NFL Daily with Gregg Rosenthal - Belichick HOF drama, Monken to Cleveland and More Coaching Carousel Updates
Episode Date: January 30, 2026Gregg Rosenthal and Ollie Connolly react to Todd Monken being named the new Browns head coach (02:50), the Ravens introducing Jesse Minter (09:10) and the Bills introducing Joe Brady (16:00) as their ...new head coaches, Brian Daboll being named the new offensive coordinator for the Titans (25:10), Patrick Graham getting the defensive coordinator job for the Steelers, and a little bit of drama between Sean Payton and Broncos quarterback Bo Nix (39:10). Plus, Gregg and Ollie try make sense of the Hall of Fame selection committee keeping Bill Belichick our of The Hall (44:20) and Gregg tells you who would make the Hall of Fame if he was on the committee (01:04:10). Note: time codes approximate. NFL Daily YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/nflpodcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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It's a tough sport. It's not for everybody. You got to be a little sick to love this game.
And we've got some sickos.
Welcome to NFL Daily, where I can promise you I will not tear up during this podcast.
My name is Greg Rosenthal. I'm with Ali Connolly. It's not Saturday, but it's close.
and it's the time of year that
Ollie Connelly loves
almost as much as the regular football season.
It's analyzing press conferences
and assistant coach hiring season.
Welcome, Ali.
How's it going over there in Manchester?
I'm doing good.
When coaches get emotional about ball,
it also gets me a little bit teary.
It really is a little bit of a trend
with these introductory press conferences.
We don't have Todd Monkens press conference yet,
but he is the new Browns coach.
going to talk about that, but we'll talk about Jesse Minner and Joe Brady meeting the media.
We'll talk about different assistant coach hirings.
We will talk about your beloved and mine too, Ali.
Who am I kidding?
I got like four Belichick books behind me, including one by Steve Belichick, football scouting
methods.
We'll talk about him getting snubbed from the Hall of Fame and just the reaction and everything
that's happening.
And if we even have time, I think I'll present my Hall of Fame vote.
if I had one because a lot of people criticize,
but I always say like if you say someone's a snub,
you have to say who you would take out.
So I will go through and make my picks.
But it really is a crazy time of year
before we kind of get into it, Ollie,
like seeing the different coaching staffs come together
and the battle for all the assistant coaches
and you have a better knowledge about like the strength and weaknesses
of a lot of these guys than most.
When Mike McCarthy said that it's more challenging,
than ever to fill a coaching staff and I'm watching what's going on the last few days.
Like I think I agree with him, but what do you think he meant by that?
I think what he may be meant was a lot of the guys that he's were with before have aged out
the league because every single person he's interviewing or requesting to interviewing or hiring
or who was in his presentation to the Steelers of, this is who I would go for,
or people who have longstanding connections with him.
And outside of Scott Tallzin, it's a lot of experience.
Experience can be great.
Staffs need experience.
but that could be a plausible explanation.
It's not as though he's going off the reservation
and bringing an influx of new ideas
to his approach to running a team.
So I did Dave Damashek's show, Football America.
Everyone should check that out whenever it comes out
and I couldn't get my camera to work,
so it's on my phone and everything.
And that's the thing about McCarthy
that I was pushing back on him
because he was trying to gas up the McCarthy higher.
And it's not so much just age in terms of energy.
it's age in terms of fresh ideas and your connection to the risers within the league and who's
on the cutting edge. And I think that was a huge problem for Bill Belichick at the end in the NFL
and could be a problem for hires like Mike McCarthy. And I don't know where Todd Monkin
fits on that spectrum. Because yes, Todd Monkin at 60 years old is a first time head coach
in the NFL. It's been quite a journey. I don't think a lot of people,
remember that he's been in the Browns building before. They are quite familiar, not this regime
with Andrew Berry, but Todd Munkin was the offensive coordinator in the Freddie Kitchen's year,
which was the year that kind of blew up the franchise and got Andrew Barry and everything
in the building. And now he's back as the head coach, a surprising hire. I think everyone
thought it was going to be one of the younger guys like Nate Thielhouse with the Rams. And if not,
and it was possibly going to be Jim Schwartz.
It turns out to be neither.
And it sounds like Monkin's first order of business
will be finding a defensive coordinator
because it doesn't sound like Jim Schwartz wants to stay with him.
Yeah, you say people thought it would be Jim Schwartz
as the fallback option.
I think Jim Schwartz is included in thinking that he was the fallback
option.
He walks out the building shouting to everyone within A shot
that they'll never see him again.
And you mentioned Monkin being there as OC before.
That was the end which he was talking on the sideline
to other coaches about what a disaster the building the Browns was.
And so he comes back into the building and everything's going to be fixed.
This is an interesting, Harry thing, because I really respect Top Monkin.
I think you mentioned kind of the age and age and experience not being the barometer for
they open to new ideas.
He's as open to ideas, I think, as any guy who's been around the game that long in the league
and has recently been in college kind of pushing the game forward and being around, particularly
defensively, some of the kind of the trend-setting minds are all levels of the sport.
And so we can tap into at least if not those guys, specifically that kind of thinking, that kind of logic as you approach, not just the general scheme, but the work week and practice habits.
So I admire Tob Monkin.
I'm glad he's finally getting a shot.
I do find it from the brown side, slightly baffling.
Why do you find it baffling?
Let's actually just assume, though, that Shieldhouse didn't want the job.
That's how I'm operating because when we heard those finalists, it just felt like,
He was the favorite.
And then Zach Jackson, I listened to his podcast.
He covers a team for the athletic.
And, you know, his understanding was that Shieldhouse and most of the candidates,
but he was the most serious one,
we're told that, like, LeBounds felt like they had a good chance to keep Jim Schwartz under him
and that they wanted Jim Schwartz.
And if anything, they were almost telling prospective candidates.
You have to keep Jim Schwartz.
And according to Zach, it sounded.
like Sheelhaus had some real reservations,
not just about how that relationship would work with Jim Schwartz
because it might be awkward for a young head coach
and just would he want his own guy if it's going to be his building.
But he sounds like maybe he didn't quite believe the Browns
that he didn't think Jim Schwartz would want to stay under him
and that that was maybe a part of the reason why he wasn't comfortable with the job.
Yeah, and I think, you know, I know Grant Udinski dealt with the same thing
where it's not just Schwartz, but it's like big chunks of the staff
are told you this is who will be in certain positions. And I just don't know how you can approach that
with a candidate. I get it with the young guys that you want to surround them with experience,
people who have know how and have done the job at a high level, particularly trying to
replicate the Ben Johnson spirit of bringing a former head coach who can help you deal with
all kind of the under the hood issues that come with being a head coach when you make that
giant leap from coordinator to head coach. It is different when it's a guy going for the same job as
you than you than you, then you come as kind of the young whippersnapper and he thinks he knows way more
ball than you and you have to be the boss of that guy. I just felt like they needed someone,
not even in that vein of let's go get the highlight real OC type past game coordinate who can
design offense for us. I thought they needed real energy and someone who could just drive the building.
I'm looking at them the same light as when Domeko went into the Texans, when Dan Campbell
went into the Lions, and those two guys had an outstanding rolandex of coaches to call upon.
They are unbelievable football brains in their own right, but they have an abundance of energy.
someone like Anthony Weaver, I think that guy is so intelligent, so smart, so crafty,
at the forefront of defensive design, even if the play calling isn't great, but can kind of
picture what the sport should look like in 2026, and it just has energy for days, and we'll just
be bursting with ideas and passion. I feel like they need someone to drive the franchise forward,
but this is a franchise that runs from the top down. It's the owner, it's the GM trying to,
you know, save his career and survive for his life, and getting someone in there who I think is
maybe a bit more dispassionate in how you would run the whole program and can just
concentrate on coaching the football team.
He will be great in front of a microphone, and maybe that was attractive to them,
because to me he's going to be very different than Kevin Stefanski.
He's going to have quotes.
The media's got to like what he brings to him.
He's going to be a little prickly with the players.
He's going to be a personality.
The problem is I think it's a situation where the GM does not ultimately have a long leash,
which means maybe Todd Monkin will not have that long of a leash,
and he's going to have to show some proof of concept sooner than later,
which is going to be difficult with no offensive line in place,
and we'll see who the quarterbacks are.
But yeah, like he did fun stuff at Georgia.
He did some fun stuff with Lamar Jackson.
I actually was someone that was watching Conference USA, Ollie, in 2015,
when Todd Munkin was coach of the year for the Southern Miss Golden Eagles, is it?
I forget what their name was.
And he was doing some fun stuff there.
So maybe he'll be good.
I actually don't think it's like a bad hire.
It's just the process to get there was confusing.
Yeah, I just think it's where the roster is at.
I think if it was even slightly better
and you had maybe more offensive pieces
to settled offensive line,
you could say this guy could maybe take us to eight, nine wins
in this division.
Could we find a way of scrabbling through one season
and being a playoff team?
I think it would look different.
I think he's an really, really good offensive coach.
But for what they need,
I just think they need a more general sense of direction
and drive behind the franchise
and Munkin for all the great parts
of how we coach.
That's just not really what you get from him.
