San Diego Union-Tribune

DABOLL HAS A STRONG COACHING PEDIGREE

- BY JEFF MILLER Miller writes for the L.A. Times.

Bills offensive coordinato­r Brian Daboll is among the potential candidates for the Chargers’ coaching job.

As the Chargers search for a new head coach to replace Anthony Lynn, The L.A. Times will examine candidates the team plans to interview. This is fourth in series of appraisals of the contenders, along with thoughts from NFL writer Sam Farmer:

Brian Daboll Current job:

Offensive coordinato­r, Buffalo Bills Age: 45

Credential­s: In his third season with the Bills, Daboll’s offense finished second in the NFL in both points and yards as quarterbac­k Josh Allen took an enormous step forward. In his previous six seasons as an NFL coordinato­r, Daboll didn’t see his offenses finish higher than 20th in either category. In 2017, Daboll won a college national championsh­ip as Alabama’s offensive coordinato­r.

Humble beginnings: Daboll’s gateway into coaching came as a volunteer assistant at College of William & Mary in 1997. He then served as a graduate assistant for two years at Michigan State under Nick Saban.

One man’s view: “He handles everything the right way. He comes at you from all angles, not just as a coach, but a guy that understand­s the game, and he’s a profession­al. He’s serious about it and he’s passionate. I love playing for him. That’s why I don’t want to give you too good of a pitch.” — Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs, via The Athletic

Did you know: Besides Saban, Daboll also worked for Bill Belichick. He was with New England from 2000 to 2006, first as a defensive assistant and then as wide receivers coach. Asked for a comparison of the two before the 2018 Sugar Bowl, Daboll called both coaching icons “very similar,” “very demanding” and “very detailed.”

Sam Farmer’s take: Look at Allen’s stats. He completed a league-low 52.8 percent of his passes as a rookie in 2018 and had a lackluster passer rating of 67.9. Two years later under Daboll, the Bills star completed 69.2 percent with a rating of 107.2. That’s astounding, and it’s a testament to both Allen and Daboll, who as an offensive coordinato­r has a long track record of making the most of his personnel. Daboll was the guy behind Peyton Hillis in Cleveland, transformi­ng that former fullback into a ball carrier who got so hot he wound up on the cover of “Madden NFL 12.” Daboll was Miami’s coordinato­r in 2011, when journeyman Matt Moore replaced injured Chad Henne and the Dolphins tore off four wins in five games, including a 31-3 rout at Kansas City and a 35-8 blistering of Buffalo. Daboll isn’t going to win the news conference — he’s as flat and Belichick-boring in public as he is fiery behind closed doors — but he’s coach material.

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Brian Daboll

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