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Baltimore Ravens

Charles Omenihu claims the book on stopping Lamar Jackson is already written – sportingnews.com

Apr 10, 2026 @ 7:19am
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensSan Francisco 49ers
Sporting News

Charles Omenihu claims the book on stopping Lamar Jackson is already written  sportingnews.com

Read moreCharles Omenihu claims the book on stopping Lamar Jackson is already written – sportingnews.com

Dolphins predicted to trade first round 23-year old potential star to Ravens – sportingnews.com

Apr 9, 2026 @ 11:06pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensMiami Dolphins
Sporting News

Dolphins predicted to trade first round 23-year old potential star to Ravens  sportingnews.com

Read moreDolphins predicted to trade first round 23-year old potential star to Ravens – sportingnews.com

Super Bowl Champion Boldly Claims NFL Has ‘Figured Out’ Lamar Jackson

Apr 9, 2026 @ 3:27pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Pro Football Network

Super Bowl champion Charles Omenihu recently claimed that the league has figured out Lamar Jackson while comparing Ravens QB to Josh Allen.

Read moreSuper Bowl Champion Boldly Claims NFL Has ‘Figured Out’ Lamar Jackson

NFL Defender Reveals Why Bills’ Josh Allen Is Greater Nightmare for Opponents Over Lamar Jackson

Apr 9, 2026 @ 2:48pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensBuffalo BillsKansas City ChiefsWashington Commanders
Heavy

One of the hottest debates in the NFL right now is about who has the title of the best quarterback. While many still consider Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs to be the top player in the league, thanks to his impressive three Super Bowl victories, there’s a strong case to be made for […] The post NFL Defender Reveals Why Bills’ Josh Allen Is Greater Nightmare for Opponents Over Lamar Jackson appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreNFL Defender Reveals Why Bills’ Josh Allen Is Greater Nightmare for Opponents Over Lamar Jackson

Baltimore Ravens 3-round mock draft: Jesse Minter pairs Lamar Jackson with new WR in 2026 NFL Draft – Sportskeeda

Apr 9, 2026 @ 2:10pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Sportskeeda

Baltimore Ravens 3-round mock draft: Jesse Minter pairs Lamar Jackson with new WR in 2026 NFL Draft  Sportskeeda

Read moreBaltimore Ravens 3-round mock draft: Jesse Minter pairs Lamar Jackson with new WR in 2026 NFL Draft – Sportskeeda

10 Brutal Times NFL Teams Did Their Players Dirty in Free Agency

Apr 9, 2026 @ 11:33am
BaseballFootballAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensCarolina PanthersGreen Bay PackersMinnesota VikingsMLBKansas City RoyalsNFLPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersTampa Bay BuccaneersWashington Redskins
Total Pro Sports