So I'm watching that,
or thinking about that higher,
and then I start watching the Jesse Minter press conference.
And it's obviously very different.
Minter is younger.
He's bringing some of that,
especially in terms of schematics,
youthful energy.
But I also found it really interesting.
Next to him on the stage were two men,
Eric DeCosta, who you would expect.
And Sashi Brown,
who came from that.
Brown's building. Shout out to Sashi Brown, who is, you know, one of the analytics kind of kings to
get a GM job. And for our listeners who probably don't remember 10 years ago, he was part of the
the Owen 16 Browns. Am I right? And I should be checking these things. Yeah, I think it was the
Owen 16 Browns. The Owen 16 Browns, the Owen 16 Wizards, correct, right? Didn't they open the season
terribly whilst he was there too? He was running the Wizards for about four seasons. And he's
been in the Ravens building.
But just we don't do comeback executive of the year.
How about comeback executive of the year for Sashi Brown being on that stage and presenting
a coherent idea of everything that happened.
Look, Minter didn't get the people going.
He wasn't nervous or anything.
He's just not like a rah-rah sounding type of guy, but he has engendered a lot of loyalty
from all the players that he's had over the years.
They said that was important hearing from all the different people that have worked.
worked with Jesse Mentor. Let's actually listen to Mentor talking about his relationship with Lamar
Jackson and some of the players that actually were involved in the coaching process.
Lamar and I have had multiple conversations. It's been great. It's been great to get to know them.
I think relationships take time. And so you don't become the head coach of the Ravens and expect
to have a deep relationship with anybody. So those take time. We've been working towards that
already. We've had wonderful conversations. Look forward to many, many more.
He also mentioned how excited he is to coach Kyle Hamilton. I think that's going to be an
awesome marriage, kind of comparing him to Derwin James, mentioned that Kyle Hamilton was part
of a committee of players that was actually kind of involved in the coaching hiring process,
where they got their feedback. So it wasn't just Lamar Hamilton and some other veterans.
I thought it was a good press conference. We don't need to judge the press conference.
What are you excited about or what were your thoughts kind of having watched what
he said his vision for the Ravens was going to be.
Yeah, I mean, when Jesse Minter talks in public, it's a kind of marketing spiel type,
as opposed to how he talks when he's either presenting in front of coach still behind the scene,
speaking to players.
So we got a lot of like the public facing Jesse Minter, I felt like.
To me, he was far and away the best candidate in the cycle.
I think he just views the game differently.
And I don't mean just the general schematic sense.
It's a lot of overlay with Mike McDonald and other people.
The way he approaches practice, the way he approaches the building is just different,
a new age and trying to push things forward.
To the point where Mike McDonald's, who's leading the best defense to the NFL,
taking his team to the Super Bowl,
went back to Michigan to find out what is this guy doing there better than I did it
when I was in that sea,
and then took that stuff back to the NFL saying he's doing things better than me
in terms of how they manage the game week.
And so to me, putting that guy the head of your franchise,
whether it works or not, we never know.
I think it's just the right move.
If you're going to try and move on from a harbour
and say, well, we want to keep some of the identity of the Ravens,
the common language, how we view and evaluate players,
but we want new and different ideas.
That's what we're hearing with the Joe Brady hire, right?
It's what we're hearing with a lot of these hires.
This is a guy who actually practices what all the teams preach.
And he was comfortable.
It wasn't like I thought he was stiff up there or anything.
I just didn't have any like massive takeaway.
So I'm not going to force it.
Let's listen to Eric DeCosta, who was really making his first head coaching higher
as the head of that front office.
Talk about the coaching search.
Steve challenged us a few weeks ago to find
the next coach who would be here for 18 years.
And if we do our job, I won't be here, which is great.
Was he paraphrasing Steve?
I think he was, yeah, as Bashati said in his press conference,
he wants to win a suit ball and get out as quickly as possible.
So I think he was saying that's what Steve told him.
Well, I also thought, see, I misread it maybe as a quote,
that it was more of like Bashadhi's getting up there in years and who knows.
And that would get to,
kind of the podcast that I've been doing with Colleen quite often where we're talking about
just being aware of death at all time. So shout out to Steve Bishati for that. You never know.
Look, I was really taken by DeCosta saying actually Jesse Minter had a lot of ground to make up
because I kind of remember him in this scouting assistant role. And to be honest, it was like hard
to imagine him as a head coach. I didn't really see him that way. But once we met in person,
that changed and also just he said hearing from a lot of people from around the league that have
worked with him and about Jesse Minner's growth that basically he was not the same guy as he was
when he was last in the Ravens building. But at least gets to speak the language that gets them all
warm and fuzzy because you're repeating back to someone how you do it is the right way to do it.
Then I have some maybe new ideas to do it different ways and you look at some of the highest.
There's an awful lot of that going on right where people are like, yes, we are doing things pretty
well. We've gone out to check all the other ideas, but actually, what we do is going pretty good.
It's a great point. It's why I'm going to handle our Hall of Fame conversation and what I think about the voting process, you know, delicately later, because I want to be part of that process eventually. But I think I like what you're doing, but I think we can adjust some things. Some actual news that came from it is Jesse Minner said he will call the defense, not a surprise, and that they will both still report to ownership, Steve Bishati. So,
So it's not like DeCosta's getting extra power.
They're keeping the same structure.
DeCosta said that that was important because he said, look, we've won two Super Bowls.
We've won a lot of games.
That way I looked at the relationship that Ozzie Newsom had with Brian Billick and then
with John Harbaugh.
We also heard that John Harbaugh texted them and said you should hire Jesse Minner,
which is interesting.
What do you think about Jesse Minner since we got you on kind of the fit with this
defense and the personnel that they have right now?
I think he's going to mimic a lot of what Mike McDonald did before.
I think the thing with Minta is more, I'm not a massive believer in like just the style
of defense, just philosophically.
I like more of an all-out attack, aggressive defense.
I like a Van's Joseph style defense.
Minter's a little bit more passive, a little bit more relaxed, a little bit in the bluff
pressure world, which is more aligned to Mike McDonald.
So I think it's just going to be pretty much a carbon copy of that then comes down to
the day-to-day play calling.
He's just more of what will the infrastructure look like.
And I think that'll be pretty radically different than what John Harbaugh was
doing at the end. So it was very different. Jesse Minter finishes his press conference almost immediately
after that ends. It was pretty short. The Joe Brady press conference starts in Buffalo. And we're
going to get to all the new news in terms of assistants and coordinators getting hired. But I wanted to
go through the head coaches first. And this was a totally different vibe. Josh Allen is there. He is
seen with crutches and a broken foot, you know, showing up to the press conference and in showing
up for his guy, Joe Brady.
It was very emotional.
Actually, let's listen to Joe Brady getting emotional, talking about, you know, how much
his players mean to him.
Lastly, our players, my guys.
I'm so appreciative of you guys being here today.
Thank you for allowing me to be myself, playing for me and being you with us.
I may be calling plays still.
but I'm no longer the offensive court at a max, right?
The defensive and special teams guys one day,
I can't wait to grow our relationship, right,
and deepen it and understand who you are
and that team you to grow that.
And I can't wait to go out to practice, right?
And when you get a takeaway, be able to celebrate with you,
just like I was talking a lot to you,
I get after Spencer Brown the same way,
and I'm in it with you guys now, right?
I can't wait to do that.
your thoughts that was one of many emotional moments earlier on he really struggled to
come to compose himself looking at his wife and everything what were your takeaways from
the joe brady uh introduction it's what i expected he's always been a phenomenal public speaker
he always gets emotional talking about football he'll do the coaching clinic circuit with like 12
guys in louisiana and start tearing up so he just really is a passionate and loves this thing
and I think that's really cool and awesome.
And it's cool to see him have that kind of emotion going into the thing.
I thought Brandon Bean's comments coming out of it
were probably more impactful and telling, moving forward.
Just him noting on their process, all these guys say were aligned.
We had a great process.
You know, we hired a guy who was already stood near us,
even though we dumped on the coaching staff last week.
But he made note of something that is really impactful
when you go through these series of interviews,
particularly when you've had a guy in there for a long time,
is go out and find all the smart people and steal as much intel as you can.
What does their sport science look like?
What does their practice schedule look like?
Even if we know we're hiring Joe,
and they claim they didn't,
but I have a good sense that I think that they knew that going into letting McDermott go.
Let's go find good information from everyone else.
And sometimes in those interviews, when you know,
particularly the sham Rooney rule ones that a lot of these teams do,
you maybe will not give all your great information in those interviews
if you don't think you're a real candidate.
But if you can gather as much intel as possible
from other really smart people to feed into your process,
you've had one voice for as long as they have.
I think that's a really good way of doing it.
And you compare that to the Steelers who just did not do that.
It's like one Zoom conversation and we're moving on with the thing.
And we're hiring the guy we wanted to hire because of where he was born and grew up.
That's not using the process to the full extent that you can.
So I've been critical of Brandon B in the Ross construction.
But I think that you compare that one process of a hire that I think is pretty good to very good
to a pretty poor one in Mike McCarthy.
You can see the difference.
De Costa in Baltimore talked about that too.
actually went even further because they started the process earlier. They interviewed like 18 people.
