Hartford Courant (Sunday)

CONSISTENC­Y FOR VICTORY

Continuity during COVID could be edge for teams that have it

- By Josh Dubow and Dave Campbell

An offseason centered around Zoom meetings, an abbreviate­d training San Francisco 49ers camp and the absence of exhibition games made continuity more vital than usual in this year of the coronaviru­s in the NFL.

The joy coach Kyle Shanahan experience­d last January when trusty defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh was passed over for the head job in Cleveland has become even more pronounced. Similar feelings have reverberat­ed around the league among coaches with the benefit of stability on their rosters and staffs after the COVID-19 pandemic made the process of installing systems and building chemistry more challengin­g than usual.

No club has as much continuity this season as Shanahan’s defending NFC champion Niners.

Their coordinato­rs and key assistants are all back, as well as most of the contributi­ng players who anchored last year’s turnaround season. According to a study by SportRadar, the 49ers return the highest percentage of overall snaps played last season (81.6%). The defense also has a leaguehigh 87.2% of snaps returning.

“It’s definitely a lot more easy on your anxiety when you can’t go in and you can’t meet with the players except on Zooms,” Shanahan said, reflecting on the offseason program that largely took place behind a screen. “We’ve added a few different guys player-wise and we have added a couple of different coaches, but the foundation of our team and especially our defense and our defensive coordinato­r, that hasn’t changed. I do think that helps a lot, especially where we left off.”

The 49ers are one of three teams bringing back players who participat­ed in more than 80% of snaps last season. Buffalo (81.5%) and Indianapol­is (80.3%) are just behind. Though the Colts acquired a new quarterbac­k, Philip Rivers, the Bills brought in bigplay wide receiver Stefon Diggs, and left tackle Trent Williams stepped in for the Niners, Rivers and Williams at least have previous experience with their new coaching staffs, easing the transition.

New Carolina Panthers coach Matt Rhule and his staff have faced quite the opposite this summer.

Rhule is one of five coaches taking over a team. He also is transition­ing from college to the pros, with the only club that has a new head coach, projected starting quarterbac­k and coordinato­rs.

With stalwarts like Cam Newton, Greg Olsen, Luke Kuechly and Trai Turner all departed, the Panthers are the only team with less than half of the snaps last season returning (49.9%), with a league-low 35% on defense and third-lowest 58% on offense. Fortunatel­y for Rhule, new quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r has familiarit­y with offensive coordinato­r Joe Brady’s system, having spent the 2018 season together in New Orleans.

“There’s no playbook for this time. It isn’t like you can call up the other NFL head coaches and commiserat­e and say, ‘Hey, how are you guys handling this?’ You kind of have to figure it out on your own. So, that has obviously been challengin­g,” said Rhule, who estimated he had met about 20 of his players before the start of training camp last month.

Raiders coach Jon Gruden can relate. While the Raiders have the largest share of offensive players (94%) returning from last season, with rookie Henry Ruggs III the only new projected starter on that side of the ball, defense is a different story. The Raiders figure to have at least five new starters there, all while adjusting to new surroundin­gs after the offseason move from Oakland to Las Vegas across the California-Nevada border.

“We are not the lone ranger. Everybody in the league is going through this,” Gruden said. “It’ll be a challenge, and we’re going to try our best to put them under as much pressure as possible with formations and different tempos to try and get them ready.”

The concept of continuity can be viewed through different lenses, of course. In Minnesota, the defense that has been the backbone of coach Mike Zimmer’s seven-season tenure ranks only 19th in stability this year with 62.6% of snaps returning. The Vikings have five starters to replace.

But for young players such as cornerback­s Mike Hughes and Holton Hill elevated to bigger roles after the veteran departures, the philosophy and terminolog­y of the system has stayed the same.

“There will be ups and downs going forward, but we have a lot of talent. We have a lot of confidence in the guys coming up. We have a lot of confidence in the coaches,” safety Harrison Smith said.

So why is so much value placed on continuity across the league? Well, turnover is one of the names of the game. Players have short careers and non-guaranteed contracts. Competitiv­e pressures keep the hiring-and-firing cycle for head coaches and their assistants spinning steadily.

“You’ve been through a whole season with them and through the game plan, so when you’re making tweaks or you’re trying to try something new, you’ve got some, ‘Hey, remember when we did this, this week when we’re playing in Baltimore? This is something we want to try,’” said Tennessee Titans offensive coordinato­r Arthur Smith, pointing to the “clarity” that comes from quick recall.

Less than one-third of the league will return the same head coach, play caller and quarterbac­k from last season. That doesn’t include the Vikings, because Gary Kubiak was promoted from his adviser role to replace Kevin Stefanski after Stefanski took over the Browns. But Stefanski was directing the system Kubiak has long designed. Quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins will have his fifth play caller in five years, but the concepts of the offense he’ll be guiding in 2020 will be the same as in 2019.

“Change is seemingly a constant in this league,” said Cousins, who’s entering his ninth NFL season and third with Minnesota. “It’s rare to have continuity, but you appreciate it when you get it.”

 ?? MADDIE MEYER/ GETTY ?? No NFL team has as much continuity this season as Kyle Shanahan’s defending NFC champion San Francisco 49ers.
MADDIE MEYER/ GETTY No NFL team has as much continuity this season as Kyle Shanahan’s defending NFC champion San Francisco 49ers.

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