Free agency is supposed to be the great equalizer in the NFL. It gives players the right to enter the market and seek out other NFL teams.  They put in the production and outperform contracts year after year. And then, finally, get paid what they’re actually worth. Only… it doesn’t always work that way. Because in a league where the franchise tag exists specifically to trap elite players… where rolling guarantees are the norm and fully guaranteed money is a fight to even get on the table… getting to free agency healthy, happy, and at market value is genuinely hard. And sometimes a team doesn’t just make it hard. They make it personal, and sometimes it gets ugly. Here are 10 times a team completely screwed a player over in free agency. Which NFL players were badly screwed by a team in free agency? Steve Smith Sr., WR, Carolina Panthers (2014)Oct 6, 2019; Charlotte, NC, USA; Former Carolina Panthers wide receiver Steve Smith Sr. speaks during the Hall of Honor ceremony during halftime against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports Thirteen years—that’s how long Steve Smith spent building the Carolina Panthers franchise into something worth watching. Every record in their books had his name on it… 12,197 receiving yards, 836 catches, 67 touchdowns.  The man was the Carolina Panthers. And on March 13, 2014, they called him and told him he was done—a move driven by GM Dave Gettleman’s desire to change the team culture and a belief that Smith had lost his top-end speed. Sure, Smith was 34 years old… and salary cap casualties are not uncommon in the NFL, but he was a legend in Charlotte. Shortly thereafter, he signed with Baltimore for three years and $11.5 million. He promised Carolina there would be “blood and guts everywhere” when he came back. And in Week 4 of the 2014 season, he delivered. 139 yards. Two touchdowns. A 38-to-10 Ravens rout of the same franchise that had discarded him. That scoreboard said everything words couldn’t. To be clear about what the Panthers did here… this wasn’t a situation where Smith was in decline. He caught 64 passes for 745 yards in 2013 at age 34. He was still producing—even on a terrible NFL team.  And it was the way that Gettleman went about it that made it all the more disrespectful You don’t cut the all-time franchise leader for cap flexibility and expect him to take it quietly. Steve Smith made absolutely sure of that. Bo Jackson, RB, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1986)Oct 4, 2015; Chicago, IL, USA; Oakland Raiders former player Bo Jackson looks on prior to the game between the Chicago Bears and the Oakland Raiders at Soldier Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-USA TODAY Sports What the Tampa Bay Buccaneers did to Bo Jackson was something different than just regular, old-fashioned market manipulation… They didn’t game the system. They lied to a 23-year-old kid and burned his college baseball eligibility to the ground on purpose. A month before the 1986 NFL Draft, Buccaneers owner Hugh Culverhouse, an Alabama alum, by the way, arranged for a private jet to fly Jackson to Tampa for a physical and a facility visit.  At the time, Jackson was in the middle of his senior baseball season at Auburn and had the good sense to ask about eligibility. He was told explicitly that the trip had been cleared by the NCAA and the SEC. It had not been cleared by anyone. The SEC had a rule that barred athletes from being professionals in one sport while still amateurs in another. The moment Jackson took that jet and those benefits from an NFL franchise, his college baseball eligibility was gone. Just like that. Senior season over. Jackson has said for decades that he believes it was deliberate.  And the consensus is that Culverhouse saw a generational athlete with a legitimate path to a two-sport career and decided the only way to force him into football was to take the other option off the table. His baseball coach at Auburn confirmed that nobody from either camp mentioned the trip to him beforehand. Had he known about the SEC rule, he said, he would have told Jackson immediately. Needless to say, Bo was furious and told the Buccaneers not to bother drafting him because he would not suit up… Of course, Tampa Bay drafted him anyway, first overall, no less. Jackson proceeded to turn down a five-year, $7.6 million contract, the richest rookie deal in league history at the time. He then signed with the Kansas City Royals for $1.07 million over three years. He said in a recent interview that he played baseball for one reason: because he wasn’t going to Tampa. The Raiders drafted him in the seventh round the following year and told him he could play both sports. And the rest is history! He became the most famous two-sport athlete in American history and one of the most iconic figures the sports world has ever seen. Plus, he helps out those in need, too. Le'Veon Bell, RB, Pittsburgh Steelers (2017-2018)Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell from last January. XXX IMG_XXX_SW_LE_VEON_BELL__1_1_NKN22DFI.JPG The Steelers told Le’Veon Bell straight to his face that they would get his contract done. The day after a divisional playoff loss to Jacksonville, Bell was pulled into an office. Kevin Colbert and Mike Tomlin told him they’d tag him for 2018, but that this time, they’d get the long-term extension figured out.  Bell later said that the conversation was the whole reason he agreed to take another tag without a fight… As we all know now, they did not get the long-term extension figured out. Instead, they came back with five years, $70 million, but only $20.5 million guaranteed in Year 1, with everything else riding on rolling guarantees… For a running back who’d absorbed 321 carries in a single season and was functionally their most important offensive player, that is crazy.  Pittsburgh basically said: we’ll use your body until it breaks and hand you as little security as we can get away with. Bell sat out the entire 2018 season. Left $14.5 million on the table. Cost himself a year of prime production for this NFL team. He signed with the Jets for four years and $52.5 million the following spring. Did the holdout backfire eventually? Sure.  But what Pittsburgh asked him to absorb on the field for what they put on the table in return was never close to fair. And everyone in that building knew it. Trent Williams, OT, Washington Redskins (2019)Dec 30, 2018; Landover, MD, USA; Washington Redskins offensive tackle Trent Williams (71) and Redskins defensive end Jonathan Allen (93) run onto the field prior to the Redskins’ game against the Philadelphia Eagles at FedEx Field. The Eagles won 24-0. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports In 2013, Trent Williams noticed a growth on his head. He told the Redskins’ medical staff about it. They told him it was a cyst… Something minor and nothing to worry about. He kept complaining, and his NFL team told him the same thing over and over again… reportedly for six years. In the 2019 offseason, Washington finally sent him to a specialist and found out he had a rare, aggressive soft-tissue cancer attached to his skull. The surgery to remove it required 350 stitches and 75 staples. The incision was the diameter of a softball. By the time doctors got to it, they told Williams they had caught it within weeks of it metastasizing to his brain. Trust was broken, and Williams held out the entire 2019 season—and the team used a loophole to avoid paying him… Because he failed a physical due to discomfort with his helmet from the surgery and was placed on the non-football injury list, they were able to withhold payment for the rest of the season… and refused to trade him for months on end. Finally, he was mercifully traded to San Francisco in 2020, where he reclaimed his status as one of the best linemen in the game. So, not a clean “free agency” screw over here, but such dirty business that it simply had to be included.  