And he expressively said, especially with these Zoom calls, like, we're just trying to get as much
information as we can. We're going to take advantage of that period where we had to wait to talk
to anyone in person. And we got a lot of things that were really helpful to us. He talked about it
openly. That is fascinating. Brady, he really kind of threaded the needle of giving Sean McDermott
a ton of credit and saying how important Sean McDermott was for changing the culture and that
we're trying to build on that and that he accomplished great things.
And I think saying the right things, I think this is going to be a very popular press conference
in terms of just assuaging the fears of the Bills fans.
Brady said he knows what the expectations are in Buffalo.
I understand that I'm walking into this role in a much better position that Coach McDermott did.
I am not naive to that.
I also understand that the expectations are higher as well.
I didn't take this job to shy away from expectations.
I sure as hell did not do that.
I'm embracing it.
I'm understanding it.
And I'm meeting it full on.
I know what I signed up for.
And we're going to embrace it because no one rises to low expectations.
I want what the city wants.
Let's go.
He sold me, Ali.
He sold me.
And Joe Brady won a football's great curses
And he went so hard to drop an F-bomb them
And caught himself at the final second
Which I appreciate
And I admire him giving Sean McDermott some props
After the guy who just gave him the job spent last week
Doing anything but give Shaw McDermott props
So I thought that was pretty classy
I do think with Brady
You know, I think their whole project there
The idea was if we're going to stabilize
As a worst case scenario
We have Josh Allen's top five offensive league
Joe Brady can deliver that for us
And then just on the margins
You get the right officiating call
the right balance of ball, that should put us in a championship game.
I think that that is a fair assessment.
And if you looked at the design of the offense that he installed
and where it's at compared to the rest of league,
if he was just doing that for the Cardinals,
and even if they were, say, 14th to the league in success rate,
whatever number you want to use,
you would say that's a really attractive external candidate.
He just happens to be with us and then has the relationship with Josh Allen.
So I do think you can start stacking things up and say
it makes a bunch of sense why you would just say,
let's give this a shot for a couple of seasons.
If it doesn't work, we'll still have Josh Allen in his prime
and we could maybe look elsewhere.
So I've come more around on the higher
than when it was initially announced.
Okay, I appreciate that.
Because I didn't have a lot of familiarity
with Joe Brady public speaking.
And by the end, I'm like, okay,
I get why he's bewitched all the national media members.
A master marketer is Joe Brady.
And I appreciate that.
You can cynically look at that.
You know, you're there in the snow in Manchester.
You can cynically look at that.
I'm here in L.A.
And I'm thinking, okay, maybe this guy's going to pop.
he's good.
He's got the good.
The thing I will say is
what I appreciate about him
is he gets to Buffalo,
what they did on offense
that we've talked about
together for two years now
with the smash mouth spread infusion
of getting the bigger bodies on the field
but bringing a lot of the stuff
he did at LSU together
was a directive from Sean McDermott
that that's how he wants it to look
and then he had the chops
to actually pull it together
and make it look excellent
for a couple seasons
with all the caveats
that Josh Allen bails him out
and everything looks pretty good
if you call him plays for Josh Allen.
I am interested then
well if that's a directive
from the guy who's kind of viewing the game from a CEO, you know, 10,000 foot view,
can you step into that role and have that same lens, offense, defense?
And that's why I think the DC hire is going to be so important.
Yeah, it's huge.
And I meant to mention with Jim Schwartz because he's already getting talked about as a potential
candidate in Buffalo.
San Francisco's another attractive job that is out there.
I don't think I'm burning anything by saying, you know, I heard some whispers that like
maybe he could even be a candidate for a team that currently has someone in place and would
displace it. I don't know who that would be, but he is an interesting name to drop into it all.
And yeah, like, on one hand, you could look at Joe Brady as a little political. He got a lot of
credit for, you know, coaching up, like, the greatest college group of skill position talent ever
assembled and now coaching up Josh Allen. On the other hand, like, maybe he is a guy.
He did strike me as a guy that maybe he is a guy like a Brian Schottenheimer who might be better suited to run a building than he actually is as just like a pure schematic game plan caller, which I got that feeling from Schottenheimer.
And I think that's that's been borne out a little bit.
So those are some positives.
Also Josh Allen obviously loves him.
Josh Allen though texted him.
They wouldn't talk during the interview process.
And he texted him afterwards.
What was it?
It was something like, I didn't get you this job.
you earn this job yourself.
Good when you got Josh Allen.
The years in Carolina earned him that job, did they?
Or was it standing, calling place for Josh Allen.
They got him the job.
By the way, Josh Allen's some news there.
He talked afterwards, and he said he had a fifth metatarsal broken bone in his foot,
and he played through it during the season,
but he aggravated it against the Browns,
which I think we knew.
And so he was playing through it in the playoffs,
and now he's recovering from that injury.
But Josh Allen's happy.
And maybe Bill's fans like Eric Roberts behind the glass, they're happy to.
Let's take a quick break.
We're going to come back.
We're going to go through the coordinator hires, some assistant hires,
and talk Belichick in the Hall of Fame after this.
What's up?
It's Cam Jordan.
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Tap in every Wednesday to hear conversations with my friends and stars for the NFL,
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Back on NFL daily, as I mentioned in the 70s,
Fahrenheit, 20s, as you guys would say there.
Holly, I'm feeling better about the bills move.
Why not help get your friends hired?
I mean, I had one full-time hire that I could use that it ended up being the only one at the NFL.
And I used it on my friend Chris Wesleyan.
It was the best guy of the hire I ever had.
You know what you're getting.
Yeah.
And you can trust them and they don't go running to the media and leak on you all the time.
I'm in.
I'm in on Joe Brady now.
Let's talk about some of the coordinators.
Although I do want to at some point get what Ali teasingly said.
He can't even say what his real thoughts were about Joe Brady or that press conference.
There was something about that press comments that you're holding out on me.
That'll be when we do NFL daily after dark and we're like four or five pines deep and then we can release all the Joe Brady tapes.
That's the show.
We're the outsiders.
We don't need to worry about what they're going to say about us.
We can bury Brian Daibble if we want, but there's really no reason to.
I think he's a good offensive coordinator hire for the Tennessee Titans.
When we last talked about this, it was not for certain.
He was still up for a couple other jobs.
So he said, let's table that until it's actually happening.
He's also going to bring his offensive line coach from New York with him to Tennessee,
has some talent to work with up front.
Ultimately, if you kind of look at the teams in the trickiest situations coming into the offseason,
I get the idea that Titans fans would have a lot of optimism of Robert Sala, Brian Dable,
the front office is a little more clear with Borgonzi is now in charge.
How are you feeling about the Titans overall, and especially Dable and Cam Ward mixing and matching?
Yeah, I don't love the fit with Cam Ward.
I think it's almost too on the nose to obviously pay kind of a big name coordinator with former first-round draft pick.
But for the actual development of what does Cam Ward need in his game,
I don't think it's going to be that additive to what he does.
Brian Dable will come in.
It'll be a super spread offense, a lot of easy buckets, a lot of kind of spread option principles,
similar to the final embers of the time with Josh Allen, where it's all super spread stuff.
We already know Cam W can do that stuff.
That's what he did in college.
That's what he made it.
And that's where he flashed and had all the crazy highlight throws of the Titans last season.
He needs to develop in a full field true professional offense.
And I just don't think Brian Dable is as willing or interested in running a full field professional offense.
anymore. A lot of under center, turn the back play action, heavier sets, trying to design
mismatches that way, sprinkling in tempo with bigger sets. It's still a bit slimmed down, a little
2016, I would say, by its logic. And so I think what will happen is Campbell will put up some
solid numbers and people say it's a good high, but in terms of how does it get us to being a team
that could really challenge someone and freak out playoff caliber defenses? I just don't think
that fits that. Unless Davey wants to evolve and coaches can always evolve and add in
fresh ideas. And I love Brian Dable as a guy, even though I know he's a unique kind of guy and
he's not everyone's flavor. He's my kind of guy. And I just don't, for me, it's leaning into the
bad habits of Cam Ward more than it is trying to progress and develop the player.
Okay, I'll make the argument on the other side. What if he is a little bit, and this is a bad
example, because look, Greg Roman is an epithet to some Ravens fans and especially Patrick
Claibon thinking about the Lamar Jackson era. But maybe, maybe what if he's almost like,
Like a similar analog to, well, he'll juice him up in what he does really well for now.
And he's not as long.
Maybe he doesn't wind up being his long term guy.
You just got to find your, I guess, Todd Munkin in this scenario maybe sooner than the Ravens did.
But that would need to include some kind of development path before you get to the next guy.
And I find that to be deeply insulting to Lamar Jackson, who played in a pure progression offense in college football.
there was an NFL passing system from Petrino, which is not what Camwell played.
And he played in an all-out air-rate offense.
You see one side of the field to throw it's one side of the field.
Brian Daible is still running the highest volume of just half-field read offense in the NFL.
You just can't play that way anymore.
When everyone's moving and rotating and rolling it, you can't figure out what anyone's doing.
I mean, these guys have done press conference after press conference, right, talking about
this very issue of going to a full progression read-type offense.
That's not the way Daibald sees things.
