hondo in seattle Posted September 21 Posted September 21 Winning a few games isn’t enough anymore. A good HC coach need to elevate the play of his roster as well as Lombardis. All of the league’s top ten winningest coaches ought to be replaced. 1. Nick Sirianni – Philadelphia Eagles Regular Season Win Percentage: .709 Why He Should Be Fired: Inherited a Howie Roseman-built juggernaut and rode the “tush push” and good coordinators to NFC glory in 2022 and NFL glory in 2024. Sirianni is just along for the ride. 2. Jim Harbaugh – San Diego Chargers Regular Season Win Percentage: .679 Why He Should Be Fired: A coaching throwback. Pushes a 1960s run-first philosophy when his most talented offensive player is his QB. Militaristic, combative, rigid, not a player’s coach. Doesn’t adapt to the strengths and shortcomings of his roster; makes them adapt to him. Was a good college coach but his techniques don’t transfer to the pros; he could beat Ohio State but can’t beat Mahomes. 3. Matt Lefluer – Green Bay Packers Regular Season Win Percentage: .655 Why He Should Be Fired: Can’t win games that matter. Last season the Packers went 0–6 against top NFC teams, including two losses each to the Lions, Vikings, and Eagles. Likewise, has a losing record in the playoffs. 4. Andy Reid – Kansas City Chiefs Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Took 21 years to win his first Lombardi. If he were any good, it would have happened sooner. Only started winning trophies when Mahomes and Spags showed up. His clock management is a national joke and his walrus-like visage and sideline demeanor inspire more memes than confidence. 5. Sean McDermott – Buffalo Bills Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Never mind that he rebuilt a laughingstock franchise, developed Josh Allen, and made the playoffs six of seven years. The combination of 13 seconds and zero Lombardis, despite having a generational talent under center, ought to send him packing. 6. Kevin O’Connell – Minnesota Vikings Regular Season Win Percentage: .636 Why He Should Be Fired: No passion, can’t build a defensive coaching staff, poor clock management, poor 4th down calls, early playoff exits, a tendency to lose primetime games and games against division rivals… the list goes on and on. A nice guy coaching to be fired. 7. Mike Tomlin – Pittsburgh Steelers Regular Season Win Percentage: .617 Why He Should Be Fired: Hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016. His loyalty to Matt Canada was borderline criminal. Steelers fans are rightly tired of wild-card exits and offensive impotence. 8. John Harbaugh – Baltimore Ravens Regular Season Win Percentage: .616 Why He Should Be Fired: Improbable fourth-quarter collapses are his trademark. Most recently, blew a 15-point lead to the Bills late in the 4th despite having the better roster. One ring in 17 seasons speaks of luck, not skill. Lamar Jackson’s prime is being wasted on Harbaugh’s stubborn loyalty to underperforming coordinators. 9. Sean McVay – Los Angeles Rams Regular Season Win Percentage: .612 Why He Should Be Fired: Won a Super Bowl with a rented roster and Aaron Donald then went 5-12 the following season. Only as good as his roster. Adds nothing. He’s supposed to be an offensive genius but only managed to put up 3 points in his first SB appearance and didn’t exactly light it up in his second. 10. Sean Payton – Denver Broncos Regular Season Win Percentage: .610 Why He Should Be Fired: He only managed to drive a Ferrari named Brees to the SB once and produced a playoff win record only a smidge above .500 thanks in large part to bottom-10 defenses. His playoff woes continue with the Broncos with only one appearance in two years, a 31-7 loss to the Bills. The Broncos didn’t need a legacy hire—they need a coach who can win in the AFC West. Payton’s not that guy. 2 1 5 12 2 2 Quote
T.E. Posted September 21 Posted September 21 Does Sean McDermott get credit over Daboll (and even Dorsey) for developing Josh Allen? Are we going with that narrative now? 3 1 1 1 1 Quote
FireChans Posted September 21 Posted September 21 26 minutes ago, hondo in seattle said: Winning a few games isn’t enough anymore. A good HC coach need to elevate the play of his roster as well as Lombardis. All of the league’s top ten winningest coaches ought to be replaced. 1. Nick Sirianni – Philadelphia Eagles Regular Season Win Percentage: .709 Why He Should Be Fired: Inherited a Howie Roseman-built juggernaut and rode the “tush push” and good coordinators to NFC glory in 2022 and NFL glory in 2024. Sirianni is just along for the ride. 2. Jim Harbaugh – San Diego Chargers Regular Season Win Percentage: .679 Why He Should Be Fired: A coaching throwback. Pushes a 1960s run-first philosophy when his most talented offensive player is his QB. Militaristic, combative, rigid, not a player’s coach. Doesn’t adapt to the strengths and shortcomings of his roster; makes them adapt to him. Was a good college coach but his techniques don’t transfer to the pros; he could beat Ohio State but can’t beat Mahomes. 3. Matt Lefluer – Green Bay Packers Regular Season Win Percentage: .655 Why He Should Be Fired: Can’t win games that matter. Last season the Packers went 0–6 against top NFC teams, including two losses each to the Lions, Vikings, and Eagles. Likewise, has a losing record in the playoffs. 