Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › coaching & GM changes around NFL (update: Tomlin)
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January 5, 2026 at 10:05 am #160810
znModeratorBlack Monday head coach firings
Falcons fire Raheem Morris
Seasons with team: 2 (2024-25)
Overall record: 16-18
Best season: 2024 (8-9 record, 2nd place in NFC South)
Playoff record: 0-0
Browns fire Kevin Stefanski
Seasons with team: 6 (2020-25)
Overall record: 45-56
Best season: 2020 (11-5 record, 3rd place in AFC North, 1 playoff win)
Playoff record: 1-2
Raiders fire Pete Carroll
Seasons with team: 1 (2025)
Overall record: 3-14
Best season: 2025 (3-14 record, 4th place in AFC West)
Playoff record: 0-0
Cardinals fire Jonathan Gannon
Seasons with team: 3 (2023-25)
Overall record: 15-36
Best season: 2024 (8-9 record, 3rd in NFC West)
Playoff record: 0-0
In-season head coach firings
Titans fire Brian Callahan
Fired on Oct. 13, 2025, after 1-5 start to 2025 season
Seasons with team: 2 (2024-25)
Overall record: 4-19
Best season: 2024 (3-14 record, 4th place in AFC South)
Playoff record: 0-0
Giants fire Brian Daboll
Fired on Nov. 10, 2025, after 2-8 start to 2025 season
Seasons with team: 4 (2022-25)
Overall record: 20-40-1
Best season: 2022 (9-7-1 record, 3rd place in NFC East, 1 playoff win)
Playoff record: 1-1
January 5, 2026 at 4:53 pm #160837
wvParticipantCardinals fire Jonathan Gannon
Seahawks 14-3
Rams 12-5
SF 12-5
Arizona 3-14Arizona fans. Man. Just look at the situation.
And i dont see any reason to think those top 3 teams are gonna suddenly fall off next year.
McDonald, McVay, Shannahan.Is there any kind of QB solution for them?
w
vJanuary 5, 2026 at 6:55 pm #160838
TSRFParticipantWell, they can trade for Stafford…
January 5, 2026 at 7:48 pm #160839
ZooeyModeratorSo far, those fired:
Morris, Atlanta
Stefanski, ClevelandJust occurred to me.
The 9ers are going to hire Morris for their DC after Salah leaves to take one of the HC openings.
Take comfort in the fact that the majority of my predictions about the world are wrong.
January 5, 2026 at 9:25 pm #160850
wvParticipantJanuary 5, 2026 at 10:36 pm #160861
znModerator"Two-time NFL Coach of the Year in a weak job market… they think they can do better than Kevin Stefanski. I would hire him in one second in Las Vegas."@colincowherd reacts to the coaching changes on Black Monday in the NFL pic.twitter.com/1TXLa7fRBt
— Herd w/Colin Cowherd (@TheHerd) January 5, 2026
January 6, 2026 at 8:13 am #160873
znModeratorReport: Dolphins request interview with Rams assistant GM https://t.co/voxkBwdxWV pic.twitter.com/sCWmHyUKWW
— Rams Wire (@TheRamsWire) January 5, 2026
January 6, 2026 at 6:15 pm #160881
znModeratorSources: John Harbaugh is out as the Ravens head coach. pic.twitter.com/Rht9ssh01j
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 6, 2026
January 6, 2026 at 11:04 pm #160895
znModeratorAndrew Brandt@AndrewBrandt
The time of year where NFL coaching agents (and NIL player agents) change their names to “sources”…January 7, 2026 at 10:07 am #160898
znModeratorJeff Howe@jeffphowe
Current openings:Head coach:
Titans
Giants
Falcons
Browns
Raiders
Cardinals
RavensGM:
Dolphins
FalconsJanuary 8, 2026 at 11:20 am #160919
wvParticipantDolphins fired Mike McDaniel.
w
vJanuary 8, 2026 at 8:45 pm #160932
InvaderRamModeratorA name that keeps coming up (can't be requested yet) when offensive HC candidates are being mentioned is Rams OC Mike LaFleur.