He wants to have a keen critical eye on.
He knows where the ball is going at the snap.
troll freak type stuff and trying to limit any exposure to the quarterback. And I think Cam Ward
will look good in that. I'm not saying it's not going to work where you get the touchdowns and the
yardage and the numbers look much better in year two. And talking about the development, the player,
to go and be made more on the top eight players in the lead, which I think he has truly the
potential to do. If you can hone in on some of the rhythm-based parts of his game,
make him a more consistent thrower and then build in the kind of upside, highlight real stuff.
The development path should be what Kaelan Williams did with Ben Johnson, where you get all
the structured greatness and then you can have some freelance responsibilities within that
Jared Goff style offense and that's where I believe they should have looked. Yeah, that's all fair
and it's a good point on where Lamar was. It's more the idea of, well, can he supercharge him
for my own enjoyment, because for everything that Greg Roman gets picked on that Lamar, that early
Lamar Greg Roman, you know, for the first like 18 months of it, was fun to watch. And I do
think this could be fun to watch, but I hear what you're saying on the long-term growth.
And Cam Ward is not starting from the same spot.
He still has a lot of developing to do.
So does Aaron Glenn as a head coach.
I don't know if he's going to get the time to do it.
We've learned that, you know, since we last tape, Brian Duker is going to be his defensive
coordinator.
He reached out to John Gruden as a potential offensive coordinator option, or at least
was going to be an option in terms of some.
some part of the offensive staff.
Just a bizarre series of events.
Zach Rosenblatt did a good job,
kind of pointing it out from the athletic of that.
Initially,
Aaron Glenn said he's not going to call the defensive plays.
They interviewed eight different guys.
Duker was not even one of those eight guys.
Wink Martindale was the favorite for the job.
I think he expected to get the job.
They changed their mind at the last.
second. So they've spent three weeks on this process. Dukary's even one of the nine people interviewed.
Then after Martindale blows up, they interview him the next day and hire him that that day,
basically. And so it doesn't give you a lot of confidence that you're firing eight or nine guys at
the last second and hiring this guy. And now Aaron Glenn is going to be calling the defensive
plays. And Frank Reich is apparently the favorite for the offensive coordinator job.
It's just preposterous. I mean, what was in the pitch deck when he got the job? He was supposed to
come and arrive to be rah-rah, instillera confidence, CEO type, going to run the whole
building. And what was the blueprint? This cannot be it. Wink Martindale and Aaron Glenn share
no commonality in defensive style, zero. And you go into negotiations, post-interview, let's get
into contract talks, then pull the rip-court because you decide, well, I'm going to call the plays
and I don't understand Winkmartindale's defense. So let me go and get my buddy and I'll call the
place. I mean, it's almost just insulting to the profession. To do what he did to the staff of telling
everyone, they're going to be back, then actually you're out late in the cycle, just totally
unprofessional, to then go to Tanner Engstrand and say, well, you can stay on the staff,
but we're going to try and bring John Gruden as a senior advisor to help design the offense,
you won't call the plays, and then you have to say to the boss, well, then what will my job be?
What is my role in the building week to week?
Okay, yeah, scratch that, you're out then.
Where is the logic?
Where is the thinking?
And then the default answer is going to be, I'll get my buddy for the defense to carry the
bottles and I'll design everything. And then I'm going to hire Frank Reich as the OC.
The list for the OC candidates is pretty wild. It's Darrell Bevel, who we'll remember from his
time in Seattle. It's Ronald Curry. Greg Roman, getting interviewed there, Lunda Wells from the Cowboys.
I believe he's a tight ends coach. I'm not sure. Yeah, it's also hard when you go back.
There's some clips going around of Glenn talking about how it took them a while to put together the
coaching staff last year, but you had to really look hard for the right guys. And this was supposed
to be sort of the expertise of Glenn is that he's been in the NFL a long time and that he's
going to be great at building a staff. That was one of the best things that Dan Campbell certainly did
in Detroit was like know the right guys to hire. And it really feels like they're flailing and just
making up as they go along. It's depressing if you're a judge. And it now feels like chasing names to
satisfy someone else, which is where I'll give Aaron Glenn a little bit of a cushion, right?
The names on the list are names that someone who maybe isn't in contact with the sport day to day,
but has owned a team for a long time, would recognize the names of guys who were successful,
even a semi-generation ago.
So speaking of familiar names, Patrick Graham, who's bounced around a lot as a defensive
coordinator is going to be the Steelers defensive coordinator.
I thought it was telling that Art Rooney and Mike McCarthy said how it was important for them
to maintain the Steeler way, which was a 3-4 defense.
They literally were saying, like, we want to run the same defense.
It's been effective for so long.
Why do we want to change that?
And I'm thinking, that was the most expensive defense in the league,
and it wasn't effective this year.
But Patrick Graham can run that system.
What do you think about his fit with Pittsburgh?
It's also truly not what they've run.
As you know, no one just runs one front for the entire game.
And Mike McCarthy's too smart.
And I think that was just like red meat to the local media,
that we're going to maintain the steel.
And I think red meat for the ownership, too.
Yes, I agree with that.
Yes, you probably say that in your first meeting with them,
and they go, okay, put that in the checkbox.
He's from Pittsburgh.
His dad loves the team.
He runs the three, four.
Great, let's hire the guy.
Let's not speak to anyone else.
Patrick Graham, I have a funny relationship with
because I think one-off design-wise,
he's as good as there is in the league.
And I've made this point all the time,
and then Raiders fans will say to me,
well, why do we keep getting beat over the head defensively?
and I say, great point.
Maybe I'm digging through the minutia of the game too much
and not recognizing the fact they get throttled over the head all the time.
So it's like a pressure coach in a world of pressure in disguise football.
I really think he's an A plus design type guy,
but you cannot ignore just the general facts.
And I get they've had tons of issues throughout his time there in Vegas.
One, with Pete Carroll being not allowed to call his own defense,
radically transform his defense doesn't even understand half of what's going on there
in terms of the verbiage,
and then obviously just not having the talent in the players.
I think when he's had a modicum of talent at all three levels, they've been fairly okay.
This is by far the best group he will have worked with.
And so I would have it as like a be higher that he, I think he's better than if you just
put together a table chart of like the fancy metrics with his groups, it won't tell the full
story of what the potential could be with him as your DC.
Yeah, he's managed to keep a DC job somewhere for seven straight years.
This will be eight.
Miami one year, two for the Giants, and then four for the.
the Raiders. At no point did he ever have a great roster. But at no point did he really have a good
defense. So that's like a long. That's a track record. A lot of them were average. They weren't like,
they weren't bad with the giants and the dolphins. But this is the best group. I'm interested to
see it because I think this would be a little bit of proof of concept. Okay, here's Patrick Graham,
getting creative with a better group of players. And so we shall see how that looks. The Chargers
made an interesting higher. And we'll fire through these last.
couple, but get to the Hall of Fame.
But they hired Western Michigan
defensive coordinator Chris
O'Leary. And
he was part of this
tree. He was in that building
a couple years ago as a safeties coach.
So he's kind of doing the thing that Jesse Minter
did back and forth from college
and then back into the warm, loving embrace
of the Harbaas. But Jim Harbaugh has
a really good track record where you kind of have to
give him the benefit of the doubt of hiring
good coaches. If he has
a secret sauce, like that has to
be a big part of it. Yeah, and work with Minter back at Georgia State eons ago, 12 years ago at this
point. I just fascinated by, and this may bore the national audience, but this kind of Len Lease
program that the Harbors are developed between college and the pros, and I think coach development
is rarely ever discussed. It's always player development. And we now are in an era where what's the
most recent OC or the longest tenured OC in the league is like, what, 2024, 2023, something like
that. So you have to have a development program for the coaches and them saying, well, you
You're a really talented safeties coach.
We want you to prepare to call plays.
We only have three preseason games where maybe we give you a couple of series.
Go back down to college for a year.
Go and get that skill set.
Then come back to us.
And it's kind of predetermined going in.
And doing that from Baltimore with Michigan, Harbour replicating that going over to L.A.
I think it's really fascinating the way they've hit on a market inefficiency.
I think that I'm surprised that the teams haven't just said.
Alabama will be our feeder team.
Let's send three staff members there a year and then call them back up to the big leagues.
Well, I think that was a huge part of Belichick.
success back in the day, which is why, again, I think it's a young man's game, is he was so good at
developing coaches. He had a very specific idea of how he was going to develop coaches. That can't last
forever, but this is kind of a new school way to do it. Wait, this is not the directional
Michigan University or college that you worked for. Is it? There's too many Michigan.
It is indeed. Oh, it is. Yeah, it is. Oh, so he's your guy.
Do you have, I mean, okay, so we should get excited about Chris O'Leary from Western Michigan.
I should have known that's where Ali was once on staff. Is that correct?
That is correct.
Wow. All right. Shout out to what's the nickname of the team, the Western Michigan?
The Broncos.
The Broncos. All right, let's go Broncos.
Speaking of which, wow, that was not on purpose. What a transition.
I thought it was fascinating that Bo Nix, I just had to get this into the show,
called his own press conference this week.
We find out that the Broncos fired Joe Lombardi, by the way.
