NEW YORK — The 2026 NFL offseason has officially abandoned the concept of a “rebuild.” Instead, teams are reloading with nuclear-grade weaponry. In a stunning flurry of moves over the last 48 hours, the coordinator market has exploded with overqualified talent, headlined by Mike McDaniel accepting the Offensive Coordinator role with the Los Angeles Chargers and Brian Daboll surfacing in Tennessee.
We aren’t just seeing position coaches get promoted; we are witnessing a consolidation of power. Ten head coaching jobs opened this cycle, but the real story is the legion of former head coaches—McDaniel, Daboll, Frank Reich, Matt Nagy, and Jonathan Gannon—taking step-down roles to rehabilitate their images and chase rings.
The Blockbuster: McDaniel Meets Herbert
The Los Angeles Chargers have won the offseason before it even started. By pairing Mike McDaniel’s motion-heavy, speed-obsessed scheme with Justin Herbert’s alien arm talent, the Chargers have arguably built the most terrifying QB-OC duo in the league. McDaniel, fresh off his exit from Miami, brings a philosophy that doesn’t just score points; it breaks calculators.
Expect the Chargers to heavily utilize their running backs in the passing game, a staple of McDaniel’s offenses, while unlocking the deep ball that has been Herbert’s calling card. This isn’t a hire; it’s a threat to the rest of the AFC West.
The Redemption Tours: Daboll, Reich, and Nagy
The “Retread Revolution” is in full swing. Brian Daboll (Titans OC) and Matt Nagy (Giants OC) are back in the play-calling chairs where they originally made their names. For Daboll, the move to Tennessee offers a chance to mold a young offense without the CEO-level headaches of the New York media market.
Meanwhile, the New York Jets have doubled down on experience, hiring Frank Reich as their Offensive Coordinator. After a turbulent stint as a head coach, Reich returns to his roots as a quarterback whisperer. His calm demeanor and intricate knowledge of protection schemes are exactly what the Jets need to stabilize a unit that has been historically volatile.
Youth Movement in Baltimore & Cleveland
While veterans dominate the headlines, the AFC North is banking on the next generation. The Baltimore Ravens have poached Declan Doyle, the 30-year-old rising star, to lead their offense. Doyle’s meteoric rise—from Broncos tight ends coach to Bears OC and now to Baltimore—suggests the Ravens are looking for modern, adaptive schematic advantages.
Their rivals, the Cleveland Browns, didn’t look far for their answer. They hired Travis Switzer, formerly the Ravens’ run-game coordinator. Switzer has been the architect behind Baltimore’s punishing ground attack for years. Stealing him is a strategic masterstroke by Cleveland: they get the brain behind the bully, and they weaken their biggest rival in the process.
“You walk into the building now and the IQ level just went through the roof. We got guys drawing up plays who have led entire franchises. It’s not just about X’s and O’s anymore; it’s about PhD-level football.”
— Anonymous AFC Offensive Veteran
Defensive Shuffle: Gannon and Morris Reset
The defensive side of the ball is equally star-studded. Jonathan Gannon lands in Green Bay as Defensive Coordinator, bringing his Vic Fangio-inspired split-safety structure to the Packers. After his head coaching stint in Arizona, Gannon’s return to a pure coordinator role makes the Packers’ defense instantly more complex to decipher.
In San Francisco, the rich get richer. The 49ers have hired Raheem Morris as Defensive Coordinator. Morris, one of the most respected leaders in football, keeps the 49ers’ culture ironclad while likely integrating more disguised coverages to combat the league’s passing explosion.
What’s Next?
With the Senior Bowl and Combine fast approaching, these new staffs have zero time to settle in. The immediate impact will be felt in free agency. Players want to play for teachers, and with names like McDaniel, Reich, and Daboll running units, expect veteran offensive talent to take discount deals to play in these proven systems.