Reggie White, DE, Philadelphia Eagles (1993)Sep 30, 1990, Philadelphia, PA, USA; FILE PHOTO; Philadelphia Eagles Defensive End #92 REGGIE WHITE in action against the Indianapolis Colts at Veterans Stadium. The Colts defeated the Eagles 24-23. Mandatory Credit: Photo By USA TODAY Sports © Copyright USA TODAY Sports Before the modern franchise tag, NFL teams used a franchise player designation that functioned the same way—a unilateral veto on a player’s freedom—and the Eagles used it to hold Reggie White in place for years. One of the greatest defensive players in history, sitting at below-market value because the league had designed a system specifically to limit what players could earn. White helped lead the legal fight that cracked the whole thing open. His involvement was central to the 1993 settlement that finally brought real free agency to the NFL. And when the market finally opened? Philadelphia showed up with an offer that didn’t match what he was worth.  It wasn’t long until the Packers came calling, and White signed a four-year, $17 million contract in Green Bay. He won a Super Bowl. He became one of the five greatest players who ever lived. Philadelphia got nothing. The Eagles spent years blocking the man’s freedom, treated the moment his leverage arrived like a formality, and watched him walk to a championship without them. It set the template for every franchise tag dispute that followed. Kirk Cousins, QB, Washington Redskins (2016-2017)Aug 18, 2012; Chicago, IL, USA; Washington Redskins quarterback Kirk Cousins (12) during the second half against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field. The Bears won 33-31. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Wierzbicki-USA TODAY Sports Washington franchise-tagged Kirk Cousins not once, but twice. The first year, he made $19.9 million. The second year, $23.9 million. He became the first quarterback in NFL history to play consecutive seasons under the franchise tag. Two years of holding a franchise hostage with his own production while Washington kept pretending their offers were serious. Their best long-term offer, by multiple accounts, would have only guaranteed him one more year beyond what the transition tag would have paid automatically. That’s not a contract. That’s just arithmetic. He rescued them from the RGIII disaster and led Washington back to relevant football. And the team came back with half measures every time. Fortunately for Cousins, he was able to escape the grasp of Washington. He walked to Minnesota in 2018 and signed the first fully guaranteed quarterback contract in NFL history. Three years, $84 million, every penny of it guaranteed. Not too shabby! Earl Thomas, S, Seattle Seahawks (2018)Oct 20, 2019; Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks running back C.J. Prosise (22) is tackled by Baltimore Ravens free safety Earl Thomas (29) in the second quarter at CenturyLink Field. The Ravens defeated the Seahawks 30-16. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports Earl Thomas told the Seahawks exactly what he wanted… an extension. Or a trade. Something that acknowledged the way he played football, which was, by any reasonable measure, at an All-Pro level for eight straight seasons. He published a letter during his 2018 holdout that put it plainly: if you’re risking your body to deliver all of this value, you deserve some assurance that the organization will take care of you if you get hurt. Seattle would not budge. They also reportedly had a chance to trade him to Dallas for a second-round pick and passed because they didn’t want to help the Cowboys before the two NFL teams played in Week 3. Thomas came back from the holdout because missing weekly game checks of $500,000 wasn’t sustainable. In Week 4 against Arizona, he broke his leg on the same limb he’d fractured two years earlier. As the cart took him off the field, he gave the Seahawks sideline the middle finger. It was not a complicated message. He went to Baltimore for four years and $55 million the following spring—a good deal, but a fraction of what he would’ve gotten had he not gotten hurt. Steve McNair, QB, Tennessee Titans (2006)Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair (9) is being pulled down by St. Louis Rams linebacker Todd Collins (54) during the second quarter of Super Bowl XXXIV inside the Georgia Dome Jan. 30, 2000. Tennessee Titans Vs St Louis Rams In Super Bowl Xxxiv Football On April 3rd, 2006, Steve McNair showed up at the Tennessee Titans’ facility for offseason workouts. A team trainer told him to leave. Not in a meeting. Not with a discussion about the future. McNair… the franchise’s all-time winningest quarterback, their co-MVP from 2003, the man who had dragged that organization to a Super Bowl appearance and given them the best decade of football in franchise history—was told to leave the building because Tennessee didn’t want to be liable for his $23.46 million cap number if he got hurt on their property. That’s right. They kept asking him to restructure his deal every year to create cap room, inflating his cap figure each time. And when the bill finally came due, they literally locked their franchise quarterback out of the building. McNair filed and won a grievance, as an arbitrator ruled that a player under contract has a right to work out at his team’s facility. The fact that it had to go to arbitration at all says everything about the way the Titans ran their organization at that time. In any case, he was eventually traded to Baltimore, where he led the Ravens to a 13-and-3 record in 2006. Made the Pro Bowl at 33 years old. Drew Brees, QB, San Diego Chargers (2006)Dec 15, 2002; Orchard Park, NY, USA; FILE PHOTO; San Diego Chargers quarterback Drew Brees (9) in action against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium. The Bills defeated the Chargers 20-13. Mandatory Credit: MPS-USA TODAY Sports Our younger fans may not remember this, but Drew Brees suffered one of the most devastating shoulder injuries in NFL history in the final game of the 2005 season. A 360-degree labrum tear with a deep partial rotator cuff tear.  Brees later said he wasn’t sure he’d ever put on a football uniform again. So, it wasn’t a huge shock when San Diego’s offer that offseason came in rather low… but it still felt wrong… like dirty business!  It was a four-year, $50 million contract… but with only a couple of million in Year 1 guaranteed money—which was wild. Realistically, it was backup quarterback money for an NFL team dressed up in big headline numbers and buried in the fine print. But to be fair, the skepticism about Brees’ prospects of playing good football again was not isolated in San Diego… Only two other teams even called. Miami had its doctors examine the shoulder for hours, and ran the other direction. New Orleans and Sean Payton, on the other hand, sat with Brees for two hours watching film, talking schemes, never once mentioning the injury. Brees signed six years and $60 million contract with the Saints, where he went on to win a Super Bowl and became one of the NFL’s most decorated passers, while the Chargers continued to toil away in mediocrity. Kirk Cousins, QB, Atlanta Falcons (2024)Dec 22, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins (18) prepares for a game against the New York Giants at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images Believe it or not, Kirk Cousins has actually been done dirty twice! Atlanta handed Kirk Cousins a four-year, $180 million contract in March 2024. $100 million fully guaranteed. The largest commitment in franchise history… So it is hard to feel that bad for him… But six weeks later, they used the eighth overall pick in the draft on Michael Penix Jr. Read that again. The Falcons gave a quarterback $100 million in guaranteed money and then, before he threw a single pass in the regular season, told the world they already had his replacement on the way. The optics alone were staggering. The actual football logic was somehow worse. By midseason, the Falcons benched Cousins for Penix — a rookie who wasn’t ready and a situation nobody in that building had thought through properly.  Granted, this NFL team screwed itself over in the process, but needless to say, Cousins was not thrilled either.