So he's gone.
We can talk about that for a second.
But I do want to say that Bo Nix calling his own press conference
to directly contradict his own coach means it is time for delivering results
presented by Uber Eats.
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I've never seen a quarterback do that.
That is delivering results as a leader.
Let's listen to Bo Nix talk about his injury.
Nothing predisposed, nothing that was there originally.
I might have gotten confused.
Didn't have any predisposed issues.
My ankles were feeling really good.
I don't think he really should share how many surgeries I've had in the past,
to be honest with you.
Because I don't, you know, he doesn't really even know that.
I just wanted this story to not go by without the rest of the country hearing it
because Broncos fans are all about this story for the last 24 hours,
but it's not going to really break through.
But it really was fascinating to me that Bo Nix had two points to,
two bones to pick, basically,
that he was not predisposed to this injury,
whatever that means,
like that it was some sort of chronic thing that was going to happen regardless.
And that Sean Payton shouldn't be talking about the amount of surgeries
that he had back in college.
Love it.
It's just classic Sean Payton.
If I had told you before on sight unseen,
a coach reveal too much medical information about
one of his players. Your first overall pick would have been Sean Peyton. That's fair. Sean Payton does
like to share a lot. And you always got to think about like, well, why did he share it?
And I think it's because he was trying to make the case that, well, it's not my fault.
I called him for that run that got his ankle broken and ruined our Super Bowl chances,
which he hasn't really taken any heat with four in the first place, which is fine. It's football.
It's bad luck. But maybe that was subconsciously or consciously what he was doing by
saying these things. Even that defense
is a mess because if it's predisposed, how
would you only just discover it?
And then why would you be calling
so many design quarterback runs late in the season
if you believe there's a predisposed sense he could hurt
his ankle? If anything, it buries you in a deeper grave
then you were trying not to dig.
And
I think it was also like a little
unfortunate because the person asking the questions
about how he had
gotten three
surgeries previously, even got
the question wrong, because Peyton had
two previous surgery, he had gotten two previous surgeries.
So it was framed a little incorrectly, which made Peyton look even worse.
I just wanted to throw that out there for the Broncos fans who are always getting angry
about everything.
And he may have meant, to be fair, preexisting some kind of hairline fracture they did not
know about until they went in.
But the way he phrased it was like it'd been a long-term thing.
And therefore, Bowes having defend accusations of being injury pro.
It's, I, we're maybe too far in the weeds where we're past the point of interest for
most fans.
but I got to give Sean Payton credit because they had to,
the PR staff had to have checked with Sean Payton of like,
hey man, I know the season's over, been over.
You said goodbye yesterday.
You did the press conference yesterday.
Bo just texted us like an hour ago and wants to do a Zoom press conference out of nowhere
that we're just going to alert our guys to last minute.
I think he's probably going to address what you said about his injury.
Is that cool?
And Sean Payne's like, yeah, whatever.
Just let him be happy.
So I'll give Sean Payton a little credit there.
Did you have any thoughts on by the way him cleaning out his offensive staff,
including his coordinator, Joe Lombardi,
but a couple of the position coaches, too, including Kiri Colbert,
who was one of my favorite Dynasty League draft picks back in, like, 2006.
I didn't not know he was on that staff.
But he fired a lot of the staff right after the season,
which is interesting for a team who I thought played well in offense.
Yeah, I mean, they were maybe a play or two away from making the Super Bowl.
And then he's pretty savage about it by clearing out guys who've been with him a long time.
And then those guys saying publicly, like, I knew this was coming for a while too.
Even if we'd made the whole dance, I think we would have been out.
But we do criticize guys for all the Sean Paytonness of it.
And you can think whatever you want about Sean Payton.
We criticize Belichick.
We just talked about Mike McCarthy being really insular.
I think the chiefs have become a tad bit to insular in the mid run of their dynasty.
He's at least saying, like, okay,
I've been with these guys for a long time.
We've kind of tapped all the resources for this part of the span of kind of the Broncos rebuild.
I bring some competency from the building after the Hackett debacle.
Now let's maybe press along.
And he's got all these young staffers that I'm sure he wants to promote and keep in-house because they're all up for jobs elsewhere.
Yeah, Davis Webb in particular has been up for head coaching jobs.
He would be a strong candidate you would think to get elevated to offensive coordinator.
So that could be what Peyton is doing there.
That was delivering results presented by Uber Eats when football makes you hungry.
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All right, let's stop right there, actually,
because I have a feeling we're going to go along
on this Hall of Fame, Belichick Talk.
Take one more break, and we'll be back in a second.
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I'm back with Season 3 of your favorite podcast,
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Let's get to the main event, 45 minutes in.
How dare they keep our beloved Bill.
Belichick out of the Hall of Fame.
I'm trying to muster the same amount of outrage that Jimmy Johnson and really everyone around
the football community has had over the last few days.
Actually, we can throw up if you're watching on YouTube the tweet from Jimmy Johnson,
which I really enjoyed because it was a quote tweet of a Kaimi Fairbairn field goal from
three weeks ago where he cut the lead to.
five, good times.
And what he said was, I would bet
that if the Hall of Fame voters were public,
very few of the ass-hs that did not vote for Bill Belichick
would come forward already.
Some are lying about their vote.
Jimmy Johnson, what a great friend to have, Ollie,
in your corner.
A great friend to have, great for us,
who want to be in this camp too,
and then one of the greatest to ever do it,
all levels of the game, jumps out there in front of all of us
and says, I'll take the shield, let's do this.
goes out publicly and starts taking shots at Paulian and Tony Dungey about SpyGate
and where he learned to do stuff that became SpyGate in Bill Belichick's era.
Love that.
Love him, but in names to it.
I mean, it's just deeply insulting.
I think everyone knows that.
Clearly a massive mess up in terms of the process,
in terms of maybe some bias,
whether it's media members or people who competed against Bill Belichick.
He's so clearly not just the slam dunk first ballot hall of fame.
He's on the Mount Rushmore of greatest coaches to ever do it.
at any level of the sport.
And it really does hurt me for him.
Now, I do think your point that you've made before on social media about the PR for him is a
great point.
But what does hurt me is how much he's obsessed with the history of the game and how much
it will bother him.
No one cares more that when they did the NFL 100 series on NFL films and he's just
like weeping about the wing team, the 1920s and those great Yale teams, it means so much
to him.
And so to not have that happen for whatever reason, whether it's politics, craft, whatever
the conspiracies are, it does hurt me for him that there's always going to be this little
buffer, even when he goes in, that it may be a little bit awkward. Yes, they hit him where it hurts
in the end. And I agree. I wanted to make that point as part of like a tweet that used every single
character. I was like, something had to go. That got cut out was kind of like, this will hurt him
in a way that I don't know if it's intentional. I think a lot of the reasons that people put out there
could be part of it in terms of him not being friendly with the media,
but I do think it was more of a combination of, yes,
like a handful of people maybe on there
that had a little bit of an anti-Belichick bias.
Bill Polion says that the NFL Hall of Fame
has confirmed to him that he did vote for Belichick.
After saying he wasn't sure he didn't remember
if he voted for Belichick initially,
to which I would say,
and this is my bigger issue with the whole process is,
if you can't remember your vote two weeks later,
you shouldn't have a vote.
And I just think there's too many people with these votes
that no longer cover the league.
And I think there can be some voters
that could be represented that way,
but I think you've got to have more diversity.
And sometimes diversity isn't just having people of different color,
and gender, which this list could absolutely use more of, but also of different ways of thinking
about the sport and different age groups. Like, yes, you should have covered the league for a good
amount of time before you're a Hall of Fame voter, but I went through the list, and it's pretty
random. Fifteen selectors are not even really in the mix covering football now. Fifteen out of 50,
and many more, if you were choosing a journalist to represent that city,
there's some weird, weird picks there.
You can just say it as it is.
It's pathetic and embarrassing.
They have a lot of opinion columnists who've not covered the sport for a long time doing it.
And it really should be people who are dedicated to the history of the game.
It doesn't matter what age they are in that respect.
To me, I do think you do have to have a real selection of people on that on the older side,
just because when you get into the veterans committee,
there's going to be a lot of young people
even around your age, Greg,
who maybe will not have seen these players play in their prime.
So I totally understand that side of things.
But it needs to be someone,
Wes is not unfortunately here with us,
but that is the ideal candidate of someone
who is so dedicated to learning and understanding
the history of the game would have real opinions,
would go to bat for people.
And that is the kind of person
that you're ideally looking for.
And does it matter that you have to have one representative
of covering every single team.
I mean, that to me almost doesn't make sense
that if you're going into the Veterans Committee,
I'd rather to have people who are historians of the game
really care about it, still actively follow it day to day.
To have opinion colonists from the early 2000s
who don't like Belichick because they were Team Tom
all the way through is utterly bizarre to me.
To have people not recuse themselves
because they were getting their ass kicked by Bill Belichick,
year after years they had to go and change all the rules
that way or cry about some cheating scandal
that didn't exist.
I just find it completely baffling.
and even the process of, well, there's five people up for it, you only get to pick three.