4. Andy Reid – Kansas City Chiefs Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Took 21 years to win his first Lombardi. If he were any good, it would have happened sooner. Only started winning trophies when Mahomes and Spags showed up. His clock management is a national joke and his walrus-like visage and sideline demeanor inspire more memes than confidence. 5. Sean McDermott – Buffalo Bills Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Never mind that he rebuilt a laughingstock franchise, developed Josh Allen, and made the playoffs six of seven years. The combination of 13 seconds and zero Lombardis, despite having a generational talent under center, ought to send him packing. 6. Kevin O’Connell – Minnesota Vikings Regular Season Win Percentage: .636 Why He Should Be Fired: No passion, can’t build a defensive coaching staff, poor clock management, poor 4th down calls, early playoff exits, a tendency to lose primetime games and games against division rivals… the list goes on and on. A nice guy coaching to be fired. 7. Mike Tomlin – Pittsburgh Steelers Regular Season Win Percentage: .617 Why He Should Be Fired: Hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016. His loyalty to Matt Canada was borderline criminal. Steelers fans are rightly tired of wild-card exits and offensive impotence. 8. John Harbaugh – Baltimore Ravens Regular Season Win Percentage: .616 Why He Should Be Fired: Improbable fourth-quarter collapses are his trademark. Most recently, blew a 15-point lead to the Bills late in the 4th despite having the better roster. One ring in 17 seasons speaks of luck, not skill. Lamar Jackson’s prime is being wasted on Harbaugh’s stubborn loyalty to underperforming coordinators. 9. Sean McVay – Los Angeles Rams Regular Season Win Percentage: .612 Why He Should Be Fired: Won a Super Bowl with a rented roster and Aaron Donald then went 5-12 the following season. Only as good as his roster. Adds nothing. He’s supposed to be an offensive genius but only managed to put up 3 points in his first SB appearance and didn’t exactly light it up in his second. 10. Sean Payton – Denver Broncos Regular Season Win Percentage: .610 Why He Should Be Fired: He only managed to drive a Ferrari named Brees to the SB once and produced a playoff win record only a smidge above .500 thanks in large part to bottom-10 defenses. His playoff woes continue with the Broncos with only one appearance in two years, a 31-7 loss to the Bills. The Broncos didn’t need a legacy hire—they need a coach who can win in the AFC West. Payton’s not that guy. wtf is this post 2 2 2 1 Quote
CSBill Posted September 21 Posted September 21 What is this thread: Stupid take on top 10 Coaches? New England game? Who cares on either? Quote
Buffalo716 Posted September 21 Posted September 21 25 minutes ago, T.E. said: Does Sean McDermott get credit over Daboll (and even Dorsey) for developing Josh Allen? Are we going with that narrative now? Are you kidding me Dude it takes an entire coaching staff to develop a franchise NFL quarterback... Sean McDermott has his entire fingerprints all over this organization from top down Yes Josh Allen spends plenty of time with McDermott and he absolutely gets credit for helping to develop him.. Bill belichick gets credit for helping to develop Tom Brady as well McDermott is not a hands-off coach he has fingerprints all over this roster, obviously he's been a huge influence on Allen A bum coach would have had Josh keeping his bad habits and never developing 2 3 Quote
boater Posted September 21 Posted September 21 This is well crafted sarcasm making fun of McDermott haters... I think. 2 5 Quote
Mr. WEO Posted September 21 Posted September 21 I figured it was satire until I saw Tomlin listed 4 Quote
T.E. Posted September 21 Posted September 21 (edited) 44 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said: Are you kidding me Dude it takes an entire coaching staff to develop a franchise NFL quarterback... Sean McDermott has his entire fingerprints all over this organization from top down Yes Josh Allen spends plenty of time with McDermott and he absolutely gets credit for helping to develop him.. Bill belichick gets credit for helping to develop Tom Brady as well McDermott is not a hands-off coach he has fingerprints all over this roster, obviously he's been a huge influence on Allen A bum coach would have had Josh keeping his bad habits and never developing I think it's a pretty big leap to suggest that a defensive coach who watched a QB competition between Josh Allen and Nathan Peterman for a full summer, only to ultimately select Peterman as his starter, has a ton of QB-development acumen. Edited September 21 by T.E. 1 4 1 1 1 Quote
Beck Water Posted September 21 Posted September 21 1 hour ago, hondo in seattle said: Winning a few games isn’t enough anymore. A good HC coach need to elevate the play of his roster as well as Lombardis. All of the league’s top ten winningest coaches ought to be replaced. 1. Nick Sirianni – Philadelphia Eagles Regular Season Win Percentage: .709 Why He Should Be Fired: Inherited a Howie Roseman-built juggernaut and rode the “tush push” and good coordinators to NFC glory in 2022 and NFL glory in 2024. Sirianni is just along for the ride. 2. Jim Harbaugh – San Diego Chargers Regular Season Win Percentage: .679 Why He Should Be Fired: A coaching throwback. Pushes a 1960s run-first philosophy when his most talented offensive player is his QB. Militaristic, combative, rigid, not a player’s coach. Doesn’t adapt to the strengths and shortcomings of his roster; makes them adapt to him. Was a good college coach but his techniques don’t transfer to the pros; he could beat Ohio State but can’t beat Mahomes. 