skilled offensive mind. His style will resonate with players.”

Assistants becoming first-time NFL head coaches have had mixed results in recent years. The group includes the Ravens’ John Harbaugh, the Saints’ Sean Peyton and the Steelers’ Mike Tomlin, but also three coaches recently fired – Jim Caldwell by the Colts, Todd Haley by the Chiefs and by the Rams.

Before joining the Packers, Philbin was Iowa’s for four years. The former small-college tight end has been an offensive coordinator at Harvard, Northeastern and Allegheny College.

Philbin becomes the seventh coach in the past eight years for the Dolphins, who went 6-10 this season and missed the playoffs for the ninth time in the past decade. It has been 19 years since they reached the AFC championship game, 27 years since they reached the Super Bowl and 38 years since they won an NFL title.

Perhaps mindful of the drought, former Miami coach Jimmy Johnson offered this tweet: “Joe Philbin new Dolphin coach..good luck!”

Philbin will now begin assembling a staff. Bowles might remain as a replacement for defensive coordinator Mike Nolan, who took the same job this week with the Atlanta Falcons.

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 NFL: Dolphins tab Philbin as new coach

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NFL: Dolphins tab Philbin as new coach

NFL Coaching roundup: Miami talks to McCoy; Colts gut staff

3c9146822a0a308441de90de32b3202a NFL Coaching roundup: Miami talks to McCoy; Colts gut staff

(PhatzRadio / ) — MIAMI – offensive coordinator is meeting again with the about their , which will wrap up a second round of interviews by the team.

McCoy met Thursday in New York with owner Stephen Ross and general manager Jeff Ireland. and Todd Bowles were interviewed Wednesday in New York, where Ross has an office.

Philbin is the offensive coordinator of the . Bowles, the Dolphins’ secondary coach, became their interim coach when Tony Sparano was fired with three games left in the season.

The three candidates became finalists after Jeff Fisher turned down the Dolphins last Friday to become coach of the . McCoy completed his first interview with Miami on Monday.

AP: Spagnuolo headed to Saints

METAIRIE, La. — Former St. Louis Rams Spagnuolo has agreed to take over as defensive coordinator for the Saints.

A person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Thursday about the hiring on condition of anonymity because the Saints have not announced it.

Spagnuolo, 52, was head coach in St. Louis the past three seasons and was fired in January after going 10-38 with the Rams. Before that he was defensive coordinator for the , a stint that included a Super Bowl upset of the .

Gregg Williams, who was New Orleans’ defensive coordinator the past three seasons, has joined Jeff Fisher’s new staff in St. Louis.

Spagnuolo’s Rams were one of three teams to beat New Orleans during the 2011 regular season.

Spagnuolo’s defense in St. Louis ranked 22nd this season, but the unit was stellar against the Saints, sacking six times and intercepting him twice in the most the Saints had all season.

Before taking over in St. Louis, Spagnuolo had top 10 defenses with the Giants in the 2007 and 2008 seasons. His 2007 defense led the NFL with 53 sacks and the 2008 unit was sixth in the league with 42.

In the Giants’ 2008 Super Bowl triumph over , their defense sacked five times and the Patriots, who had led the NFL with an average of 36.8 points per game, to only 14 points.

Before joining the Giants, Spagnuolo was a defensive assistant in Philadelphia from 1999-2006. He coached Pro Bowl players including Brian and Lito Sheppard, and helped Philadelphia field a 10th-ranked defense in the 2004 season, when the Eagles made it to the Super Bowl before falling to New England.

Colts gut coaching staff

INDIANAPOLIS — One horribly bad season has pressed the Colts into major shake-up mode.

Two weeks after cleaning out the front office and two days after firing coach Jim Caldwell, Indianapolis announced most of Caldwell’s assistants are out of work, too.

Among the eight assistant coaches let go Thursday were defensive line coach John Teerlinck and his son, Bill; Frank Reich, the onetime quarterbacks coach who coached the receivers this season, and longtime conditioning coach Jon Torine. Linebackers Murphy, who served on the staffs of Jim Mora, Tony Dungy and Caldwell and was promoted to defensive coordinator in late November, decided to retire after 27 seasons on the NFL sideline.

That’s not all.

Defensive backs coach Alan Williams is leaving the Colts after 10 seasons to become the ’ defensive coordinator.

All this came despite the midseason firing of defensive coordinator Larry Coyer and the postseason firing of special teams coordinator Ray Rychleski, Caldwell’s first two hires.

That leaves only nine of 20 coaches who started the season still on Indy’s staff, and their fates may not be determined until the Colts hire a new head coach. The most notable holdover is offensive coordinator Clyde Christensen. Team vice chairman Bill Polian and general manager Chris Polian were both fired the day after Indy finished a 2-14 season, its worst in two decades.

This is the biggest overhaul Indy has had in Peyton Manning’s 14-year career.

