Los Angeles Times

A FIRST AMONG EQUALS

At 7-1, Packers’ LaFleur is only new coach out of eight with a winning record.

- SAM FARMER ON THE NFL

This tongue-in-cheek observatio­n made the rounds during the football offseason: If you have ever shaken the hand of the Rams’ Sean McVay, you’re undeniably qualified to be an NFL head coach.

In a copycat league, McVay is the cat to copy.

With that in mind, it’s worth taking a look at a couple of Rams assistant coaches now running teams of their own. Halfway through their rookie seasons, those coaches reside at opposite ends of the success spectrum.

Zac Taylor, Rams quarterbac­ks coach last season, is at the helm of the 0-8 Cincinnati Bengals. The club sat on its hands as the trade deadline expired this week and benched longtime starting quarterbac­k Andy Dalton. The situation is grim.

Meanwhile, the 7-1 Green Bay Packers are enjoying a resurgence under Matt LaFleur, who was Rams offensive coordinato­r two years ago. He’s the first

coach in franchise history to win seven of his first eight games — and the first in the league to do so since Jim Harbaugh with San Francisco in 2011.

“Everyone is naturally excited about the opportunit­y,” said Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, whose team plays at the Chargers on Sunday. “Us old heads realize how this doesn’t come around all the time. We’re fortunate enough to be 7-1. Guys like myself who have been around a long time realize how special this opportunit­y is.”

The relationsh­ip LaFleur and Rodgers have forged — by all appearance­s far more harmonious than the constant tension between Rodgers and former coach Mike McCarthy — is paying dividends. So is the reliance on running back Aaron Jones, who is playing like a smaller version of Todd Gurley during his most productive Rams days.

LaFleur (Saginaw Valley State) and Taylor (Nebraska) were college quarterbac­ks, as were three other new head coaches this season: Tampa Bay’s Bruce Arians (Virginia Tech), Cleveland’s Freddie Kitchens (Alabama) and Arizona’s Kliff Kingsbury (Texas Tech). Adam Gase of the New York Jets was a receiver in high school.

The other two new coaches, Denver’s Vic Fangio and Miami’s Brian Flores, have defensive background­s.

The Bengals are one of two winless teams, the other being the 0-7 Dolphins. Before the season, Miami fans were concerned their team was tanking for better draft picks, and none of the moves the Dolphins have made suggest otherwise.

Flores remains optimistic, telling reporters this week: “In this situation right now, the goal for me is to help this team improve on a week-to-week basis. I think that is happening, and we’ll just keep going out there practicing. I think this team is getting closer to getting to the point to where we can pull out a ballgame.”

That could happen Sunday when the Dolphins play host to the 1-6 Jets — led by Gase, the coach Flores replaced in Miami. The Jets have a minus-107 points differenti­al, worse than every team except the Dolphins, who are a staggering minus-161.

According to the Associated Press, it has been 50 years since there was a Week 8 game featuring two teams with a worse combined record.

Kitchens’ Browns (2-5) have one more win than the Jets, and the mood in Cleveland isn’t much brighter. This season has been a disaster so far for a franchise that came in with such high hopes and star players on both sides of the ball. “I think 2-5, I don’t know what — everything’s in front of us,” Kitchens said after Sunday’s 27-13 loss to New England. “I don’t know what else to say about that. Everything’s in front of us. So win the games that we’re supposed to win and we’ll be fine.”

The good news for the Browns is they’re playing the similarly struggling Broncos, who are 2-6, coming off backto-back losses to Kansas City and Indianapol­is, and now have lost quarterbac­k Joe Flacco to a herniated disk in his neck.

Kingsbury’s Cardinals (3-5-1) opened the season with a tie at Detroit, then lost three in a row before bouncing back with three consecutiv­e victories. That winning streak ended with Sunday’s lopsided loss to New Orleans, and the Cardinals followed up Thursday with a loss to San Francisco.

During their winning streak, the Cardinals showed they have the capability to rebuild with an innovative offense run through rookie quarterbac­k and No. 1 pick Kyler Murray.

“I’ve always just had that expectatio­n, if we execute and I can call good plays, that we’re going to be successful,” Kingsbury told reporters during that stretch. “When I got here, people acted like I had never called plays before, never coached football before. I have a feel for the game and what I think we can do.”

Arians, who came out of retirement to sign a fouryear coaching deal with Tampa Bay, is 2-5 for the first time as a head coach. His previous worst record through seven games came in 2013, his first season in Arizona, when the Cardinals started 3-4.

But he can draw hope from that situation.

Those Cardinals won seven of their last nine games to finish 10-6, barely missing the playoffs.

 ?? Michael Ainsworth Associated Press ?? MATT LaFLEUR, left, and Aaron Rodgers have made for a nearly unbeatable team in Green Bay.
Michael Ainsworth Associated Press MATT LaFLEUR, left, and Aaron Rodgers have made for a nearly unbeatable team in Green Bay.
 ?? Michael Hickey Getty Images ?? ZAC TAYLOR, the Rams quarterbac­ks coach last season, is at the helm of the 0-8 Cincinnati Bengals, joining Miami as the only winless teams left this season.
Michael Hickey Getty Images ZAC TAYLOR, the Rams quarterbac­ks coach last season, is at the helm of the 0-8 Cincinnati Bengals, joining Miami as the only winless teams left this season.
 ?? John McCall South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? BRIAN FLORES took over a Miami Dolphins team that shed a lot of talent as it looks to the future.
John McCall South Florida Sun Sentinel BRIAN FLORES took over a Miami Dolphins team that shed a lot of talent as it looks to the future.

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