Read more10 Brutal Times NFL Teams Did Their Players Dirty in Free Agency

2026 NFL Mock Draft: Big Trades, Latest Rumors Shake Up New 4-Round Forecast

Apr 9, 2026 @ 7:01am
FootballNFLArizona CardinalsAtlanta FalconsBaltimore RavensCarolina PanthersChicago BearsCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysDetroit LionsHouston TexansIndianapolis ColtsKansas City ChiefsLas Vegas RaidersLos Angeles ChargersLos Angeles RamsMiami DolphinsMinnesota VikingsNew England PatriotsNew Orleans SaintsNew York GiantsNew York JetsPhiladelphia EaglesPittsburgh SteelersSan Francisco 49ersSeattle SeahawksTampa Bay BuccaneersTennessee TitansWashington Commanders
Athlon Sports

See how some blockbuster trades and the latest buzz could impact the early going of the 2026 NFL Draft in this updated four-round projection.

Read more2026 NFL Mock Draft: Big Trades, Latest Rumors Shake Up New 4-Round Forecast

3 reasons Kenyon Sadiq would be perfect Ravens fit in 2026 NFL Draft

Apr 8, 2026 @ 11:28pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
ClutchPoints

This NFL Draft isn’t loaded at the top with the usual premium positions like quarterback and tackle, but there are still plenty of top prospects to choose from. The pass-catching group is one of the strengths of the 2026 class, and the infusion of talented offensive weapons will allow teams to give a big boost […] The post 3 reasons Kenyon Sadiq would be perfect Ravens fit in 2026 NFL Draft appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Read more3 reasons Kenyon Sadiq would be perfect Ravens fit in 2026 NFL Draft

4 Ravens veterans who could easily be replaced in the 2026 NFL Draft

Apr 8, 2026 @ 2:49pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
FanSided

Baltimore is going to have to get younger eventually, so why not start in April?