But another name with some legit buzz is Rams assistant Nate Scheelhaase, who interviewed with Jax and TB last year for OC jobs a year ago. He's 35. pic.twitter.com/Wki1lGBMhS
— Peter Schrager (@PSchrags) January 7, 2026
https://www.si.com/nfl/rams/onsi/los-angeles-nate-scheelhaase-became-architect-aerial-assault
How Rams’ Nate Scheelhaase Became Architect of the Aerial Assault
In an exclusive interview, the Los Angeles Rams’ passing game coordinator provided an insightful look at his work, life, and vision for the future
Brock Vierra
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4 hours agoWOODLAND HILLS, Ca. When news broke last offseason that the Rams were able to retain offensive assistant Nate Scheelhaase, the move came and went from the news cycle but it’s impact has driven the Rams to new heights in 2025.
“He’s a great coach,” stated Rams head coach Sean McVay. “He has great leadership, great capacity for the game, similar to a lot of our other great coaches. First and foremost, he has great character. There’s an ability to be able to connect with all different types. There’s an ability to own the game from an all-22 perspective. He’s excellent. I’ve really enjoyed working with him. He’s a great person, first and foremost, and he has a great family. He’s been outstanding, working with the receivers, but he has a tremendous impact on our team and our group as a whole.”
McVay highlights an important point about Scheelhaase’s magic and it’s his ability to connect. Earlier this season, Scheelhaase was gracious enough to sit down with Rams On SI for an exclusive interview and now that reports have emerged that Scheelhaase is a name being looked at for offensive coordinator jobs next season, with some believing he has head coaching potential, here is an inside look into the man who helped Los Angeles retake the skies.
The Man Who Stands Ahead Of The Curve
Via information accumulated across the Rams’ entire 2025 regular season, it’s clear that Scheelhaase is not only a respected coach within the facility, he’s one of the brightest minds in football, blending his intelligence with his emotional understanding to form a platform for which the Rams have set repeated high marks.“He’s a smart dude,” stated Rams offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur. “One, he’s incredibly efficient with finding stuff around the league and what people are doing and keeping up with the times, which is so important. He’s just eager to not just know what we’re doing or what the Houston Texans defense is doing, but he’s eager to know what the landscape of the league is and that’s a big factor.”
“As coaches we’re the best thieves out there. Someone does something cool, we’ll steal it, make it our own and call it our own then not cite our source. He does an incredible job at gathering that stuff. He’s awesome with the receivers. He’s awesome in front of the unit. I don’t think he really cares about his future, but his future in my opinion is really bright. He’s where his feet are and we’re really lucky to have him.”
Scheelhaase is the man keeping the Rams ahead of the curve, introducing new offensive concepts into the meeting room, giving the offensive staff more than enough to create new offenses such as the game-changing 13 personnel package.
I asked Scheelhaase about offensive innovation and what does the next evolution of offensive football look like in his mind. Scheelhaase, like most brillant offensive minds, believes offensive football rotates on a cycle and that the teams who are able to best weather the storms of change are those who control the controllables.
“As many times as people ask me that question, the more important question that I ask myself is, what doesn’t change,” questioned Scheelhaase. “What in the last ten years, or the last five years, what’s not changing? What are the consistent foundational things that are important no matter what kind of offense, no matter how things are changing defensively, no matter how you’re trying to attack people, what are some, some of the like, mainstay, foundational, pillar, items that like, man, if you want to have good offensive football, this is what it takes.”
Looking at patterns across the game has been a key piece to Scheelhaase’s success. There are many similarities in Scheelhaase and Sean McVay’s school of thought, using pre-snap looks to induce poor decisions by painting similar pre-snap looks and then masking the play through similar actions on a variety of calls/ designs.
“I’m always like looking for the next idea, the best idea but I’m also trying to figure out, as much as anything, what has been tried and true throughout the last two, three, four, five years, that still is true today…I think that it’s cyclical,” cited Scheelhaase. “As far as, like, what happens in football, the ability to attack people both pre and post snap, Sean [McVay], his offenses, how that’s affected and influenced NFL offenses.”
“I always think the pre-snap operation is a huge part of what happens in the NFL,” continued Scheelhaase. “I think you’ve seen us do some stuff, the motions, the shifts, the personnel changes, the tempo, those things have infiltrated the NFL in a unique way and I think just continuing to watch what quarterbacks are doing pre-snap, and watch how that affects offenses in a positive way, that’s probably what I feel like I pay the most attention to.”
