The Denver Post

Josh McDaniels backs out of Indianapol­is Colts coaching job to stay with New England Patriots.

Patriots coordinato­r spurns Colts to stay with New England

- By Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS» Josh McDaniels has backed out of a deal to become the Indianapol­is’ Colts new coach, a decision that shocked the franchise hours after it announced his hiring.

The Colts confirmed McDaniels’ decision in a statement Tuesday night after reports emerged that the Patriots’ offensive coordinato­r had opted to stay in New England with coach Bill Belichick.

McDaniels had agreed to contract terms with the Colts to replace the fired Chuck Pagano. A news conference had been scheduled for Wednesday at Lucas Oil Stadium.

The Colts said McDaniels informed them Tuesday evening that he would not sign the deal.

“Although we are surprised and disappoint­ed, we will resume our head coaching search immediatel­y and find the right fit to lead our team and organizati­on on and off the field,” the Colts said in the statement.

The Patriots and McDaniels’ agent, Bob LaMont, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

“I’m speechless,” former Colts receiver Reggie Wayne told NFL Network. “I’ve talked with people in the Colts organizati­on, and they feel like they’ve been hoodwinked.”

By spurning the Colts after they waited 22 days to hire him, McDaniels leaves the reeling franchise as the only one without a coach. New England defensive coordinato­r Matt Patricia left Belichick’s staff a day after the Patriots’ Super Bowl loss to become coach of the Detroit Lions.

Indy had interviewe­d several candidates for the job, including two that were hired by other teams — Matt Nagy went to Chicago and Mike Vrabel to Tennessee.

McDaniels has been considered a toptier head coaching candidate for several years even though his only other coaching stint with Denver ended badly. He went 8-8 with the Broncos in 2009 and 3-9 in 2010 before he was fired. He worked with the St. Louis Rams in 2011 before returning to New England in 2012, where he has been the offensive coordinato­r ever since.

And turning down his second chance, after agreeing to a deal with Indy, could make other teams outside of New England more hesitant to hire McDaniels. His decision will also have ramificati­ons for the coaches who were set to join his staff.

It’s unusual but not unpreceden­ted in league history for a deal with a new coach to fall through at the last minute. McDaniels’ move was eerily reminiscen­t of his mentor, Belichick, who resigned as coach of the Jets with a handwritte­n note less than a day after he was hired in 2000.

Although McDaniels never signed his contract with Indianapol­is, his stint was even shorter. The team announced his hiring on its Twitter account late Tuesday morning. Hours later, the Colts had deleted the tweet and replaced it with the statement about his withdrawal.

Pagano was fired Dec. 31 after the team finished 4-12 in a season without injured quarterbac­k Andrew Luck.

Within days of Pagano’s ouster, Colts general manager Chris Ballard interviewe­d McDaniels during the Patriots’ postseason bye week. Two weeks later, reports indicated the deal was all but finished and potential suitors, like the New York Giants, started hiring other coaches.

Now the Colts find themselves in perhaps the toughest position of all — finding a new coach in February.

 ?? Elise Amendola, The Associated Press ?? New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick, left, and offensive coordinato­r Josh McDaniels have worked together for two stints, once before McDaniels coached the Broncos and again since he was fired.
Elise Amendola, The Associated Press New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick, left, and offensive coordinato­r Josh McDaniels have worked together for two stints, once before McDaniels coached the Broncos and again since he was fired.

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