Read more4 Ravens veterans who could easily be replaced in the 2026 NFL Draft

Ravens Lose ‘Big and Sorry’ 17-Game Starter to Giants

Apr 8, 2026 @ 2:04pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensNew York Giants
Heavy

Baltimore Ravens starting offensive guard Daniel Faalele has signed a 1-year free-agent contract with the New York Giants. The post Ravens Lose ‘Big and Sorry’ 17-Game Starter to Giants appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreRavens Lose ‘Big and Sorry’ 17-Game Starter to Giants

Giants’ John Harbaugh Swipes 6-Foot-8 Starter From Ravens in Signing News

Apr 8, 2026 @ 1:59pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensNew York Giants
Heavy

New York Giants HC John Harbaugh is reuniting with another former starter, luring an ex-draft pick over from the Baltimore Ravens in the latest free agency news. The post Giants’ John Harbaugh Swipes 6-Foot-8 Starter From Ravens in Signing News appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreGiants’ John Harbaugh Swipes 6-Foot-8 Starter From Ravens in Signing News

Ravens' Kyle Van Noy Shares Story of Searching for Biological Family

Apr 8, 2026 @ 12:53pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Athlon Sports

Ex-Ravens linebacker Kyle Van Noy revealed that he hired a PI four years ago and located his biological family, including siblings who don't know he exists.

Read moreRavens' Kyle Van Noy Shares Story of Searching for Biological Family

Analyst hints as franchise-altering Ravens decision involving Lamar Jackson – sportingnews.com

Apr 8, 2026 @ 3:00am
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Sporting News

Analyst hints as franchise-altering Ravens decision involving Lamar Jackson  sportingnews.com

Read moreAnalyst hints as franchise-altering Ravens decision involving Lamar Jackson – sportingnews.com

Ravens Urged to Fix Maxx Crosby Error With Giants Trade

Apr 7, 2026 @ 10:37pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensNew York Giants
Heavy

The Baltimore Ravens are urged to fix their Maxx Crosby mistake by making a trade with the New York Giants. The post Ravens Urged to Fix Maxx Crosby Error With Giants Trade appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreRavens Urged to Fix Maxx Crosby Error With Giants Trade

Ravens QB Lamar Jackson Called ‘Problematic’ by Disgraced NFL Head Coach

Apr 7, 2026 @ 9:21pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Heavy

Former NFL head coach Eric Mangini called out Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson for finally showing up at OTAs after years of skipping out. The post Ravens QB Lamar Jackson Called ‘Problematic’ by Disgraced NFL Head Coach appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Read moreRavens QB Lamar Jackson Called ‘Problematic’ by Disgraced NFL Head Coach

Ravens urged to sign All-Pro WR for Lamar Jackson – sportingnews.com

Apr 7, 2026 @ 8:29pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
Sporting News

Ravens urged to sign All-Pro WR for Lamar Jackson  sportingnews.com

Read moreRavens urged to sign All-Pro WR for Lamar Jackson – sportingnews.com

Former NFL QB Colin Kaepernick Announces Career News

Apr 7, 2026 @ 6:59pm
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensSan Francisco 49ersSeattle Seahawks
Athlon Sports

Colin Kaepernick played six seasons in the NFL for the San Francisco 49ers, leading them to the Super Bowl during the 2012 season. The dual-threat quarterback threw for 302 yards and rushed for 62 against the Baltimore Ravens, leading an inspired second-half comeback that fell short, 34-31, at the ...

Read moreFormer NFL QB Colin Kaepernick Announces Career News

Wild but brilliant move Ravens must make in 2026 NFL Draft

Apr 7, 2026 @ 5:20pm
FootballNFLBaltimore Ravens
ClutchPoints

Recently, David Njoku’s visit was an offseason subplot, and the unsuccessful pursuit of Maxx Crosby created another, but neither should dominate the Baltimore Ravens’ draft considerations. When the draft board opens, the key question is how to effectively utilize a significant amount of draft capital this year, with the Ravens holding the 14th overall pick […] The post Wild but brilliant move Ravens must make in 2026 NFL Draft appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Read moreWild but brilliant move Ravens must make in 2026 NFL Draft

10 Worst NFL Coach Firings That Still Make No Sense

Apr 7, 2026 @ 11:58am
FootballNFLBaltimore RavensCincinnati BengalsCleveland BrownsDallas CowboysHouston OilersSan Diego ChargersSan Francisco 49ersTennessee TitansWashington Redskins
Total Pro Sports