And it is in that through that since being named Rams’ passing game coordinator in the offseason, the Rams finished the season on top of several statistical leaderboards. Matthew Stafford is the NFL’s passing yards and passing touchdowns king, while being tied for second for fewest interceptions thrown by a quarterback who played 17 games. As a result, Stafford is in a dead heat with Drake Maye for the MVP award.
Puka Nacua sits on top of the NFL leaderboards for receptions while Davante Adams led the NFL in touchdown receptions.
But while Scheelhaase steals concepts for the Rams to exploit, it was actually Scheelhaase who stole from the Rams originally, paving his path to Los Angeles.
A True Hustler
Not many men can produce multiple NFL-grade wide receivers out of a program with the history of Iowa State, but at the same time, not many men can replace Juice Williams and then set program records. That’s Nate Scheelhaase. A standout collegiate quarterback who parlayed his on-field success to a coaching career that took him from his alma mater, Illinois to Iowa State, where he climbed up Matt Campbell’s coaching ladder to be his offensive coordinator, before being hired by the Rams for the 2024 season.Los Angeles Rams WR Davante Adams On Returning From Injury, Struggles, Playoff Experience
A True Hustler
Not many men can produce multiple NFL-grade wide receivers out of a program with the history of Iowa State, but at the same time, not many men can replace Juice Williams and then set program records. That’s Nate Scheelhaase. A standout collegiate quarterback who parlayed his on-field success to a coaching career that took him from his alma mater, Illinois to Iowa State, where he climbed up Matt Campbell’s coaching ladder to be his offensive coordinator, before being hired by the Rams for the 2024 season.ADVERTISING
Nate Scheelhaase
Nov 20, 2010; Chicago, IL, USA; Illinois Fighting Illini quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase (2) runs away from Northwestern Wildcats linebacker Nate Williams (44) during the first quarter at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerry Lai-Imagn Images | Jerry Lai-Imagn Images
Back in 2022, when Scheelhaase was Iowa State’s wide receivers coach, he stole McVay concepts built for Cooper Kupp to turn wide receiver Jaylin Noel from a little-known prospect into a household collegiate playmaker.“I remember sitting with Jaylin Noel after the LA Rams 2021 Super Bowl year, and watching Cooper Kupp stack, choice, decision-making based on coverages and, I mean I literally remember after his freshman year, watching that cut up and just showing him all the different looks that Cooper Kupp got, and saying man, we’re going to do this play with you this next year.”
“And then Jaylin ran a ton of that, I mean, all throughout his time there at Iowa State. So there was an appreciation, for Sean, the offense, of what they were doing here, for Cooper Kupp. So those things happen naturally.”
In the three years after the 2021 season, Noel recorded 206 catches for 2,586 and 18 touchdowns. The Houston Texans drafted Noel and Iowa State teammate Jayden Higgins, whom Scheelhaase recruited and coached, in the 2025 NFL Draft. Scheelhaase was on the opposite sideline for their debuts in week one.
Higgins and Noel made their first NFL catches in that game.
Why Scheelhaase Is Built to Lead
Regardless of what happens, there’s is a very slim chance Scheelhaase isn’t an offensive coordinator next season. He has the knowledge, the experience, the ability to successfully teach, and the resume for the job. He was interviewed twice last season, by Tampa Bay and Jacksonville, and to be frank, I thought the Jaguars’ job was a done deal.Scheelhaase came back for a reason and that reason is to get a premier coordinator job in 2026, whether with the Rams or with someone else, while putting another year of experience within the McVay system under his belt. But when it comes to the prospect of Scheelhaase being a head coach, here’s why I believe he will be one within the next five years.
Scheelhaase, a very personable professional, spoke about the times his professional life crossed over with his personal, with that exposure benefiting both sides. Back at Iowa State, long before NFL wide receiver Xavier Hutchinson was making millions with the Houston Texans, he was making sure Scheelhaase’s eldest son was okay while Scheelhaase and his wife would run out of the house.
“Xavier Hutchinson literally babysat my oldest son,” stated Scheelhaase. “His girlfriend really was the one who babysat my son, but my son would be most excited about Xavier Hutchinson coming over. My son’s stows away the jerseys that he has…it’s more than just football with those dudes like Xavier Hutchinson.”
