It was a terrible hire when it happened, but the New England Patriots not even giving Jerod Mayo a chance to improve or grow as a head coach was another terrible look for the fallen Evil Empire. Mayo was hand-picked by Robert Kraft to succeed Bill Belichick after moving on from him last year.
A brief look at what's right in Detroit and what went wrong in New England, plus an update on coaching searches in Dallas, Chicago
Jerod Mayo's wife took to social media on Friday to speak out against rumors associated with Mayo's firing as head coach of the New England Patriots
The New England Patriots could be on the verge of hiring their next coach after completing an interview with Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson on Friday, the fourth candidate to be brought in as part of the search to fill the vacancy created by the firing of Jerod Mayo.
According to the NFL Network, Glenn has declined an interview request to speak to the Patriots. After one season, the Patriots (4-13) made the decision to part ways with Jerod Mayo.
There are three certainties in life: death, taxes and the New England Patriots hiring Josh McDaniels to be their offensive coordinator. McDaniels is returning to New England to serve as the Patriots' offensive coordinator for a third time, the team announced on Wednesday.
Mike Vrabel and the Patriots are starting the process of building their coaching staff. Here are all of the latest updates.
Free Press columnist Carlos Monarrez answers three questions from Ford Field about the Detroit Lions’ 31-9 win over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday night. Not only was it clearly running back ...
The Detroit Lions will be well represented when 2025 Pro Bowl selections are announced Thursday, but one player who won't be on the list could be this year's biggest snub. Lions safety Kerby ...
As a result, that moved the Patriots to the fourth pick in the draft. The Patriots then fired head coach Jerod Mayo a few hours later. That paved the way for the Tennessee Titans, who fell to the ...
The New England Patriots are retaining special teams coordinator Jeremy Springer, according to a report from NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport on Monday. Springer had the second overall special teams unit in the NFL, per statistics from Pro Football Focus. So it would make sense that coach Mike Vrabel would like to retain that success on the team.