Playing in the NFL is hard, but there is a serious argument to be made that being a successful head coach in the league is an even steeper challenge. Not only do you have to operate as the CEO of a highly publicized company effectively, but you also have to manage dozens of professional athletes while deploying a successful strategy on offense and defense. To say that it takes a whole lot to get it right is a massive understatement. So, when you find the right guy, it is pivotal to keep him in town no matter what, but NFL owners are impatient. Sometimes they get an itch to make a rogue move, thinking that the team has plateaued and perhaps the grass is greener on the other side—only to realize in short order that they have made a terrible mistake. Let’s take a look back at the 10 WORST Head Coach firings in NFL history that tanked the organizations that let their guy go! Which coaches were unceremoniously fired in the NFL? Bill Belichick, Cleveland Browns/Baltimore RavensJan 1, 1995; Cleveland, OH, USA; FILE PHOTO; Cleveland Browns head coach Bill Belichick prior to the 1994 Wild Card Playoff Game against the New England Patriots at Cleveland Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Photo By USA TODAY Sports © Copyright USA TODAY Sports It’s funny how history rewrites itself.  Aside from the whole UNC mess… Today, Bill Belichick is widely regarded as one of the greatest coaches in NFL history…  In the 2000’s he became a six-time Super Bowl champ and a feared mastermind that made opposing coaches overthink every last decision. He was essentially the hooded overlord of football’s modern dynasty, but back in Cleveland in the mid-’90s, he was the guy that the Browns handed a pink slip to. Belichick took over a dysfunctional Browns team in 1991—and while his approach wasn’t warm and fuzzy, it was effective at turning things around. The Browns went 11-5 in 1994 and won a playoff game—their only postseason win since the 1980s.  But by 1995, the walls were closing in… Modell announced he was moving the franchise to Baltimore, chaos swallowed the season, and Belichick was a casualty in the process. Who knows—maybe if they brought BB along for the ride, they would have been the 2000s dynasty—not the Pats! George Allen, Washington RedskinsSep 16, 1973; Washington, DC, USA; FILE PHOTO; Washington Redskins head coach George Allen on the sidelines during the 1973 season. Mandatory Credit: Photo By Malcolm Emmons-USA TODAY Sports © Copyright Malcolm Emmons If you were to make a list of the most innovative minds in NFL history, George Allen would be somewhere near the top; thus, his exit from Washington in 1977 is one of those classic “what were they thinking?” moments. In his seven seasons with the Redskins, he went 67-30-1, made the playoffs five times, never had a losing season, and won the NFC title in 1972. He built the “Over-the-Hill Gang,” a roster of savvy veterans who outsmarted younger teams every Sunday, and he revolutionised how special teams were coached and valued.  Allen was obsessed with preparation—film study, substitutions, clock control—all things that are normal now because he made them normal. Allen reportedly turned down a four-year, $1 million contract extension because he didn’t like ownership’s new demands, and the team promptly showed him the door. Imagine firing a guy who had literally never had a losing season and replacing him with one of his favorite players in Jack Pardee… brutal. Washington ended up sinking into a three-year period of pure mediocrity under Pardee with an even .500 record during his tenure, and they never hit the same heights as they did with Allen until years later, when Joe Gibbs was brought into the fold. Marty Schottenheimer, San Diego ChargersSept. 17, 2006; San Diego, CA, USA; San Diego Chargers head coach Marty Schottenheimer against the Tennessee Titans at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, CA. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports © 2006 Mark J. Rebilas This one still stings, even 18 years later. Marty Schottenheimer went 14-2 with the 2006 Chargers — the best regular-season record in franchise history. LaDainian Tomlinson won MVP, Philip Rivers had taken the baton from Drew Brees—and then some, frankly, the team was loaded across the board.  Then came the playoff loss to New England, and within a few weeks, Marty was fired over front office tension with GM A.J. Smith. Think about that. A 14-2 coach was shown the door because of office politics. Yes, the playoff loss was a factor… but even the stated reason was “philosophical differences,” but let’s be real, it was an ego collision. And ownership picked the wrong side. People criticised his 5-13 playoff record, but postseason heartbreak doesn’t make a coach bad, especially not when the team continued to suffer untimely injuries, which makes him unlucky.  