Titans close to hiring Gregg Williams

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  • ThomasTomasz
    • Jan 2025

    Titans close to hiring Gregg Williams

    MOBILE, Ala. – Coach Sean Payton's return to the New Orleans Saints was all the buzz Tuesday among the hundreds of coaches and front-office people at the Senior Bowl.

    When it came to Gregg Williams, however, the buzz was killed in a matter of seconds. As talented and accomplished as Williams has been in his career prior to the bounty scandal that severely impacted New Orleans' season, there is a huge question around the NFL about how exactly he can get back in the league.

    If at all.

    The primary issues for Williams, suspended indefinitely by the league for his role in the bounty program, are trust and his ability to work within a staff. The trust issue relates to both how players will deal with him and how he will follow orders from a head coach.

    "Fabulous coach, energetic, inventive, aggressive … but after all the stuff that happened, are your players going to worry about what they do or say in front of him?" one head coach said. "Heck, the way you hear it from the people [in New Orleans], he won't listen to superiors."

    Williams has been cleared by the NFL to pursue a job, a league source confirmed Tuesday. According to a report by NFL.com, the clearance is subject to approval by commissioner Roger Goodell. However, it's considered unlikely that the league will stand in the way of Williams returning.

    What's more likely to hold up the process is that Williams is considered radioactive by many coaches. In an informal survey of four head coaches, each withholding his name, all seemed uncomfortable with the idea of bringing in Williams. Longtime friend Jeff Fisher of St. Louis hired Williams as his defensive coordinator before the scandal broke last offseason. However, Williams reportedly isn't a consideration for the Rams' current opening.

    That decision seemed telling to many of the other coaches because Fisher and Williams have been friends for nearly 20 years. Although none of the four coaches had talked to Fisher, all said that the immediate interpretation is that Williams would have a hard time gaining the trust of players.

    Williams played a role in the NFL building a case against players in the bounty scandal, eventually admitting to pushing players to participate in the bounties and administering the program. That administration included tracking big hits that would be rewarded. Williams also was among the coaches who provided information on player behavior which eventually led to suspensions for Jonathan Vilma, Will Smith, Anthony Hargrove, and Scott Fujita.

    All of those suspensions were eventually thrown out on appeal to former commissioner Paul Tagliabue. Still, the mere fact that Williams was so forthcoming to the league about the behavior of the players may be too much for him to earn trust and credibility – certainly as a defensive coordinator, a position that ultimately has great control over players.

    All of the coaches who talked about Williams said that getting players to buy into what he was saying would be difficult, particularly among veteran players. Moreover, Williams' image as something of a renegade – good or bad, he has long been considered a brazen man with a larger-than-life ego – has morphed in this situation into more of an outlaw.

    "I've been around Gregg a lot over the years and I like him, but he has always been a guy who pushed it to the limit as much as possible," another coach said.

    That makes many people fearful that Williams will be difficult to handle. Moreover, his strong attitude could be hard to control even if he were a lower-level assistant, such as a linebackers coach.

    As an example, one coach pointed out the problems that former Philadelphia defensive line coach Jim Washburn had fitting in with the Eagles' staff the past two years. Washburn, who has an extremely strong personality, was eventually fired in the middle of last season by former Eagles coach Andy Reid when he could no longer get along with the rest of the staff.

    So while Payton returned to the league to much fanfare on Tuesday, Williams may be stuck waiting for an opportunity.

    And he may be stuck for quite some time.

    http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nfl--co...034658398.html
  • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
    Highwayman
    • Feb 2009
    • 15428

    #2
    He should drop down to the college level...he'll find work.

    The NFL is going to be tough to get back into considering...

    Comment

    • ThomasTomasz
      • Jan 2025

      #3
      Suspended former New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams has already met with the Tennessee Titans and is on the verge of becoming the Titans' assistant head coach, according to league sources.

      Before Williams can finalize a contract with the Titans, however, he first must be reinstated by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell -- a move that could come as early as this week.

      Should Williams be reinstated, no obstacles are expected on the contractual front, according to sources. The two sides are familiar with each other, with Williams having worked in Tennessee from 1993-2000.

      Williams already has met with Titans officials, including head coach Mike Munchak, who is said to be in favor of Williams' addition to the staff, according to sources.

      Additionally, former Titans and St. Louis Rams coach Jeff Fisher has endorsed Williams to his former employer. Fisher hired Williams to lead St. Louis' defense this season, but Williams' suspension for his role in the Saints' bounty scandal lasted the entirety of the 2012-13 season. Williams was not retained by the Rams at season's end.

      Neither Williams nor his representatives could be reached for comment.

      Munchak has known Williams since 1990. Munchak was playing for the then-Houston Oilers when Williams became an assistant coach with the team. They also coached together with the Oilers; Munchak oversaw the offensive line starting in 1994 and Williams rose from defensive assistant to coaching special teams, then linebackers and finally defensive coordinator.

      Williams left the Titans to become head coach of the Buffalo Bills in 2001 before becoming defensive coordinator with the Washington Redskins from 2004-07. Williams also was defensive coordinator in Jacksonville in 2008 before being hired by the Saints in 2009.

      Munchak already has Jerry Gray as his defensive coordinator, who left the Titans with Williams and served as Williams' defensive coordinator in Buffalo. But Munchak will be coaching for his job in 2013 after going 6-10 in his second season as head coach, and Tennessee's defense needs help after setting a franchise record for allowing 471 points in 2012.

      http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/88...nnessee-titans
      Both Gray and Munchak should be looking over their shoulder. A slow start for the defense for Gray, or the team for Munchak, could easily mean Williams taking over.

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