Massachusetts

Josh McDaniels Speaks Following Decision to Stay With Pats

Josh McDaniels sent ripples throughout the NFL with his decision to pull out of an agreement to become the Indianapolis Colts' head coach in order to remain the offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots.

He has yet to speak publicly about what factored into the 11th hour about-face, but offered few words at his Westwood, Massachusetts home Wednesday when asked for a comment by an NBC10 Boston reporter.

"I love the Patriot nation," he said when asked if he had anything to say to them.

When asked a follow up question, McDaniels replied, “No, I'm not going to do any comments. Thank you.”

Asked how he’s feeling, McDaniels responded with, “I'm fine.”

The brief comments came on the same day McDaniels was supposed to be introduced as head coach of the Indianapolis Colts. Instead, Colts general manager Chris Ballard held a press conference addressing McDaniels' decision to stay with the Patriots.

"That's his prerogative and that's his choice, he chose not to be an Indianapolis Colt," said Ballard.

McDaniels' return as New England's offensive coordinator leaves many wondering what this means for current head coach Bill Belichick, and if McDaniels is the next Patriots head coach in waiting.

One Patriots fan said he'd be OK with that.

"I just think he has one of the best football minds in the entire NFL," Mark Polson said, "and I think we need to hang onto that and keep him around."

Belichick gave no indication after the Super Bowl loss to Philadelphia on Sunday night that he plans to exit in 2018. And just last month he said that it was "absolutely" his intention to be back for his 19th season with the Patriots.

But at age 65, he's also the second-oldest coach in the NFL, behind only Seattle's Pete Carroll at 66.

McDaniels has been one of the hottest names in coaching searches every offseason over the past three years.

At 41, he's considered one of the NFL's brightest young minds. What's more, McDaniels is someone whom Patriots quarterback Tom Brady trusts and recently called "a great coach and a great friend."

It's unclear how McDaniels' decision will affect him regarding future opportunities with other NFL teams, a gamble should he never get the opportunity to lead the Patriots.

Ballard said in his press conference Wednesday that the assistants that McDaniels had already hired to be on his staff would have their contracts honored. If McDaniels ever leaves New England again, he will certainly have some repairs to make to his image around the league.

Responding to a suggestion that comfort with the Patriots might have played a role in McDaniels' decision, former coach and current NBC football analyst Tony Dungy said in a tweet Wednesday that "there is no excuse big enough to justify this," adding it was indefensible to leave the assistant coaches he's hired in limbo.

Charlie Weis, who was Patriots offensive coordinator from 2000 through 2004 and coached alongside McDaniels, is now an analyst on SiriusXM NFL Radio. During an appearance on Mad Dog Sports Radio he called McDaniels' decision "unbelievable."

"I know his agent, Bob LaMonte. I had his agent for 15 years," Weis said. "And I promise you, with 100 percent conviction, this is against what Bob LaMonte wanted him to do."

LaMonte didn't return a message seeking comment. LaMonte, who represents several coaches and executives around the NFL, including Ballard, fired McDaniels on Wednesday.

Ballard made one last comment before ending his news conference Wednesday, saying, "The rivalry is back on."

Patriots fans are not buying that.

"I think you need to win for a rivalry," said Polson, "so I don't think much of what he said."

McDaniels is one of Belichick's most-tenured assistants, having served under him a combined of 15 years (nine as offensive coordinator) over two different stints, beginning in 2001. It's a run that allowed him to be a part of all five of New England's Super Bowl wins.

The only break in his Patriots' timeline came from 2009 to 2011, when he served as the Denver Broncos coach for two seasons, followed by a stop in St. Louis as the Rams offensive coordinator in 2011. He returned to New England in 2012.

During Super Bowl week, McDaniels spoke about the support he has in New England. He said it was the biggest takeaway from his failed experience in Denver.

"It's about the people that are with you more than it is about one person," McDaniels said. "There's no doubt about that. It takes an army of good people pulling the same direction to try to have success and I think the most important thing a head coach can do."

The Patriots have rarely let people with significant institutional knowledge walk out the door since Belichick took over in 2000.

And it would hardly be ideal timing for the Patriots to change offensive coordinators on Brady, who will also turn 41 in August.

Despite New England's Super Bowl loss to the Eagles, McDaniels was the architect of another typical Patriots offensive showcase, as New England gained 613 yards.

"I think he is so well prepared and gets me prepared every week," Brady said of McDaniels. "He is so diligent. He is just a great coach. I love playing for him."

McDaniels and Brady did have a heated moment on the sideline during win over Buffalo this past season. But Brady publicly apologized to McDaniels after video of their verbal skirmish went viral.

"A lot of people see it and they think the nature of our relationship would be something like that, but it's really the exact opposite of that," Brady said at the time. "He knows how much I love him."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us