The Chargers didn’t just fire an NFL coach; they fired a culture that prioritized accountability over flash—and, honestly, fans have ownership to blame for never fully capitalizing on all of that mid-2000s talent and bringing home a Super Bowl like many expected them to. George Seifert, San Francisco 49ersJan 29, 1995; Miami, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; San Francisco 49ers head coach George Seifert on the field prior to Super Bowl XXIX against the San Diego Chargers at Joe Robbie Stadium. The 49ers defeated the Chargers 49-26. Mandatory Credit: RVR Photos-USA TODAY NETWORK If you want a coaching tenure that basically reads like perfection on paper, Seifert delivers. He turned around the San Francisco 49ers in 1989, posting a remarkable 98-30 regular season record over eight seasons, won two Super Bowls, and had the best winning percentage in the NFL at his departure. But then came 1996, where the 49ers ended up going 12 and 4, but were eliminated in the divisional round again by the Green Bay Packers. Instead of another shot at building on that success, he was quietly ushered out.  His “resignation” or firing, depending on how honestly you look at it, came because ownership—led by Eddie DeBartolo Jr.—had unrealistic expectations that went beyond regular-season domination… They needed Super Bowl wins every year. When they didn’t get it, they pulled the plug. This, of course, led to some dark days under Steve Mariucci in the Bay Area… The 49ers maintained Seifert’s standards in year 1, going 13 and 3, but fell off a cliff the following year going 4 and 12—and quickly faded into irrelevance way beneath Bartolo’s standards! Jim Harbaugh, San Francisco 49ersJanuary 7, 2011; San Francisco, CA, USA; Jim Harbaugh addresses the media during a press conference after being announced the new head coach of the San Francisco 49ers at the Palace Hotel. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports The 49ers and Jim Harbaugh were like an elite rock band that was super fun to watch on the come-up, but imploded at its peak.  From 2011 to 2014, they went 44-19-1, reached three NFC Championships, and came within five yards of capturing a Lombardi Trophy.  Then, after one bumpy 8-8 year, which seemingly unearthed years of growing tension with General Manager, Trent Baalke, they “mutually parted ways.”  If you are looking for a clean way to sum it up… Basically… Baalke got his feelings hurt because Harbaugh didn’t treat him with kid gloves, so he rashly decided to fire the guy who turned them from 6-10 to perennial contenders. And, as you might’ve expected, the post-Harbaugh years were a disaster. Jim Tomsula and Chip Kelly, both gone within a single season, put up a 7- 25 record, which is simply horrendous.  The 49ers didn’t stabilize again until Kyle Shanahan arrived in 2017, which, unsurprisingly, coincided with Baalke’s unceremonious departure from the organization. I understand that Harbaugh’s intensity wore people out, but that’s the cost of greatness. He built that defense’s identity, amplifying the swagger of studs like Patrick Willis and NaVorro Bowman.  When the dust settled, it was clear as day that Harbaugh was the straw that stirred the drink out in the Bay Area… and based on the success he had turning around the University of Michigan—and now the Los Angeles Chargers—it’s safe to say Baalke was completely misguided in giving Harbaugh a pink slip. Mike Vrabel, Tennessee TitansNov 30, 2014; Houston, TX, USA; Houston Texans linebackers coach Mike Vrabel prior to the game against the Tennessee Titans at NRG Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports It’s rare for a coach to be proven right this quickly… Though… this was one that everyone saw the writing on the wall for.  When the Titans fired Mike Vrabel in January 2024, ownership said the team “needed a new direction.” Well, that new direction has been a nosedive. Brian Callahan went 4-19 before being canned this October, and Tennessee has scored just 83 points through six games. Meanwhile, Vrabel took a year off from head coaching to do some consulting work and has since taken the job in New England with his old team, the Patriots. And, well, so far, so good! Yep, the same team that just went 4-13 last year is sitting at 5-2 partway through the 2025 season and has a hilarious 31-13 thumping of the Titans to its name. It had to feel good for Vrabel to win over his old squad after the way ownership tried to throw him under the bus.  What is crazy is that he is bringing a very similar impact to New England that he did when he got to Tennessee.  He’s rebuilt the defense, put an unproven quarterback in a position to succeed, and has the whole locker room buying in. What’s wild is how obvious this outcome felt.  Vrabel was 54 and 45 in Tennessee with three playoff trips and a 2021 NFL Coach of the Year trophy. Fans were even willing to go to extreme lengths to have him back. The roster regressed because of personnel misses, not coaching. Yet ownership blamed the voice instead of the roster. Now, Vrabel’s thriving in Foxborough while the Titans are back in “interim” mode because they hastily showed one of the best culture-builders in the game the door. Marvin Lewis, Cincinnati BengalsCincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis instructs the defense in the first quarter of a Week 17 NFL football game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh. The Cincinnati Bengals lead 10-3 at halftime. Cincinnati Bengals At Pittsburgh Steelers 12 30 2018 Syndication Cincinnati Before Marvin Lewis arrived in 2003, the Bengals were the NFL’s punchline, year in and year out. They were known as a franchise allergic to stability and addicted to mediocrity.  