The Denver Post

Coaches made numerous curious calls, assertions and admonition­s in Week 9

- By Arnie Stapleton

Coaches made some curious calls, assertions and admonition­s in Week 9 as the NFL hit the halfway point with some real head-scratchers.

Oakland coach Jon Gruden insisted the silver and black is still golden, saying he’s getting calls from players dying to play for the Raiders (1-7) next season.

Hue Jackson suggested the Browns should have shown more patience before showing him the door with a 3-36-1 record, and his replacemen­t, Gregg Williams, swore he’d turned down multiple head coaching offers since his firing by the Bills in 2003.

Matt Patricia, the latest disciple of Bill Belichick to discover just how hard it is to win without Tom Brady, had no problem with a reporter’s question so much as his poor posture, apparently averse to any kind of slump.

And Broncos embattled coach Vance Joseph admitted he got greedy in sending Brandon McManus out for a 62-yard field goal with 22 seconds left before halftime Sunday, a costly decision that backfired and resulted in a six-point swing in a gutwrenchi­ng two-point loss to the Texans.

Raiders Nadirs. In an interview with Fox Sports that aired before Oakland’s 34-3 shellackin­g at the hands of the 49ers, Gruden told Raiders Hall of Famer Howie Long that said his trades of two of his biggest stars in Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper hasn’t affected other players’ desires to play for the Raiders in 2019.

“I got a cellphone just like you and everybody else,” Gruden said. “I get a lot of phone calls from people that are dying to come play here. I’m just telling you. They’re dying to play for the Raiders.”

Oakland may have nearly $70 million cap space to go with three first-round draft picks next April, but doesn’t talking to potential free agents teeter on tampering?

Hue’s view. Jackson said he could have turned things around in Cleveland if given more time.

“I was surprised that I was not given the opportunit­y to display what I could do as a play caller with a much more talented roster,” Jackson told Cleveland.com after he was fired along with offensive coordinato­r Todd Haley following the Browns’ 25th consecutiv­e road loss.

Jackson said he thought No. 1 overall pick Baker Mayfield will be successful but he lamented the Browns passing on quarterbac­ks Carson Wentz, Deshaun Watson and Patrick Mahomes in recent years as Cleveland chose to stockpile draft picks.

Wild Williams. The real eyeopener in Cleveland was Williams’ wild claims in his first news conference as interim head coach. Williams had served as defensive coordinato­r for several teams since his firing as head coach in Buffalo 15 years ago, but he said that was only because he had turned down multiple offers to be a head coach again.

He said he had “11 letters sent in to interview for head coaching jobs” and “four of them I didn’t even have to show up, just sign the contract and come.”

The NFL suspended Williams for the 2012 season after ruling that while the Saints defensive coordinato­r he orchestrat­ed a program by which players were paid for knocking opponents from a game.

“That thing was a long time ago,” Williams said when asked if he ever imagined being a head coach again. “That’s nothing that we’re talking about now.”

Vexed Vance. Joseph lost for the 17th time in 25 games Sunday when McManus missed a 51yard field goal as time expired, turning a potential 20-19 thriller into a crushing 19-17 loss to the Texans.

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