The Family Man Turns Into the Teacher
While Scheelhaase is a family man, having started his home in Ames, Iowa, before moving to Southern California, his job is what pays the bills and for any coach, the struggle of balancing work and home life is one that often leads to failures that affect both sides.Whenever there are problems with either, they bleed into each other and that’s where Scheelhaase has the leg up. As someone who was in the collegiate ranks, who is now working at the highest level in the NFL, he has an ability to impact young players in a meaningful and beneficial way.
Scheelhaase joked that some of the receivers he’s worked with during his time with the Rams had never been in a huddle at the collegiate level. They’ve also only been utilized in one way, taking away the mental aspect of the position, leading players to be behind the eight ball once they get to the league.
Thus, Scheelhaase’s whole philosophy is about finding things that players know, concepts they’re comfortable with, designing his offense around those concepts while introducing new ideas with common tones. That system has led to instant success and a buy-in from his group.
A True Team Builder
Why has Los Angeles been such a fit for Scheelhaase? It’s because the Rams mimic the feelings of collegiate ball. There is a time and a place for everything and having an emphasis on fun has been the calling card for the franchise’s ability to get through tough times.“Coach McVay, what’s cool about him is if you’re like, picturing an image of college football, the right culture, environment, five years ago, and what you want to build,” stated Scheelhaase. “The connection that you want the coaches and the players to have amongst each other. That’s what this place feels like. I feel like I’ve heard players say before, you know, the University of Los Angeles Rams and there is a little bit of that college feel that we have because of the connection that’s made, the authentic, real connection that’s made from a relationship standpoint that I do think is unique.”
“Again, for me, this is the only NFL environment that I’ve seen so I’m not able to compare to a lot of places, but I do know people love coming to work here every day and I do know that there’s a certain culture and environment that is the tone that’s set by Coach McVay, the rest of the staff, that is appreciated on a player level, on a coaching level, and that’s that is unique to our place, our environment.”
Why do I think he’ll be a head coach soon? Because that’s who you’re bringing into the facility. Those were the same words echoed by Davante Adams when he first came to the Rams and continue to be the standard for the team.
Nate Scheelhaase. A pillar of the Los Angeles Rams and the NFL’s next coaching superstar.
Follow on X (Twitter) @RamsInsideronSI and @BrockVierra. Please let us know your thoughts when you like our Facebook page WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE
January 9, 2026 at 8:35 am #160943
wvParticipantthe Vierra article:
“..I feel like I’ve heard players say before, you know, the University of Los Angeles Rams and there is a little bit of that college feel that we have because of the connection that’s made, the authentic, real connection that’s made from a relationship standpoint that I do think is unique.”
====They were awfully lucky to land McVay in 2017. Its startling how many coaches he has to replace as the years go by. And so many of them have done well.
11 bad years before McVay came along.
Martz 6 years 53-32
Linehan 3 years 11-25
Spagnuolo 3 years 10-38
Fisher 5 years 31-45McVay 9 years… 92-57
—
w
vJanuary 9, 2026 at 10:06 am #160944
InvaderRamModeratorThey were awfully lucky to land McVay in 2017. Its startling how many coaches he has to replace as the years go by. And so many of them have done well.
yeah. it’s really hard to grasp sometimes. just a special time in rams’ history.
just how special we’ll have to find out.
January 9, 2026 at 10:16 am #160945
InvaderRamModeratoron scheelhaase. i wonder how much influence he had on the 13 personnel package the rams started rolling out this year. or possibly stafford’s best season yet in his 17 year career. i at least feel confident if some team decides to hire lafleur away that they have a candidate to promote from within. the rams always seem to have a succession plan for all these coaches who get hired away.
January 9, 2026 at 10:35 am #160947
wvParticipantyeah. it’s really hard to grasp sometimes. just a special time in rams’ history.
just how special we’ll have to find out.
Coulda had Matt Patricia.
w
v—————
LA Rams Talking To Big-Name Candidates In Head Coach SearchJanuary 9, 2017 / CBS Baltimore
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Rams are casting a wide net to find their next head coach.
The Rams’ front office is talking to most of the popular candidates for the NFL’s half-dozen coaching vacancies as they begin rebuilding from their 4-12 season.