But Lewis managed to do more than just change the team on the field; their identity evolved under his leadership.  Over 16 seasons, Lewis went 131-122-3 and took Cincinnati to the postseason seven times. That’s not small potatoes when you consider the Bengals hadn’t had a winning season in over a decade before he showed up. But after the 2018 campaign, ownership decided it was time to “move on.” Translation: they were tired of losing in the Wild Card round. Sure, Lewis never won a playoff game, but he built a legitimate culture with next to no help from ownership. He had to navigate minimal free-agent spending, a revolving door of coordinators, and a notoriously old-school front office that barely believed in scouting innovation. When Lewis left, the Bengals got exactly what they asked for: a reset. Unfortunately, that reset meant a two-year stretch of absolute irrelevance before Joe Burrow came to town. Mike Shanahan, Washington RedskinsDec 29, 2013; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; Washington Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan walks off the field after a game against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium. The Giants defeated the Redskins 20-6. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports If you were making a Mount Rushmore of bad NFL owners, Dan Snyder would be carved right in the middle.  Few people in football history have burned through more competent personnel than Snyder, and Mike Shanahan, widely regarded as one of the best coaching minds in NFL history, was one of his biggest casualties. When Shanahan took over in Washington back in 2010, the franchise was already a full-blown fixer-upper. Years of Dan Snyder meddling had left the roster top-heavy, the locker room fractured, and the fan base numb to disappointment.  It wasn’t exactly the kind of place that even a two-time Super Bowl champion could walk into and instantly win. But Shanahan wasn’t looking for a quick fix — he was trying to rebuild a culture. But Shanahan quietly did what he always did best: found talent where nobody else was looking. A sixth-round pick named Alfred Morris became a 1,600-yard rusher in 2012, and that same year, Washington drafted Robert Griffin III and went 10- 6, winning the NFC East for the first time in over a decade.  It felt like the corner had finally been turned. Then came the injuries… and the interference. RG3’s knee exploded in that playoff loss, and Snyder, instead of letting his coach manage the recovery, turned the situation into a circus. By the end of 2013, the relationship between owner and coach had completely unraveled, forcing Shanahan out of town—and Washington back into the cellar. Jimmy Johnson, Dallas CowboysOct 16, 2023; Inglewood, California, USA; Jimmy Johnson attends the game between the Los Angeles Chargers and the Dallas Cowboys at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports This one is the gold standard of disastrous divorces. Two Super Bowl titles. Back-to-back. A complete franchise turnaround from 1-15 laughingstock to full-blown dynasty — and somehow, it still ended with the head coach walking away because the owner, Jerry Jones, couldn’t share credit. When Jimmy Johnson arrived in Dallas in 1989, the Cowboys were broken. The roster was depleted, culture was nonexistent, and Tom Landry’s long shadow still hung over everything.  Johnson tore it all down and rebuilt it through the draft, By 1993, Dallas was a juggernaut. Faster, tougher, and better than anyone else in the league. Then came the ego war. Jerry Jones started taking public credit for the team’s rise, calling himself the architect. Johnson pushed back — and just weeks after winning a second straight Lombardi, the two split. Jones spun it as “mutual,” but it was anything but. Yes, the Cowboys won another Super Bowl the next year under Barry Switzer, but let’s be real—that was still Jimmy’s NFL team. The roster, the culture, and the discipline were all Johnson’s.  And after that brief echo of success, the dynasty fizzled, and Dallas hasn’t been the same since. Bum Phillips, Houston OilersOct 14, 2012; Houston, TX, USA; Houston Oilers former head coach Bum Phillips attends a game between the Houston Texans and Green Bay Packers in the first quarter at Reliant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports Every franchise dreams of a coach who wins football games and gives them an identity… Phillips did both! Cowboy hat, boots, and all. He was Texas football personified. And from 1975 to 1980, Phillips went 55- 35 with Houston, made two AFC title games, and turned the Oilers from an afterthought into a legitimate contender. Then… they fired him. This wasn’t some long, slow decline either. The Oilers went 11-5 in 1980 and were coming off back-to-back deep NFL playoff runs.  Everyone in Houston believed they were this close to breaking through but owner Bud Adams had other ideas and once the Oilers lost in the Wild Card round that last, fateful year, he decided he wanted more control—a classic mistake by an overconfident owner. And with it, he deflated the best era of Oilers football until the Warren Moon run a decade later.

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