So now you get this weird situation where you've got the people who don't cover the sport
have a gripe with Bill personally, the people who competed against him may have a gripe,
then people trying to kind of work their votes around to make sure someone they like gets in
because they think Bill Belichick's going to have enough votes to get in,
is how you get yourselves into this complete debacle.
And it's just not what the hall is supposed to be about, either the physical hall of Canton
or just the hall in general should mean much more than that.
and they've let the great institution down, Greg.
Yeah, and do they know ball?
Like, I think that should be part.
Like, if it's going to be the Hall of Fame,
I think you've got to have the best of the best.
And maybe that a lot of them were better candidates
at different points of their career,
but maybe not.
Some of them are not really locked into the NFL
as their main thing.
For instance, Kansas City star columnist,
Vahey Gregorian,
wrote a column about why Belichick,
didn't get his vote, which I appreciated because at least it gave the thought process.
I don't agree with his thought process at all. It alluded to what you're just talking about.
He wanted to get the veterans in. So to explain it to the listeners, you have the modern era
candidates, and there's 15 finalists, and five of those maximum can get in. And then you have
the Veterans Committee candidates. And as you said, there's five potential people that could have
been put onto the list.
They were the finalists, essentially, but they're in three different buckets.
Three ex-players, one, quote, contributor, and one former coach.
And so those five men are competing for the same three spots.
On top of that, they changed the way all of this was changed a couple of years ago,
where once you get to that part of the proceedings, you need an 80% approval to get in,
And so do the math.
It's really hard to do if people are splitting their votes and you can only vote for three.
And it turned out last year that we just had a way smaller Hall of Fame class than ever.
We didn't have as many of the ex-veterans committee players or coach, Mike Shanahan's still waiting.
And it created a situation where just like less people are coming in.
So all of that can be true that they absolutely need to change the bylaws and the way that they decided to,
change it a couple years ago when they thought too many people were getting in,
to now too few were getting in. But it makes zero sense. And here's where I really struggle
with it. It's like, Ken Anderson never deserved to go in over Bill Belichick. There's no way.
You always have to vote for the person that deserves it the most. And these three veterans,
by definition, weren't voted in for 25 straight years. Forget about being first ballot. They weren't
first 15 ballots. That's when you come off the ballot. And of course, Bill Belichick should be in
as a no-bra. We don't even need to, like, make the case for Bill Belichick. But it's something I've
been surprised, actually, there is this much outrage about. I had a bad barometer. I'm like,
oh, well, this is nice. Everyone's just saying everything. So I don't even feel like I have to.
They actually are even more outrage for me, because knowing how crazy and out-of-touching,
some of the voters are and how crazy the process is it was still shocking to me, but I think it was a
little less shocking or surprising to me than a lot of the people who aren't as dialed into it.
And maybe that caused the outrage. I was just like, I can't believe they f*** this up. But actually,
like, I kind of can see how it happened as stupid as it is. So go for it. Jimmy Johnson and every
single show and everything out there. Like, I'm glad you got this one because it's,
it's just obvious how bad it is.
Yeah, the process is a mess.
To not have it just be yes, no,
why you have to tear different variations of Hall of Famers,
as you said,
how you can even do that anyway
and not wind up with Bill being number one on your list
across the board with the guys on there is a joke.
But to not have it be yes, no,
to have a 50-person selection committee,
I think is way too small,
and to have the names they have on there
is frankly embarrassing.
You look at some of the people you've read off.
I've covered the sport for 15 years.
I've worked in sport for many of those years.
as a coach or as a scout,
I've not heard of some of those people
outside of last time
the list came out of who the voters were.
They don't cover the sport actively.
Now, Bill Paulian knows way more about football than we do.
I think having someone like that on the committee
should be there, but you should,
if you have a personal beef with someone,
recruits yourself.
Now, is Bill Paulian, you know,
does he have the ego to accept
he should recruit himself and recognize his bias?
I doubt it, but if you have a big enough voting pool,
you can at least mitigate some of those concerns.
and I'm still not buying, by the way.
Paulian saying he can't remember
then releasing, going on serious exam
and reading a well-prepared statement
that he had to read on the air
about getting in touch with the Hall of Fame.
If we're doing any sort of conspiracy theory,
I'm guessing he confirmed the votes
never coming out.
Because for some reason,
they're not going to release the ballots
because they won,
because it's this shrouded mystery
of all these former columnists,
opinion colonists,
deciding who's going to the Hall of Fame,
which matters,
which goes in the Tombstone,
which's all about legacy,
which matters for family members
and generations about whether the guy was in or not.
This is a voting body that will not put Mike Shanahan in when the rest of the league is saying year after year, all we want is a vision and version of Shannon and football.
Does it look like he had an impact on the sport?
Does he have the hardware to prove he should be in there too?
And yet the guy cannot get in.
Mike Holmgren cannot get in.
And now Bill Belichick cannot get in.
Yeah, it's a killer.
And they will change the process.
I actually sort of lost touch with it.
And in my head, they were changing the process.
after last year because they all agreed so uniformly the people involved with the voting
that it was a mistake what happened, that I thought the process had changed more.
I don't think it changed at all.
It will change ultimately.
But and this is tricky because I respect a lot of the men and women, although obviously
it's mostly men that have these votes.
But I actually think the bigger issue is the composition of,
there's better people in each market to represent that market and that it should not be a lifetime
appointment and that someone, I guess the Hall of Fame is the people, you know, needs to take an
active role in that either it's got, you either got term limits or you just make the tough decisions
because it's an important decision. And it's a really tough thing to be a Hall of Fame voter
because most of these people didn't cover the league. They covered their team. And that's,
the other part where I think the composition could be less 32 different people representing
a city and then all these different at large and like more at large people because
obviously there's self-interest here like I'm talking about like people that cover the league
like myself but I think the right national people that were covering the league broadly and
whatever type of committee if it's ex-player scouts whatever it doesn't all have to be media
members either that are covering the league broadly like of course those should be
a bigger part of the pie than someone who is just covering the Titans.
Yeah, it shouldn't be majority media members, in my opinion.
It should be historians of the game if they're in the media members.
It should have more of a national focus because it's the Hall of Fame.
It's not the whole, it's not the ring of honor of a certain team,
which is how these guys are kind of presented from whoever brings them to the table.
Then they put the argument up and they go back and forth.
There should be some kind of weighted percentage of the current members of the hall
getting to have a vote to say, do they want someone in the brotherhood or not?
And you can kind of weight it versus the committee versus those guys too,
which may lift someone over the top or knock someone below.
The threshold should be really high, by the way,
to get into the thing rather than it being like the Basketball Hall of Fame
where everyone who got a single, triple, double or whatever can get in there.
And you cannot, if you have a 50-person member body,
how can you have Tony Dungee and Bill Paulian,
who worked together during the peak of their careers on that,
plus someone representative from the cults,
who may or may not, I don't know, be influenced by the fact
to the most famous people who ever work for the franchiser
on that body too.
So that's three people who may have a similar line of thinking,
making up that percentage of a 50-member body.
It's just ridiculous.
It bubs me out because some of the people I'm even thinking about,
like, I like a lot, but they're, like, covering other sports now.
It just, like, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
For instance, I'm going to just, like, give an example of just what I'm talking about.
Like, they have a few at-large broadcasters.
And it's like, yeah, Dan Fouts, I think, made sense at the time.
And if you wanted him as part of, like, the Veterans Committee,
but it's like Greg Olson would be a good person to have in there.
So someone, like, if you want to have, you know, someone that's representing broadcasting or something,
like that played with him, but, like, there's a lot of ways that you could go.
And, yeah, Belichick would obviously be on my ballot.
I hate the people that were making, like, the, any of the arguments against them, too,
because if they put your defensive game plan from a Super Bowl
against the hottest offense the league
had ever seen at that time into the hall,
why is the guy who designed the game plan
then went on to win eight Lombardi's not in it?
Right, you're talking about the one he did
as the Giants defensive coordinator,
which is absolutely part of his run,
and everyone's like, well, he didn't win a Super Bowl
without Brady at, you know, like the best quarterback of all time.
Tom Brady was not the best quarterback of all time
between 2001 and 2004.
I can go back and show you all the rankings.
no one consider him a top five quarterback.
I think by the end of 04, that was maybe unfair.
In fact, he was probably a little underrated by the end of 04.
But for 01, 0203, like, he was not that guy.
They won because of the combination.
And they won because of the combination throughout.
Except Bill Paulian did have a first round grade on Tom Brady,
but decided not to take him.
Even though he took three centers in one draft class when he had Jeff Saturday,
he decided not to take a first round quarterback in any of the first six rounds of the draft
because he had Peter Manning on his roster.
You're reminding me of a quote that I was looking for as you were talking, but I wanted to really lock in more with the gold that Ali's spinning that I didn't find it, where someone said in reference to this whole Bill Polian saying that he voted for him was a politician quote was like, only trust people with their votes if they say they didn't vote against you.
Like never trust the person that says they voted for you was essentially the politicians vote.
I forget where that was from.
but I love that.
And I do think there will be change.
And I do think there's going to be second impact effects
where if Robert Kraft does get inducted,
it's going to cast a little bit of a pall over it.
And Kraft is going to have to pretend to be leading that charge from the stage
because Belchick's going to be there.
