NEW YORK — The 2026 NFL coaching carousel just spun off its axis. On a Valentine’s Day packed with league-altering moves, the New York Giants locked in John Harbaugh’s cabinet, DeMarco Murray booked a ticket to Kansas City, and the Arizona Cardinals opted for continuity on defense despite a regime shift.
Giants: The Harbaugh Era Gets Its Generals
The Giants aren’t just hiring coaches; they’re building a war room. John Harbaugh’s 2026 staff is official, but the biggest splash didn’t happen on the sidelines. The franchise hired Dawn Aponte as Senior VP of Football Operations and Strategy. Aponte, a cap wizard and former NFL executive, brings the kind of front-office firepower that turns rosters into dynasties.
On the field, Harbaugh made a calculated gamble: retaining Charlie Bullen. After pulling his name from defensive coordinator searches elsewhere, Bullen stays in East Rutherford with a shiny new contract and the title of Run Game Coordinator. Expect him to be the hottest name on the DC market again in 2027.
Arizona: LaFleur Gets the Band Back Together
Matt LaFleur’s first major decision in the desert? Don’t fix what isn’t broken. The Cardinals are retaining Nick Rallis as defensive coordinator. Rallis, the youngest DC in the league when he first took the job, kept Arizona’s defense scrappy last season despite personnel deficits. Keeping him suggests LaFleur wants stability while he overhauls the offense.
The special teams unit, however, gets a new pilot. Arizona hired Michael Ghobrial, a move that screams “familiarity.” Ghobrial and LaFleur overlapped at the New York Jets, and that shared history likely sealed the deal. Ghobrial’s chaotic, high-energy coverage units are exactly what the Cardinals need to flip field position in the NFC West.
Chiefs: A Star Returns
The Chiefs just added serious horsepower to their coaching room. DeMarco Murray is the new running backs coach in Kansas City. The former rushing champ has been grinding in the college ranks, and his jump back to the pros is a massive win for Andy Reid’s staff. Murray knows the position inside out—he lived the hits. Pairing his vision with KC’s backfield talent is a scary thought for the rest of the AFC West.
Kansas City also brought in Chad O’Shea to coach wide receivers, looking to add veteran discipline to a room that has been notoriously inconsistent.
“You look at a guy like John Fox joining Buffalo… that’s not just a hire, that’s insurance. When bullets start flying in December, you want a guy who’s seen the movie before.”
— Anonymous AFC Executive
Quick Hits: The Carousel Don’t Stop
- Buffalo Bills: Joe Brady added the ultimate safety net. John Fox joins as a senior assistant. Fox has coached in two Super Bowls; his job is to let Brady focus on play-calling while he manages the locker room temperaments.
- Dallas Cowboys: They dipped into the college ranks, plucking Scott Symons from SMU to coach inside linebackers. Symons turned the Mustangs’ defense into a turnover machine; Dallas hopes that aggression translates to Sundays.
- Las Vegas Raiders: The DC search is heating up. They’re interviewing Rams assistant Aubrey Pleasant today and Seahawks safeties coach Jeff Howard on Saturday. Meanwhile, Mike McCoy is officially the new Assistant Head Coach.
- Seattle Seahawks: While they look for an OC—interviewing Arizona’s Conner Senger—they secured a win on defense. Karl Scott is staying put, rejecting outside interest to keep developing Seattle’s secondary.
Playoff Implications
The Giants are the team to watch here. By pairing Harbaugh with Aponte and retaining a rising star like Bullen, they are signaling a “win-now” window. This isn’t a rebuild; it’s a reload. In Arizona, LaFleur keeping Rallis suggests the Cardinals believe they are closer to contending than the national media thinks. If that defense takes another step forward, the NFC West hierarchy could look very different by December.

