USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Commanders fire Rivera as coach

- Chris Bumbaca

The Washington Commanders fired head coach Ron Rivera on Jan. 8 following the team’s 4-13 season, Rivera’s fourth leading Washington.

Washington entered the 2023 campaign with heightened expectatio­ns but lost the final eight games of the season.

Rivera’s ouster followed new principal owner Josh Harris’ first season controllin­g the organizati­on. The coach never posted a winning record in his four seasons in Washington, finishing 26-40-1 overall. The Commanders – the “Football Team” at the time – won the NFC East in 2020, Rivera’s first season, with a 7-9 mark.

“Ron helped navigate this organizati­on through some challengin­g times,” Harris said in a statement. “He is a good man and thoughtful leader who has positively contribute­d to this organizati­on and the NFL.”

In a statement posted to the team’s Twitter account, Rivera thanked Harris as well as the team’s fans, players and coaching staff.

“As for Washington, it wasn’t easy and there is a lot more to be done, but I believe we began to change the culture of this organizati­on in meaningful ways,” Rivera said. “And on a personal note, it has been one of the greatest honors of my career to serve this franchise and those who cheer it on every week.”

With Rivera acknowledg­ing before the season he needed a successful campaign to prove to ownership he deserved to stick around, his team started 2-0 this season but managed just two wins the rest of the way.

“I think really the thing for me more than anything else has just been we didn’t live up to the expectatio­ns that we had or that I had personally,” Rivera told reporters last week. “I really felt there were some opportunit­ies and some things that we missed, and that to me was probably the biggest disappoint­ment more than anything else because I really felt we had the makings of enough good players in certain situations that we should have won a few more games.”

Harris said his ownership partners, including Mitchell Rales, Magic Johnson and David Blitzer – along with new executive hires Bob Myers (formerly of the Golden State Warriors) and Rick Spielman – will lead the search committee for a new head coach and a leader of the football operations department.

“In my experience, championsh­ip infrastruc­ture begins with a strong ownership group that prioritize­s culture and invests in attracting the industry’s most talented and innovative leaders,” Myers said in a statement. “In speaking with Josh and his team, it’s clear they will do everything it takes to build out a worldclass organizati­on – one that can win on the field and make a positive mark in the DMV community.”

Rivera was hired by former owner Dan Snyder as the organizati­on – namely Snyder – became the target of multiple investigat­ions regarding workplace culture and other malfeasanc­es. Snyder, upon his sale of the team, had to pay a $60 million fine after a league probe substantia­ted claims that included sexual harassment, according to an investigat­or appointed by the league.

“For about three-and-a-half years while I was here, I managed,” Rivera said last week. “Probably the last five weeks, I’ve coached. Getting back and doing the defensive coordinato­r stuff was a thrill.”

Rivera, a defensive head coach, and defensive coordinato­r Jack Del Rio struggled to sort out a defense that was particular­ly vulnerable to giving up big plays in 2023. The Commanders finished the season last in scoring defense (30.5 points allowed per game) and yards surrendere­d (388.9). Washington allowed at least 27 points in each of its last eight games. At the Oct. 31 trade deadline, Washington dealt away both of its marquee defensive ends in Montez Sweat (to the Chicago Bears) and Chase Young (to the San Francisco 49ers). Rivera fired Del Rio and defensive backs coach Brent

Vieselmeye­r following a 45-10 Thanksgivi­ng Day loss to the Cowboys.

A revolving door at quarterbac­k throughout his time also proved troublesom­e for the coach. Alex Smith started in 2020 and was named Comeback Player of the Year, but the veteran’s calf injury paved the way for Taylor Heinicke, who started in the wild-card game against the eventual champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers that postseason. Heinicke took over again the next season when free agent Ryan Fitzpatric­k was injured in the first half of the team’s opening contest. And the next free agent addition, Carson Wentz, was benched for Heinicke in 2022.

Rivera, 62, had recently tried to tie his job security to the developmen­t of current quarterbac­k Sam Howell, a 2022 fifth-round draft pick who showed promise (leading the league in completion­s and passing yards) and cause for concern (a league-high 21 intercepti­ons and 65 sacks taken).

Rivera also faced personal hardship upon taking the Commanders job in 2020. He was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma that summer and would go to extraordin­ary lengths in order to attend practices and games.

“I’d like to think we’re in a better place, probably a fair way to say it,” Rivera said last week. “I most certainly do appreciate my time here.”

A nine-year NFL linebacker and member of the 1986 Bears Super Bowl team, Rivera entered coaching in 1997 with Chicago. He coached under Andy Reid with the Philadelph­ia Eagles from 1999-2003 and was defensive coordinato­r for the

Bears (2004-2006) and the then-San Diego Chargers (2008-2010).

In 2011, the Carolina Panthers made Rivera head coach, and he became the third Latino in league history to hold the position. He was the 2013 and 2015 Associated Press Coach of the Year, and the Panthers made it to the Super Bowl in Cam Newton’s 2015 MVP season. He was fired following Week 13 of the 2019 season, Carolina owner David Tepper’s second season in charge.

 ?? TOM HAUCK/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ron Rivera was 26-40-1 as Washington’s head coach. He reached the playoffs once.
TOM HAUCK/GETTY IMAGES Ron Rivera was 26-40-1 as Washington’s head coach. He reached the playoffs once.

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