Marin Independent Journal

Jets hire 49ers DC Saleh as head coach

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

NEW YORK » The New York Jets were searching for a leader, someone who could bring a frustrated, playoff-starved franchise back to respectabi­lity.

They think they found their guy in Robert Saleh.

The Jets reached an agreement in principle with the popular and energetic San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinato­r Thursday night to hire him as their head coach. Saleh replaces Adam Gase, who was fired by on Jan. 3 after going 9-23 in two seasons.

The 41-year-old Saleh emerged as a favorite for the Jets job when he was brought in for a second — and this time, in-person — interview Tuesday night, and those

discussion­s extended into Wednesday. He was the first of the nine known candidates New York interviewe­d remotely to meet with chairman and CEO Christophe­r Johnson, team president Hymie Elhai and general manager Joe Douglas at its facility in Florham Park, New Jersey.

Saleh left the Jets and met with Philadelph­ia, which fired Doug Pederson on Monday. And New York also had an in-person meeting with Tennessee offensive coordinato­r Arthur Smith on Wednesday night and Thursday morning.

After Smith left without a deal, New York had internal discussion­s and opted to hire Saleh.

Saleh, recognized as an energetic leader who is well liked by his players, had been the 49ers’ defensive coordinato­r under Kyle Shanahan since 2017, overseeing San Francisco’s defense that ranked No. 2 overall on the way to the Super Bowl last season.

The 49ers ranked fifth in overall defense this season despite season-ending injuries to pass rushers Nick Bosa — the 2019 AP NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year — and Dee Ford, as well as defensive linemen Solomon Thomas and Ezekiel Ansah. While San Francisco missed the playoffs, Saleh’s work with a bangedup and short-handed defense made him a popular candidate among the teams looking for a coach.

Saleh, the son of Lebanese parents, is the second minority coach to be hired by the Jets in the last six years and first since Todd Bowles, who is Black, in 2015. He’s the fourth active minority coach in the NFL, joining Miami’s Brian Flores, Washington’s Ron Rivera and Pittsburgh’s Mike Tomlin.

Saleh, who first interviewe­d remotely with the Jets last Friday, also spoke with Detroit, Atlanta, Jacksonvil­le and the Los Angeles Chargers.

New York pounced, though, after Douglas promised the team would “cast a very wide net” in its search. Both Johnson and Douglas spoke about finding a leader, a CEO-type of coach who would oversee the entire operation of the team and help re-establish a culture and identity for the franchise.

The 20th coach in franchise history, Saleh beat out Smith, Kansas City offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy, Carolina offensive coordinato­r Joe Brady, Buffalo offensive coordinato­r Brian Daboll, Indianapol­is defensive coordinato­r Matt Eberflus, New Orleans defensive backs coach Aaron Glenn, former Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis, and Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinato­r Brandon Staley.

Saleh is the seventh straight coach hired by the Jets to not have previous head coaching experience, with the last not fitting that category being Bill Parcells in 1997. He’s also the fifth former defensive coordinato­r to get the job among New York’s last six hires, with Gase the only exception.

Saleh could bring in 49ers passing game coordinato­r Mike LaFleur, brother of Packers coach Matt LaFleur and Saleh’s best man at his wedding, to run his offense.

Saleh began his coaching career in 2002 as a defensive assistant at Michigan State for two seasons.

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Saleh
 ?? TONY AVELAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. FILE ?? The Jets announced Robert Saleh’s hiring on Thursday.
TONY AVELAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. FILE The Jets announced Robert Saleh’s hiring on Thursday.

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