The Rams already have interviewed Atlanta offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan, Arizona offensive coordinator Harold Goodwin, Washington offensive coordinator Sean McVay, and Carolina assistant head coach Steve Wilks. They plan to speak with New England coordinators Josh McDaniels and Matt Patricia this weekend, along with Buffalo interim coach Anthony Lynn and other candidates.
Los Angeles lost its final seven games and fired fifth-year head coach Jeff Fisher last month with three games remaining. The Rams have had 13 straight non-winning seasons and haven’t made the playoffs since 2004.
They don’t look close to a playoff return with an offense that has ranked last in the NFL for two straight years, including their homecoming season in Los Angeles. A topflight offensive coach could change that, and the Rams are clearly interested in the top offensive coordinators on the market.
McDaniels, the former Denver Broncos head coach, was the Rams’ offensive coordinator in St. Louis in 2011, when they went 2-14. After coach Steve Spagnuolo was fired, McDaniels returned to the Patriots.
Shanahan, an offensive coordinator for nine seasons, is another top candidate after engineering the Falcons’ high-powered offense this year. Atlanta scored 42 points against the Rams at the Coliseum in December, and Fisher was fired one day later.
Rams general manager Les Snead is among the front office employees speaking to head coaching candidates. Snead’s future with the team still could be in doubt after five losing seasons, but Los Angeles owner Stan Kroenke must be seriously thinking about keeping the GM in place.
The Rams likely don’t have the NFL’s most attractive coaching opening with a mediocre talent base around No. 1 pick Jared Goff and running back Todd Gurley. But the Rams will be attractive to some candidates with their high-profile hometown, a deep-pocketed owner and a palatial new stadium opening in Inglewood in 2019.
“I think the job is very attractive, but I think it’s going to take the right fit,” Rams chief operating officer Kevin Demoff told the team’s official website. “As the jobs stack up, I’m sure there are positives and I’m sure there are negatives. Quite frankly, if you have an opening, there are negatives. That is why you have an opening. The key is, what are the positives to your job?”
https://www.cbsnews.com/baltimore/news/la-rams-talking-to-big-name-candidates-in-head-coach-search/
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January 9, 2026 at 11:09 am #160951
InvaderRamModeratorCoulda had Matt Patricia.
well. and i also wonder how mcvay’s trajectory would have gone if he were hired by the browns? or some other such team. snead and mcvay seem very much in sync. are there better gms out there? maybe. better head coaches than sean? possibly. but that synergy between the two really seems to work. probably something mcvay learned from his grandfather.
mcvay certainly is the face of this franchise and seems to grasp the need to rely on the people around him.
and kevin demoff too. i wasn’t very high on him at all at the beginning. but i was wrong. he’s put the right people in place. not just on the football side of things. but people to manage the salary cap and the ability to construct a roster within the confines of that cap.
January 11, 2026 at 5:20 pm #161061
znModeratorAdam Schefter@AdamSchefter
Rams OC Mike LaFleur has been asked to interview, and will this week, for the HC positions in Las Vegas and Arizona, per ESPN’s @PSchrags.January 11, 2026 at 5:50 pm #161065
znModeratorAlbert Breer@AlbertBreer
Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak is done with his head-coaching interviews, having taken six of them. He met with the Cardinals, Dolphins, Falcons, Giants, Raiders and Ravens over the last two days.Hot name on a market lacking in young offensive coaches.
January 11, 2026 at 8:12 pm #161086
znModeratorRams passing game coordinator Nate Scheelhaase (I botched the pronunciation of his name on Thursday's NFL Live) will have a full dance card next week. 35-year-old former Illinois QB and Matt Campbell disciple at Iowa State has spent the last two years at McVay's hip. pic.twitter.com/hqM71JtHjC
— Peter Schrager (@PSchrags) January 10, 2026
January 11, 2026 at 8:12 pm #161087
znModeratorHere’s a fun one: The Dolphins have requested an interview with Rams DC Chris Shula for their head coaching job, per source.
