The Fort Morgan Times

Coaching search, posturing, silly season already in full swing

What about Ejiro Evero? And which quarterbac­k will Nathaniel Hackett be coaching in New York?

- By Parker Gabriel pgabriel@denverpost.com

Eleven things about the Broncos and their head coaching search as the world turns, candidates start making decisions and crunch time approaches.

1. A lot of folks interested in Denver and Houston will have their eyes on the NFC Championsh­ip Game on Sunday because of San Francisco defensive coordinato­r DeMeco Ryans. He’s considered a top candidate for both franchises, each hiring a head coach for the second straight offseason. Interestin­gly, both of Philadelph­ia’s coordinato­rs are also prominent young head coaching candidates in defensive coordinato­r Jonathan Gannon and offensive coordinato­r Shane Steichen.

2. The Broncos have only talked to Ryans of that trio, but they did interview Gannon last year before eventually hiring Nathaniel Hackett. Houston interviewe­d Gannon twice last year and again this year but, according to the NFL Network, considers Ryans to be its top candidate for the job this time around.

3. A couple of process notes: A team cannot formalize a head coaching hire until the candidate’s season is concluded. So, if the 49ers win Sunday and punch their ticket to the Super Bowl and if Ryans ends up getting a head coaching job in either place, then he could not be formally introduced until the middle of February. Same goes for Gannon or Steichen if the Eagles win.

4. That doesn’t mean, however, that nothing happens in the two weeks before the title games and the Super Bowl. Last year, Minnesota had to wait until after the Super Bowl to formally introduce Kevin O’Connell, who was the offensive coordinato­r for eventual champion Los Angeles Rams. He was introduced as the head coach by the franchise on Feb. 16 — the Vikings’ intent to hire him was first reported Feb. 2, the Wednesday after the NFC Championsh­ip Game — and one day later the team finalized terms with nine assistant coaches.

5. Some staff positions are subject to the Rooney Rule as the NFL continues to expand its efforts to increase the number of interviews minority candidates get for jobs. Clubs are required to interview two external minority candidates and/or women for coordinato­r positions and at least one such candidate for quarterbac­ks coaches.

6. If Denver loses out on Ryans to the Texans, then they’ll be back to the drawing board regardless of whether the 49ers or Eagles win Sunday. They’ve kept in touch with several candidates over the course of the past week, but it’s unclear whether they feel good enough about another candidate on the list to offer the job straight away or if they’d consider interviewi­ng other candidates.

7. With a caveat that things can and do change quickly in these searches: Despite all the twists and turns the Broncos’ coaching search has taken so

far, there’s no indication that their own defensive coordinato­r, Ejiro Evero, has been in serious contention for the job to this point. He’s certainly attracted attention elsewhere, however, completing multiple interviews with Houston and Indianapol­is and getting a second interview opportunit­y with Arizona.

8. One editorial note: If you’re not on social media, good for you. If you are, you probably noticed a substantia­l dose of Sean Payton, uh, stuff over the past week. It is the season of smokescree­ning and posturing, no doubt. But until Payton takes a job — Arizona looks like the only other possibilit­y this winter — or announces publicly that he’s returning to FOX to do another year of television, he’s worth at least keeping in mind as it pertains to Denver’s search. There’s a lot to work through — trade compensati­on for New Orleans, salary, roster control, organizati­onal setup, etc. — and it stands to reason that a 15year head coach would have stronger feelings on some of those items than a rookie coach, but it’s not impossible the sides end up deciding they need each other.

9. Sunday will make 54 of the past 385 days that the Broncos have not had a permanent head coach. The search between Vic Fangio’s firing and Nathaniel Hackett’s hiring lasted 19 days and Sunday makes 35 days since Hackett’s firing. That’s 14% of the past year and change, if you’re scoring at home.

10. Speaking of Hackett, it will be fascinatin­g to see how he fares as the offensive coordinato­r in New York. He’s working for a guy he knows well in Robert Saleh and the Jets players should be somewhat familiar with the terminolog­y considerin­g their last coordinato­r was Mike LaFleur, the younger brother of Packers coach Matt LaFleur, whom Hackett worked for the three years before getting to Denver. Now Mike LaFleur is off to work with Sean McVay, who used to have Matt LaFleur on his Los Angeles Rams staff. Once upon a time, both LaFleurs and McVay were on Washington’s staff with Mike and Kyle Shanahan, Mike McDaniel, Raheem Morris and more. Small world.

11. Once the coaching carousel settles out a little bit, it will be on to the veteran quarterbac­k carousel. Will Aaron Rodgers get traded? Where will Derek Carr land? Will Seattle resign Geno Smith? Can the Ravens and Lamar Jackson find common ground? Daniel Jones is slated to be a free agent. Some guy named Tom Brady, too. Bottom line: The NFL rarely ever slows down.

 ?? ANDY CROSS — THE DENVER POST ?? Denver Broncos defensive coordinato­r Ejiro Evero, left, and head coach Nathaniel Hackett at the UCHealth Training Center August 05, 2022.
ANDY CROSS — THE DENVER POST Denver Broncos defensive coordinato­r Ejiro Evero, left, and head coach Nathaniel Hackett at the UCHealth Training Center August 05, 2022.

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