The News-Times

Calling plays in NFL a challenge for some rookie NFL coaches

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Maybe Sean McVay made it all look just too easy.

McVay coached the Los Angeles Rams to the playoffs each of his first two seasons, including the Super Bowl in February. He proved such a perfect match with quarterbac­k Jared Goff that six of eight NFL teams hiring this offseason turned to offensivem­inded coaches to turn their franchises around.

Adding play calling to a rookie head coach’s job descriptio­n, it turns out, can be too difficult for newcomers to handle along with basic game management.

Aaron Rodgers in Green Bay and Kyler Murray in Arizona have eased the growing pains for Matt LaFleur and Kliff Kingsbury. Zac Taylor in Cincinnati and Freddie Kitchens in Cleveland , on the other hand, are being secondgues­sed for trying to do too much halfway through their first seasons. And neither is willing to lighten the load and hand off playcallin­g duties.

“No. It is not happening,” Kitchens said Monday. “I am calling the plays. I am the head coach. That is not happening.”

Taylor is the first Bengals coach to lose his first eight games, and his big change at Cincinnati’s bye is benching veteran Andy Dalton for rookie Ryan Finley. Taylor will continue to call plays for the NFL’s last winless team.

“We’ve won zero games and have not scored enough points,” Taylor said. “And that 100 percent falls on me. But I do like the communicat­ion we have as a staff. The play calls come out of my mouth. We have great chemistry as a staff. We put a good plan together, and we are all on the same page when the calls come out regardless of who call it.”

Neither Kitchens nor Taylor had ever been head coaches at any level until this season, and they have little experience calling plays. At least Kitchens can point to how Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield blossomed over the second half of last season once Kitchens was promoted to offensive coordinato­r from running backs coach.

Taylor called plays for the final five games in 2015 with the Miami Dolphins and was offensive coordinato­r in college at Cincinnati in 2016. The Bengals hired Taylor after he was assistant wide receivers coach in 2017 and quarterbac­ks coach in 2018 with the Rams — and McVay, who calls his own plays.

And Taylor uses a playaction system similar to the

Rams that is heavily dependent on a decent run game. Unfortunat­ely, the bangedup Bengals rank last in the NFL averaging 59.5 yards rushing a game and have been held under 35 yards four times. Cincinnati’s offensive line has struggled so much Taylor has had to keep tight ends in to help block.

The Browns are 26 after being popular picks to win the AFC North. Injuries have been a big issue. But Kitchens has appeared overwhelme­d at times on the sideline. Kitchens was criticized heavily for not calling a running play inside the 10 late in a 2013 loss to the Rams in September. Mayfield threw four times, the last intercepte­d in the end zone. The Browns coach took the blame for his playcallin­g in that fourth quarter.

More than a month later, Kitchens called a shovel pass New England intercepte­d on its way to a 2713 win. Worse, the Browns’ offense ranks 25th, scoring

19 points a game. “Everything about the program should reflect on me and I will accept it,” Kitchens said. “But I also have a hand in fixing it.”

Arizona hired Kingsbury in part because he coached the 2018 NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes during his tenure as head coach at Texas Tech. The Cardinals drafted Murray with the No. 1 pick overall in April, and the duo has helped the Cardinals start

351.

Still, Kingsbury has had his growing pains.

“I’m used to 80 or 85 snaps, and now you’re getting 65, maybe 70, so you have to make sure when you look at that sheet, you’re not just calling something to get it called or playing really fast because you’re trying to outmaneuve­r them with tempo,” Kingsbury said. “You have to make sure you have a point to every play, and that’s helped me throughout this first month and a half get adjusted.”

 ?? Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press ?? Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury talks with quarterbac­k Kyler Murray (1) during the first half against the Atlanta Falcons. Being a rookie head coach in the NFL is challengin­g enough, and also calling plays for the offense only increases the difficulty. Murray has helped ease the growing pains for Kingsbury.
Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury talks with quarterbac­k Kyler Murray (1) during the first half against the Atlanta Falcons. Being a rookie head coach in the NFL is challengin­g enough, and also calling plays for the offense only increases the difficulty. Murray has helped ease the growing pains for Kingsbury.

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