3. Matt Lefluer – Green Bay Packers Regular Season Win Percentage: .655 Why He Should Be Fired: Can’t win games that matter. Last season the Packers went 0–6 against top NFC teams, including two losses each to the Lions, Vikings, and Eagles. Likewise, has a losing record in the playoffs. 4. Andy Reid – Kansas City Chiefs Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Took 21 years to win his first Lombardi. If he were any good, it would have happened sooner. Only started winning trophies when Mahomes and Spags showed up. His clock management is a national joke and his walrus-like visage and sideline demeanor inspire more memes than confidence. 5. Sean McDermott – Buffalo Bills Regular Season Win Percentage: .646 Why He Should Be Fired: Never mind that he rebuilt a laughingstock franchise, developed Josh Allen, and made the playoffs six of seven years. The combination of 13 seconds and zero Lombardis, despite having a generational talent under center, ought to send him packing. 6. Kevin O’Connell – Minnesota Vikings Regular Season Win Percentage: .636 Why He Should Be Fired: No passion, can’t build a defensive coaching staff, poor clock management, poor 4th down calls, early playoff exits, a tendency to lose primetime games and games against division rivals… the list goes on and on. A nice guy coaching to be fired. 7. Mike Tomlin – Pittsburgh Steelers Regular Season Win Percentage: .617 Why He Should Be Fired: Hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016. His loyalty to Matt Canada was borderline criminal. Steelers fans are rightly tired of wild-card exits and offensive impotence. 8. John Harbaugh – Baltimore Ravens Regular Season Win Percentage: .616 Why He Should Be Fired: Improbable fourth-quarter collapses are his trademark. Most recently, blew a 15-point lead to the Bills late in the 4th despite having the better roster. One ring in 17 seasons speaks of luck, not skill. Lamar Jackson’s prime is being wasted on Harbaugh’s stubborn loyalty to underperforming coordinators. 9. Sean McVay – Los Angeles Rams Regular Season Win Percentage: .612 Why He Should Be Fired: Won a Super Bowl with a rented roster and Aaron Donald then went 5-12 the following season. Only as good as his roster. Adds nothing. He’s supposed to be an offensive genius but only managed to put up 3 points in his first SB appearance and didn’t exactly light it up in his second. 10. Sean Payton – Denver Broncos Regular Season Win Percentage: .610 Why He Should Be Fired: He only managed to drive a Ferrari named Brees to the SB once and produced a playoff win record only a smidge above .500 thanks in large part to bottom-10 defenses. His playoff woes continue with the Broncos with only one appearance in two years, a 31-7 loss to the Bills. The Broncos didn’t need a legacy hire—they need a coach who can win in the AFC West. Payton’s not that guy. Did you actually write this yourself, or are you quoting someone else's writing? Clever if the former 1 Quote
BigAl2526 Posted September 21 Posted September 21 17 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said: I figured it was satire until I saw Tomlin listed Yeah, that was kind of my reaction. Tomlin is still a pretty good coach, I think, but his teams have been mired in the "OK" category for too long. I don't think what they are doing is likely to produce division championships any time soon. Quote
Buffalo716 Posted September 21 Posted September 21 25 minutes ago, T.E. said: I think it's a pretty big leap to suggest that a defensive coach who watched a QB competition between Josh Allen and Nathan Peterman for a full summer, only to ultimately select Peterman as his starter, has a ton of QB-development acumen. You're actually making more of my point that he helps Sitting a rookie quarterback and learning from the bench is never the wrong thing.. in fact it could only help them There was a time when all quarterbacks even first round picks used to sit Eli and Philip Rivers.. it's certainly helped Patrick mahomes Sean McDermott was doing the best thing for Josh Allen's long-term success which was not throwing him to the fire... Problem was Peterman was just that bad If we even had tyrod Taylor level play Josh Allen was going to stay on the bench and learn and fix his problems from the bench You just made my point that was the smartest thing McDermott did.. was trying to develop him the right way.. just like Aaron Rodgers too.. and Jordan love.. it's always the correct move My point just got made that he has a big hand in it 1 Quote
AlCowlingsTaxiService Posted September 21 Posted September 21 I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume this is satire 1 Quote
Don Otreply Posted September 21 Posted September 21 That, and all those guys are short, and we all know what that means…, Quote
T.E. Posted September 21 Posted September 21 3 minutes ago, Dr. Who said: It's clearly satire folks. You're talking to a message board where half of the posters still think the Jimmy Spagnola poster is actually a real Jets fan. 1 5 Quote
FireChans Posted September 21 Posted September 21 27 minutes ago, Beck Water said: Did you actually write this yourself, or are you quoting someone else's writing? Clever if the former It’s not clever at all because it’s clearly just a ChatGPT prompt. That format is classic AI 3 Quote
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