Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Defensive coordinato­r Capers fired; shakeup puts Packers on path to a new era,

Decline on defense costs coordinato­r his job

- Michael Cohen

GREEN BAY – The fallout from a disappoint­ing 7-9 season unfolded quickly for the Green Bay Packers, who wasted little time relieving defensive coordinato­r Dom Capers of his duties after a nine-year run.

A league source confirmed that Capers, defensive line coach Mike Trgovac and inside linebacker­s coach Scott McCurley all were fired amid a significan­t overhaul of the team’s most glaring weakness. Additional changes to the defensive staff are likely to follow in the next few days.

The decision to rework the defensive staff came in the wake of a lackluster season in which the broken collarbone of quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers pulled back the curtain on issues across the board.

When Capers’ unit exhibited the same flaws as 2016 — namely the lack of pass rush, poor secondary play and a lack of cohesion from front to back — the Packers and coach Mike McCarthy felt it was time for a change.

Possible candidates to succeed Capers include defensive coordinato­rs Vic Fangio of the Chicago Bears, Gregg Williams of the Cleveland Browns and Steve Spagnuolo of the New York Giants, among others.

Capers’ undoing was the result of a statistica­l nosedive in recent years compounded by widespread disorganiz­ation this season. The Packers had fielded a steady defense as recently as 2015, when the team ranked sixth against the pass, seventh in opposing quarterbac­k passer rating, ninth in intercepti­ons and tied for 12th in points allowed.

But massive slippage over the last two years hinted at larger systemic issues, especially given the recent influx of high draft picks on that side of the ball: two first-round picks in cornerback Damarious Randall and nose tackle Kenny Clark; three second-round picks in cornerback Quinten Rollins, cornerback Kevin King and safety Josh Jones; two third-round picks in outside linebacker Kyler Fackrell and defensive tackle Montravius Adams.

Year over year, the Packers have found it increasing­ly difficult to defend against the pass, regardless of the opposing quarterbac­k. A secondary that ranked in the top 10 in most statistica­l categories a handful of times under Capers — 2009, ’10, ’12, ’14 and ’15 — plummeted to the bottom of the league in astounding fashion as turnovers vanished.

The likes of Andy Dalton, Jameis Winston, DeShone Kizer, Blake Bortles, Marcus Mariota, Kirk Cousins, Brock Osweiler and Sam Bradford have combined to throw 22 touchdown passes against only three intercepti­ons in the last two seasons, all mediocre quarterbac­ks. Perhaps most concerning for McCarthy was the dissolutio­n of Capers’ defensive formula, which the team’s media guide describes as “pressuring the quarterbac­k and creating turnovers.” Capers has survived multiple seasons of leaky defense by generating takeaways at extremely high rates, thus creating more possession­s for the offense.

The Packers led the league in intercepti­ons twice in Capers’ nine seasons (2009, ’11) and finished in the top 10 another five times (2010, ’12, ’14, ’15, ’16) to shroud several mediocre defenses in the seven years since their last Super Bowl appearance.

This year, though, the intercepti­ons (T-20th) and sacks (T-17th) were harder to find. Randall and safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix were the only players with multiple intercepti­ons; outside linebacker­s Clay Matthews and Nick Perry were the only consistent threats to rush the passer. Week after week, opposing quarterbac­ks took a hatchet to porous coverage on the back end, and the Packers finished the regular season ranked 31st in opposing quarterbac­k passer rating (102.0) and 30th in completion percentage allowed (67.8).

Equally worrisome was the pattern of logistical dysfunctio­n that straddled the line between comedic and embarrassi­ng. No defense, it seemed, had as many communicat­ion breakdowns as the Packers, who shuffled their on-field headset between a minimum of three different players in an attempt to combat the problem.

There were times when the Packers had too many men on the field and others when they didn’t have enough. There were blown coverages in which receivers ran free and others when two defenders followed the same target. Veterans had to redirect rookies before the ball was snapped. Coaches disagreed with one another over whose players were at fault for certain touchdowns.

The operation as a whole felt broken. Still, there were several factors that went beyond Capers’ control, shifting at least a portion of the blame to general manager Ted Thompson, who is stepping down and will take an advisory role with the organizati­on.

The Packers’ cornerback position was decimated by injuries in each of the last two seasons, beginning with the career-ending concussion for Sam Shields in the 2016 season opener at Jacksonvil­le. Capers has been without a true No. 1 corner ever since, a virtual death sentence in today’s pass-happy league.

There were groin problems for Randall and Rollins, both of whom needed surgery last season, and a devastatin­g knee injury to Demetri Goodson that cost him all of 2017. Rollins tore his Achilles tendon in October. King, this year’s top draft pick, was in an out of the lineup with a shoulder problem that ultimately landed him on injured reserve. Davon House, the lone veteran Thompson signed, battled problems with his quadricep, shoulder and multiple transverse process fractures in his back.

It meant that in each of the last two years, as the Packers reached the NFC Championsh­ip Game in 2016 and fought to remain in the playoff race this season, Capers reached a point where undrafted rookies were the only healthy bodies at one of the game’s most important positions. The chances of Makinton Dorleant, Josh Hawkins, Lenzy Pipkins and Donatello Brown guiding the Packers to glory was slim, so Capers turned his backup safeties into slot cornerback­s instead.

At some point, Thompson should have reinforced his roster with veterans to give Capers a legitimate chance.

If Capers decides to call it a career, he will leave the sport with a tremendous résumé. He entered coaching as a graduate assistant with Kent State in 1972 and has been on the sideline ever since, sitting out just a single year in the last five decades. He broke into the National Football League as the defensive backs coach for the New Orleans Saints in 1986 and has been here ever since.

Capers earned his first coordinato­r job with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1992 and held the same position for Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and Miami Dolphins before arriving in Green Bay. He has been a head coach twice, for the Carolina Panthers and Houston Texans, and was named Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year in 1996 after his Panthers went 12-4 to reach the NFC Championsh­ip Game in their second year of existence. He won a Super Bowl with the Packers in 2010.

As recently as last week, in what turned out to be his final news conference with the Packers, Capers expressed his love for the job and his enjoyment in coming to work each day. He will be 68 years old in August, but don’t be surprised if someone offers him a coaching position next season.

Tom Silverstei­n of the Journal Sentinel contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Under Dom Capers, the Packers defense showed little pass rush and poor secondary play the last two seasons.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Under Dom Capers, the Packers defense showed little pass rush and poor secondary play the last two seasons.
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