Adam Venetary is a really strong candidate this year.
and I think he has a good chance to get in.
So I think Belichick would be there for Vinatari.
Would he be there if it was just Kraft?
Maybe, maybe not.
But either way, Kraft, when he makes that speech, if he's getting in,
has to make the same speech that all the expatriates are going to be making,
and they all believe it, of how much Bill Belichick was robbed.
So it's going to have this second level impact where it actually,
I think, in a way, is going to be good for Belichick,
even though it's going to really bother him.
I think their only way out to this is an idea that Nick Wright put forward,
which is the best idea.
They opened up, if you remember, for the 100 year anniversary where they just kind of went,
we got to clear the backlog.
We have a significant backlog here.
They're going to have to do that again and just make it a nauseating All-Patriots run
where you get gronkin, you get everyone in all at once,
you delay craft for another season, and you just have six pads on the stage.
Nick Wright came up with this.
I think it's their only way to spin their way out of this,
where you can then get the backlash to be able to being so frustrated that it's an All-Patriots weekend,
you put them on the Hall of Fame game, you do the whole thing, you celebrate the Great Dynasty
of Our Time, you screen the Apple TV documentary where Robert Kraft is dumping on Bill Belichick for 10 hours,
you do the whole shebang, and then it will kind of spin back around that people forget he was
excluded from the first ballot and just be frustrated at all Patriots weekend.
Fun idea would be so loathom for the rest of America to watch that weekend that I don't think
it would do the Hall of Fame much justice or service, but it would be fun.
anything creative like that. I do also, you alluded to it earlier, but just to spell it out. And if it
wasn't obvious enough, we're going long on this because I do care a lot about the Hall of Fame
process. I would love to personally be part of it and I would take it seriously. Like if they ever
let an NFL media person be part of it like they now do with the associated press votes. And I care,
and I kind of love that people are even caring about this because it's like, yeah, I get into this.
I think this is stuff worth getting into.
But I love the little news item that you dropped earlier,
but I don't know if the listener will kind of know the reference that you're talking about.
Both Jimmy Johnson and Bill Cower have alluded to the fact that, like,
oh, yeah, it was common practice.
Everyone was doing the Spigate stuff.
And that Howard Mud, the former Colts offensive line coach,
he's the one that taught Bill Lachan,
and he's the one that taught Jimmy Johnson how to do this.
Howard Mudd eventually ended up working for Tony Dungy and Bill Pollyan, of course,
and that they're just now out on Front Street, let's saying it publicly.
It's like, we could have used you 20 years ago, Jimmy and Bill just saying like,
oh, everyone was doing SpyGate back in the day.
But just like a fun little news nugget dropped 15 years later.
To Kawa's credit, he has been consistent.
Kauer is like open.
Like, here is how I cheated throughout my run.
I don't care.
I got the trophy.
Who cares?
And I admire that from Bill Kala.
He did not include there that, you know, his,
organization was pumping in crowd noise throughout playoff games, which may or may not have
happened with Bill Pollian.
That they never really beat the allegation there.
Let's wrap up by saying if I'm if I'm going to be critical, what would my ballot be?
And you mentioned how they did kind of jam in some extra Hall of Famers around the top
100 a few years ago and then now they're like pulling back and now they're going to have to
figure it all out.
I struggle with the seniors committee stuff.
I don't feel as well positioned to have a strong opinion about it.
So when it comes to the senior members and the contributors, Belichick would obviously get my vote.
I'm torn on Robert Kraft.
Ken Anderson has my vote, in part because of my conversations with Chris Wessling about Ken
Anderson and going through it and some of the Bill Walsh,
quotes, and you're kind of giving him a little bit of credit for the career that he didn't have,
but I am all about peak, and Ken Anderson, to me, for his peak, would get my vote as a
contributor.
So Belichick and Ken Anderson would be my two yeses from the seniors and the contributors.
And I think I would split up Kraft.
I'm not sure.
What do you think on Kraft?
I just don't think I'm pro-owners going in.
Yes, me neither.
Unless it's like Lamar Hunt, totally good with sport wouldn't exist the way it does today without him.
That's the one.
After that, I think I'm pretty good.
I don't care they did a great media rights deal overseas, frankly.
But once Jerry Jones is in, it kind of opens it.
You can't have Jerry Jones in there with those credentials and 20 years of poverty
and not have Robert Kraft in there.
So they've kind of backed themselves into a lane to please Jerry.
That's where I struggle with it.
And I'm not a voter that has a history.
And none of this is official anyway.
so I'm just going to say that, like, I'm not sure about Kraft because my instinct would be similar to yours where I'd have a hard time ever voting an owner in unless, like, the bar is just so high compared to, like, possibly getting a Mike Shanahan or an ex player in.
And that's just where I'm at with owners.
I don't think that anything that happens on the field should be necessarily put to ownership. Now, you need a good owner to be successful.
on the field. But that's the whole case for Robert Kraft. There is no other case. No, they talk
about the off the field stuff and working on the committees and building out the league and blah, blah,
as if it wouldn't have happened on its own. To me, it has to be where you've done something like
Art Runeo-Lumah Hunt, where it's really the definition of the league as we see now, where it makes
sense that you go. And so it's so beyond just the league and the sport and like how well they sell
media rights and how many trophies you pick up to really impact in the sport more generally
in the direction of it. And I don't think the Robert Crafts
case could be anything about the direction of the sport itself beyond TV rights deals are pretty good
and he was involved in negotiations. Sure, yes. And he has a lot of friends in the media, which I think
helps his case and when he gets talked about here. But yeah, like the best case you had for Jerry Jones
outside of the sport was like, well, he let everyone make more money because they started doing
side deals with Pepsi. And it's like, what are we talking about here? You're going to put that on a
plaque. All right, let's go to the modern candidate. So I went through my
ballot. Here are the 15 people. I'm going to just read them all that were eligible for
enshrinement. Willie Anderson, the tackle of the Bengals for many years. Drew Brees of the Saints.
Jari Evans, the Guard, who played with the Saints. Larry Fitzgerald, a wide receiver with
the Cardinals, of course. Frank Gore, who had his best days with the 49ers at running back.
My favorite really was excited to see him on the finalist list in his very first year, which Bodes
really well for him getting in at some point
if he doesn't this year. Tori Holt
who's been a finalist for a while, wide receiver
with the St. Louis Rams. Luke Kekley
mostly known for being a
multiple time guest of NFL Daily.
Terrell Suggs, the
edge rusher for the Ravens,
Adam Vinatieri, the kicker
with the Patriots and the Colts. Reggie Wayne
wide receiver with the Colts. Kevin
Williams, part of the Twin Towers, the
defensive tackle. Love seeing him as part of the finalist
now. That's some progress for him
with the Vikings. Jason
Whitten getting on to the finalist list right away.
I was, that wasn't a given as a tight end.
So that really bodes well for him.
Darren Woodson, who was his teammate at one point with the Cowboys and Marshall Yanda,
the guard for the Ravens.
My ballot.
Ali, and you're just going to respond off of this because we're going to get out of here.
Drew Breeze seems like a no-douder, right?
No-brainer.
No-brainer.
And that's the thing with Belichick, too.
Like, as much as I love Breeze, I've made some like all-time quarterbacks list.
and you know, you could put him in the top 10,
you could not put him in the top 10.
I think he's probably going to be in almost anyone's top 15.
Yes.
But the fact that like Belichick has a pretty strong case
for like number one or two coach and like people would go insane.
Like Drew Breeze is a total no doubt, no brainer.
He's obviously getting in, just comparing him to Belichick.
Of course, Belichick should be that as well.
Larry Fitzgerald makes the list for me too.
and I think he's going to get in on his first year.
Any Larry Fitzgerald thoughts from over the years?
I think he's one of the greatest to ever do it.
I think he should be no-brainer that the problem they back themselves into is
making these receivers wait and having a receiver backlog that maybe he will just fall out
of it, but he should absolutely be in.
There is no argument, like no great argument against him.
You know, part of the Hall of Fame All 2010 teams, obviously the numbers that he accumulated
are insane.
the only thing that could even have possibly created any debate at the time is like first team
all pro one time. And I do remember, I covered most of these years. Larry Fitzgerald was in this
weird spot where he usually was like the third best receiver in the NFL or the fourth. And that's
incredible. Like he was so good. And I think sometimes you could have made the case he was the
best. And maybe he should have had more than one first team all pro. But it is worth pointing out.
that that was the case for him for most of his career,
where it was like, that to me is absolutely a Hall of Famer,
a no-doubter if you're third or fourth best
for most of your career, much less like 10 or 12 straight years,
that's a Hall of Famer.
But he always did have kind of Moss and T.O. or Megacharren the different years
popping up, just like going over the top of him.
You're running through maybe the four great receivers of all times.
And it's like, oh, you're sick.
It's like, okay, it depends where your threshold bar is,
I guess I think there were at times where,
He was a better, more impactful receiver.
There were guys who may be a bit more glamorous
and possibly more flashes, a vertical threat.
Those guys used to always get the AP awards.
Although then you think about the run he had in that year
with the Cardinals going to the Super Bowl,
how just one of the most dominant runs.