Team owner Jim Irsay hasn’t made this many changes since 1997 when he fired the general manager and coach the day after the season ended, then got rid of quarterback Jim Harbaugh so they could take Manning with the No. 1 overall pick in that draft.

Could it happen again? Yes.

With Manning, the Colts won an NFL-record 115 regular-season games during the previous decade and tied the league record for consecutive playoff appearances with nine.

But with Manning having neck surgery in September, the third on his neck in 19 months, and missing the entire season, the Colts collapsed.

They lost their first 13 games behind three different quarterbacks, then won twice in five days and nearly lost the right to the No. 1 overall draft pick. But a season-ending loss at Jacksonville clinched the top draft spot, which most expect Indianapolis to use on Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck.

If they take Luck, Irsay could elect not to pay Manning a $28 million bonus and let him walk away as a free agent. Or he could retire.

New GM Ryan Grigson said earlier this week that he hadn’t yet spoken with Manning and that the medical details would likely dictate Manning’s future. Irsay has said he will pay Manning if he’s healthy enough to play.

The other coaches let go Thursday were assistant Devin Fitzsimmons, offensive line coach Pete Metzelaars, special assistant to the defense Rod Perry, and quarterbacks coach Ron Turner.

Indy has reportedly sought permission to speak with Tennessee defensive coordinator Jerry Gray, New Orleans offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael and Bengals defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer.

A decision on the new head coach isn’t likely to come until next week.

Vikings tab Williams as defensive coordinator

MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Vikings have hired Alan Williams, the defensive backs coach for the Indianapolis Colts for the past 10 years, as their new defensive coordinator.

He’ll be supervising the man he’s replacing in that role — and try to help the Vikings revive a group that was the easiest in the league to throw a touchdown pass against this season.

Yes, this is a unique arrangement and a challenging job. For Williams, though, what’s most important is his strong relationship with the guy who hired him, head coach Leslie Frazier. They shared responsible of the Colts defensive backs for two years, including the Super Bowl-winning team in 2006-07.

“It was another opportunity to work together, first of all, and to win some more championships,” Williams said Thursday, after signing a two-year contract.

To get to that level, Frazier, Williams and the rest of the Vikings have a lot of work to do coming off a 3-13 season, beginning with a depleted secondary that gave up a NFL-most 34 touchdown passes against only eight interceptions in 2011.

Those struggles were contributing factors in Frazier’s decision — he also said he sought some “new energy” — to dismiss defensive line coach Karl Dunbar and demote defensive coordinator Fred Pagac to linebackers coach.

But with defensive end Jared Allen’s league-leading 22 sacks, a late resurgence by defensive tackle Kevin Williams and an established outside linebacker in Chad Greenway, there is some talent there.

“Any time you get a chance to come in with a lot of the building blocks already in place, you want to jump at that,” Williams said on a conference call.

Promotions are attractive, too, of course. The 42-year-old Williams, a college teammate of former Vikings defensive coordinator and current Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, was chosen after Jacksonville defensive coordinator Mel Tucker decided to stay with the Jaguars.

Frazier said he also spoke with fired St. Louis coach Steve Spagnuolo, but the timing wasn’t right.

“We were fortunate that Alan was available,” Frazier said, adding: “I was a little nervous that we might not be able to get the guy I thought would be able to help us.”

Frazier will have a big hand in that help. He said he wasn’t involved as he should have been in the defense at the beginning of the season, and he’ll have heavy input with Williams, who has been schooled in the same 4-3 scheme and Tampa-2 zone coverage the Vikings have used versions of for years.

“Having a full offseason together, I’ve got to believe is going to be a big plus for us,” Frazier said.

Brendan Daly, an assistant defensive line coach for the Vikings from 2006-08 who joined Spagnuolo’s staff with the Rams in 2009, was hired by Frazier to replace Dunbar as the defensive line coach.

But Pagac is staying, as is Frazier’s old teammate, Mike Singletary, who remains an assistant head coach — and a linebackers coach. Neither Frazier nor Williams said they were sure yet how Pagac’s and Singletary’s duties would be divided.

Frazier said he wasn’t concerned about a too-many-cooks-in-the-kitchen problem with running the defense.

“Hearing their feedback, that assured me that it could work,” Frazier said. “If you don’t have the right kind of people it can be a dicey situation.”

Frazier lauded the ability of Williams to communicate and relate to the players. Williams is another branch of the Tony Dungy coaching tree, having learned under the soft-spoken, respected former coach of the Colts and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Williams said he wasn’t worried about Frazier micromanaging his job. He also said he wasn’t concerned about the potential awkwardness of working with Pagac, the man he was hired to replace. If Frazier said this would be fine, well, that was all he needed to hear.

“I know his word is golden. I know his judgment is second to none,” Williams said.