Shula — the grandson of legendary Dolphins coach Don Shula — is eligible to interview next week after the Rams’ wild card game. pic.twitter.com/5Iaq4tcQbz
— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) January 10, 2026
January 11, 2026 at 8:14 pm #161089
znModeratorSumming up the last couple of posts:
…
Demand for Rams' assistants 📈📈📈
Per sources …
• DC Chris Shula has requests from Cards, Raiders, Titans, Giants, Ravens and Dolphins.
• PGC Nathan Scheelhaase has requests from Raiders, Browns and Ravens.
• OC Mike LaFleur has requests from the Raiders and Cards.
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) January 11, 2026
January 13, 2026 at 10:02 am #161155
znModeratorCameron DaSilva@camdasilva
Rams assistant coaches (Shula, LaFleur, Scheelhaase) have a combined 11 HC interviews this weekJanuary 13, 2026 at 10:37 am #161159
ZooeyModeratorShula to Miami makes way too much sense for it not to happen.
Is the McVay staff the most pilfered in the league over the past 9 years?
January 13, 2026 at 11:33 am #161164
wvParticipantShula to Miami makes way too much sense for it not to happen.
Is the McVay staff the most pilfered in the league over the past 9 years?
Cowherd pointed out Raheem and Brandon Staley both failed as Head Coaches, and like them, Shula is a rams’ Defensive guy. So, i dunno.
w
vJanuary 13, 2026 at 12:06 pm #161167
ZooeyModeratorCowherd pointed out Raheem and Brandon Staley both failed as Head Coaches, and like them, Shula is a rams’ Defensive guy. So, i dunno.
I don’t have any idea if Shula will be/would be a good HC. Miami isn’t a great situation since they don’t have a QB (and Tua has a hefty, long-term contract that will be difficult to unload). The fact that they have been largely unsuccessful for such a long time also implies that there are organizational problems that even good coaches may find difficult to overcome. I dunno. All I’m saying is that from Miami’s point of view, hiring Don Shula’s grandson off a good team with a good defense under him is going to stimulate the fan base. For whatever that’s worth.
Edit: On Tua, I heard some yapper propose that Miami could/should trade Tua “NBA style” to get rid of him. That would mean sending good draft picks along with Tua to a team that is looking to completely rebuild through the draft, and they would take on Tua’s contract to eat in exchange for extra good (and cheap) draft picks. So Arizona might be a candidate for that. Take Tua (with no intention of starting him), and get a bunch of youngsters in the draft.
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This reply was modified 1 month, 3 weeks ago by
Zooey.
January 13, 2026 at 2:36 pm #161175
znModeratorDraftKings@DraftKings
Mike Tomlin in 19 seasons with the Steelers:• Super Bowl winner
• 8 division titles
• Zero losing seasons🚨 🚨 🚨 #Steelers coach Mike Tomlin has informed the team that he plans to step away from coaching, meaning one of the greatest to do it will take a break.
Pittsburgh has a coveted opening. pic.twitter.com/iqp3qoX7bO
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 13, 2026
January 13, 2026 at 3:54 pm #161178
wvParticipantSaw this on Bomani Jones vid. I had never heard this.
Back in 2006 or so, the Dolphins interviewed Mike Tomlin for their head-coaching job. Nick Saben had just left that job.
“Internal discussions revealed a committee member’s comment that Tomlin was “too hip-hop,” which reportedly played a role in choosing Cameron.”
w
vJanuary 13, 2026 at 4:20 pm #161179
znModerator“Internal discussions revealed a committee member’s comment that Tomlin was “too hip-hop,” which reportedly played a role in choosing Cameron.”
Cam Cameron went 1-15 and was fired after a year.
Meanwhile, in Pittsburgh, they were immediately impressed by Tomlin.
One good indicator of Tomlin’s caliber as a coach is the number of players who left Pittsburgh and became problems elsewhere, but were never problems with the Steelers, along with the number of players who were problems before Pittsburgh but stopped being that the minute they signed with the Steelers.
January 13, 2026 at 6:16 pm #161184
wvParticipantCam Cameron went 1-15 and was fired after a year.
Meanwhile, in Pittsburgh, they were immediately impressed by Tomlin.
One good indicator of Tomlin’s caliber as a coach is the number of players who left Pittsburgh and became problems elsewhere, but were never problems with the Steelers, along with the number of players who were problems before Pittsburgh but stopped being that the minute they signed with the Steelers.
Spags was too Gospel.
w
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