And he was that dominant as a receiver
during that portion of his career as anyone.
Luke Kikli, to me, was really surprising omission last year.
Just you know it when you see it,
I'm someone who's going to reward peak, and to me he was the best at his position during his career,
and I do think he'll get in this year.
Yeah, him, Patrick Willis, best lineback as I've ever studied ever evaluated should be no doubted to me.
Yeah, and unlike, unfortunately for Willis, you know, not as much, I know he left the game earlier,
but not as much injuries early in his career.
And Keekely, to me, was even maybe another level above, but that's unfair maybe to Patrick Willis.
All right, so that's three to me that are pretty easy, I think.
And then for my final three spots, just to give people a clue,
I considered in the end, Adam Vinatieri, Marshall Yonda, the Guard for the Ravens,
and Tori Holt, who I am feeling that feeling that maybe some of the voters are like,
that I do want him to get in.
And I think he's waited long enough.
But I have to be a man of my word, Ollie.
and I think put the people in that deserve it most right away.
And I would have spent more time with this process, obviously,
and who knows if that would have come to a different result
if I actually had a vote.
But I think Vinutieri and Marshall Yonda just get in for me over Tori Hull.
Marshall Yonda, who all pros at multiple different positions,
it was crazy to look at the PFF all probes,
which are less consistent because they're grading is less consistent.
And he had five first-team PFF all.
pros and a second team. And they were at three different positions. It was like he started out at
right tackle. He did it at left guard and right guard. But he also, you know, at the end of his career,
they made him switch guard positions and he was great at that too. And so I think there's an
argument to be made like he was either the best or the second best at his position for an eight-year
period. Holt doesn't quite get there to me. And so if you are accepting that, that Vintetary gets in
on his first chance, then those were my last two.
Yeah, to me, it would be more between Vinetary and Holt at that point.
I think Yonder is the guy who dominated all the Hall of Famous
who were going to come through these next classes.
If you speak to JJ, what, anyone like that,
and say, who's the guy who would just, like, murder you for three or four reps in the game?
It's Marshall Yonder.
If all the greatest players of all time is saying he's the guy who gave them the most bother,
then had that level of consistency, has to go in right away.
Good.
You made me feel better about that one, because it's tough.
Offensive line play.
that's where if I had a vote, I would dive more into it, not just the numbers, but talk to
more people. I admit that I didn't hear it. It's more based off of what I saw, what I heard at the
time, what people say. And I think for him at his position, if you compare him to, let's say,
Willie Anderson at the time, Jari Evans at the time, the other offensive linemen on this list,
it's like, yeah, I think everyone would have agreed that Yonda for his position was higher.
And ultimately, I think that's true, too, if you compare him to Kevin Williams, Witten, who, you know, these are guys that I did watch each and every year.
Suggs.
I love Gore and really hope that he gets in eventually and even Holt.
I think Yonda gets there.
What are your thoughts on Vennetieri?
And if there's anyone from that longer list that I gave you, I know I didn't prep you too long that stand out to you as another one that would be really strong to consider.
The Viteieri ones to me is interesting because it does come down to this phrase, people like,
to use of can you tell the story of the game or not? And I don't know how much you wait that.
I actually do care about the whole being a place you can take someone and take them through
the trajectory and history of the sport. And it would be difficult to tell it without,
how do you kick off a dynasty? It begins with this guy's foot. Well, was he also just as good
and did he have like the longevity? Well, he have more longevity than basically anyone
to kick a football at that higher level, doing it for two different teams who competed nonstop
and they won championships on his foot. So to me, he does cross the threshold. I have
a really, really high bar for the kickers, because I think they probably do have to be in kind of
the annals of the game to get in there, whereas other guys, I'm happy to just say they were the
most dominant player at their position for a long time. Yeah, I'm torn on it too. Now, Venetieri does
lead the all-time, like, he is the all-time leader in field goals made and stuff. So he has the
cumulative. He has the all-pros because he did it over a number of years. There was actually a year,
I was looking this up, I remembered it too. When he was 42, where he was like eight years into the
Colts era and he didn't miss a kick that year.
Like, I think he missed one kick that year.
So in terms of a big spot, I voted him because I was like, should a kicker make the
Hall of Fame, basically?
And if my answer is accepting yes, was he the best kicker, like, throughout a lot of those
years?
No, like, I think Justin Tucker, for instance, was a more dominant kicker year to year than
Venetieri.
It was a different era.
I think you do have to adjust for eras.
but even for that era, he didn't have like the biggest leg in terms of hitting long field goals
as consistently.
But how I looked at it in the end was like, if I'm going to say a kicker ever can get in,
he would get in.
And I think for his position, if I'm accepting that a kicker can get in for his position
comparing him to the other players at the other positions, I would be fine.
Not like if he had to wait, I don't think it's going to be some egregious, you know, miscarriage of justice.
if Holt gets in over him or a bunch of different of the players listed.
And because I think he'll get in eventually.
But if I'm accepting that, I think like he's that kicker.
He's the kicker to get him.
I agree with you, but it is tough because every year you could push him back by saying,
well, Frank Gore, I'm running back this year.
We'll do him.
Terry Holt, it's his time.
We'll put him in.
Well, you keep pushing out.
Look at the classes that are coming up.
It is absolutely stacked.
Every season you guys say, well, an edge rush you,
is maybe in the whole, a very good, Fringe Hall of Famer.
Let's put him above the kicker.
If a kick is going to go in for all elements,
of it, the cumulative, the story of the game, the history of it, he's the guy.
And I, look, all these guys are such greats that have had such great careers.
And I think this process is painful.
We found out that Eli Manning is not going to make it this year already.
I don't like this trend that we're getting these reports, that the guys don't make it.
That's never happened before.
Because unfortunately, they have to keep answering these questions, and it becomes like
an annual point of pain when it should be a point of pride.
that they're so close.
So we know, I forgot to mention Eli before.
I think it was because I knew he's already not going to make it.
But I'm not slagging any of these other names.
To me, none of them maybe beyond Yonda hit that point to me that it was like,
oh yeah, no doubt or for sure.
Like I expect them to get in and he's getting in.
And so they're all in a similar bucket where you can make different cases.
And for me, the Tori Holt case was I'm about peak.
to me he was the one in in St. Louis.
He had a six-year run where he went 1,300 to 1,700 yards,
where he was safely in the top five receivers in the NFL to me in each one of those seasons
and just the subtle mover, incredible hands.
And to me, kind of passes that test.
It's why I'd probably vote Roger Craig in too.
I forgot to mention that as my other player that I would vote in.
Because for the first seven years of his career,
if you look at yards from scrimmage, it's Eric Dickerson 1.
And then it's Roger Craig number two over like some of the greatest names you've ever seen.
Like, you know, Barry Sanders and Walter Payton, who weren't like playing for every single one of those years.
But he's, you know, solidly ahead of those guys.
So to me, if you have a like dominant seven-year run, like, that's enough for me.
I'm for those guys more than the compiler.
So you're happy with kind of the whole of very, very good as opposed to just haul off the elite of the elite.
Top five of the position.
That's where Suggs is a tricky one.
for me. I adore Terrell Suggs. He was not one of the best three players on his own defense often,
even though I think he's one of the greats. But that's me to be the whole of very good. I think
Jason Whitten is the whole of good. The whole very, very good to me is whole and that to you is
enough. I don't know. Because honestly, after the first, it's why in the end,
you said it should be yes or no. Okay? And I hate to do this with my guy Gore.
because I think I would be yes on Gore, but to me it's maybe a little bit of a bias,
but I really do believe he was one of the best running backs in each of those years where he wasn't
honored by the All-Pro.
It was just sort of the situations that they used him in some ways.
The six guys that I mentioned I strongly consider it kind of those are my yeses.
I don't think I have a yes for the rest of them.
And so Holt has long been a guy I thought was made my cut for whatever reason.
and I think mine is no on the rest of them.
So it's tough.
The Suggs and Woodson, I think, like, our halls are very good, not quite.
Well, I'm glad we solved it for them.
They can reach out to you next year and just pick it up from that.
I'm going to try to work some behind-the-scenes magic.
Can I somehow get on that committee?
Probably not.
It's never going to happen.
Eric's is like, this was supposed to be an hour-long show,
but you know what, Eric, it's the weekend.
And we wanted to talk coaches.
and we wanted to talk Hall of Fame
because we're not going to talk about it at length
during Super Bowl week.
I thought this was the time to do it.
We will obviously congratulate the men that did make it
and hit on that.
But for the most part, next week is going to be all about the game
and all about the rest of the league
because we're talking about in two different players
from different teams
and start looking ahead to the offseason.
Ali, that was awesome.
Apologies for keeping you so long.
We'll get you back next week.
And yes, we will be doing shows
all next week from San Francisco,
but we do have a show on Monday
that will be from the Chris Wesleyan
podcast studio.
So that's the next time you'll hear from us in the feed.
Who knows?
Maybe the Raiders or the Cardinals will finally hire someone,
but I don't think so because they're waiting for Clint Kubiak.
We'll see you that.
What's up?
It's Cam Jordan.
I'm back with season three of your favorite podcast,
the Off the Edge with Cam Jordan podcast.
Tap in every Wednesday
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