Williams said he doesn’t believe “wholesale changes” are necessary for the secondary and vowed that the Vikings will be better and faster as a defense. While his personality is more muted than Tomlin’s, he said they have a similar philosophy about how to teach their players and how to call a game.

“We’re going to run. We’re going to tackle. We’re going to hit. We’re going to play tough better than our opponents,” Williams said.

Jaguars fill out staff with Olson

JACKSONVILLE — New Jacksonville Jaguars coach Mike Mularkey is close to completing his staff.

Mularkey hired former Tampa Bay offensive coordinator Greg Olson as quarterbacks coach and former New Orleans secondary coach Tony Oden to the same position Thursday. The moves leave the Jaguars with just a few open spots, including running backs coach, receivers coach and special teams coordinator.

The team interviewed former Illinois and Florida head coach Ron Zook for the special teams opening Wednesday and former St. Louis Rams running backs coach Sylvester Croom for the same position.

Olson is entering his 11th season in the NFL. He spent the last four years in Tampa, one as quarterbacks coach and three as offensive coordinator. He also served as offensive coordinator for the Detroit Lions in 2005 and St. Louis Rams in 2006-07.

In Jacksonville, he will be tasked with getting more out of rookie Blaine Gabbert. The former Missouri star struggled in his first season, completing 51% of his passes for 2,214 yards and 12 touchdowns. He threw 11 interceptions, lost five fumbles and was sacked 40 times.

Olson has 25 years of coaching experience, including 15 in college and 10 in the NFL. His resume includes quarterbacks Josh Freeman (Tampa Bay), Marc Bulger (St. Louis), Jeff Garcia (San Francisco) and Drew Brees (Purdue).

Oden was an assistant defensive backs coach with the New Orleans Saints for five seasons before being promoted to secondary coach last season. He went to high school with Jaguars defensive coordinator Mel Tucker in Ohio, a relationship that helped him land the job. He also was given the title of assistant head coach.

Other coaches include Tucker, offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski, linebackers coach Mark Duffner, defensive line coach Joe Cullen, assistant defensive line coach Paul Spicer, assistant defensive backs coach Marlon McCree, defensive assistant Brandon Blaney and assistant special teams coach Craig Aukerman.

NFL Coaching roundup: Miami talks to McCoy; Colts gut staff is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL Coaching roundup: Miami talks to McCoy; Colts gut staff

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NFL: Packers persevere after tragic death of coach’s son

7b4a280abbf4c0be74f722ff9a26124b NFL: Packers persevere after tragic death of coach’s son

() – quarterback said on Wednesday this week’s death of ’s son had a deep effect on him, but that he hoped the tragedy could help bring the (NFL) team closer together.

The team was hit hard on Monday by news that 21-year-old Michael Philbin had been found dead by drowning just as the top-seeded Super Bowl champions began preparations for the start of their playoff push against fourth-seeded .

“With the passing of Joe’s son, it’s been difficult, but I think it brings us together and makes us realize how important family is,” Rodgers told reporters at the Giants practice facility on a conference call. “Not just our but also our .”

The supremely confident Rodgers, who set a new NFL standard for passing proficiency with a record this season, said he was at a loss for words to comfort Philbin.

“Joe and I have a real tight relationship and to be honest, it’s been real hard on me to not be able to have the words to comfort him and his wife and the family. It’s been difficult. We love Joe, we’re praying for him. We’re behind him,” he said.

Green Bay McCarthy, who calls the offensive plays during the game, said he was not worried about team morale heading into their playoff opener on Sunday.

“There’s a clear focus and understanding that professionally we’re very blessed and fortunate enough to be in this position and it’s important for us to take full advantage of this opportunity,” said McCarthy.

“Joe, more than anybody, would want us to pour all of our heart and energy into our preparation and that’s what the team has done.”

The Packers, coming off a bye, enter this postseason in stark contrast to last year when they overcame a flood of injuries to claim the Trophy as a team.

This season, Green Bay flirted with perfection, getting their closest call against the Giants last month in a 38-35 win to go 12-0 before finally taking their only loss of the season two weeks later, falling 19-14 to the Kansas City Chiefs.

“Last year was different challenges,” said Rodgers. “We had more injuries, 15 guys on the (injured reserve list), different guys filling spots,” he said.

“This year we’re not sneaking up on anybody. Being Super Bowl champs you often have a target on your backs. It’s a different set of circumstances, a different adversity this year.”

McCarthy said everybody on the team practiced Wednesday as the Packers took advantage of their week off to heal injuries. The coach sounded confident, but not about to overlook any .

“Anybody who’s been through playoff runs knows there is a clear line of distinction drawn between the regular season and the playoffs. We’re one of four teams left in the NFC, and more importantly, it’s us playing the Giants.

“I think you throw the seeds out the window. Now it’s a football game between two teams that have earned the right to play in this tournament.”

(Reporting by Larry Fine; Editing by Frank Pingue)

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