3 head coaches the Broncos could have hired instead of Sean Payton
Views: 4019
2023-10-02 04:51
Very little has gone right for Sean Payton in his first full month as the head coach of the Denver Broncos. This team stinks. Here are three coaches they should have hired over him instead last offseason cycle.

The Denver Broncos are among the worst teams in the NFL this year. They duked it out with one of the other worst teams in the league in the hapless Chicago Bears in Week 4. While the Broncos now have a rare Sunday evening worthy of celebrating, life is miserable leading a sub.-500 team like this on the first day of October. Sean Payton may have been great with the New Orleans Saints, but oof...

Payton spent last year working as an NFL analyst for FOX, a role that he could have kept going forward if he really wanted to. He was excellent in that job. However, he could not help himself and took one of the five head-coaching positions available last offseason cycle. He picked Denver over the likes of the Arizona Cardinals and the Houston Texans, two teams that look to be better than his.

Not to say the game has passed him by, but the nadir of Broncos football is still dragging a long at rock bottom. Denver gave up 70 points a week ago to the surprisingly juggernaut Miami Dolphins. While we expect Denver to win a few games this season under Payton's guidance, his first month as their head coach is closer to the Nathaniel Hackett complete disaster than we ever could expected.

Apparently, new ownership in Denver is not all that great. If the Walton-Penner Family were smarter, they could have, would have, probably should have hired one of these three coaches over Payton.

Denver Broncos: 3 better options over Sean Payton as their head coach

3. Detroit Lions OC Ben Johnson should be a head coach next season

Although he was a finalist for the Carolina Panthers gig that ultimately went to former Indianapolis Colts head coach Frank Reich, what a year it was for Ben Johnson as the offensive coordinator of the 2022 Detroit Lions. While it is all about Dan Campbell, man, in the Motor City, man, he has himself one helluva offensive coordinator in Johnson, man. He has gotten the most out of Jared Goff in Detroit.

Frankly, Johnson made the right call to stay put in Detroit. Last offseason was his first real trip on the coaching carousel, and he nearly came away with the Panthers job. Not to say he was ever up for the Broncos gig, but he should have been. Denver's ongoing issues for the better part of a decade now have had to do with offensive ineptitude, really ever since Peyton Manning's arm turned into a noodle.

While I have my doubts about Johnson getting the most out of a declining Russell Wilson's skill set, we have seen him reinvigorate Goff into being an unquestioned top-10 passer in the sport. In short, he has Goff playing the quarterback position with a ton of confidence, probably even more than he felt getting all of the answers on the test from Sean McVay when he was with the Los Angeles Rams.

Johnson will be leading his own NFL team next season, but he could have been leading the Broncos.

2. Unlike the Denver Broncos, Jim Harbaugh refuses to lose at head coach

This could have gone to hell in a hand basket too, but I absolutely would have loved to see Jim Harbaugh roaming the NFL sidelines in Denver this season. I mean, his departure from his alma mater of Michigan would have made the College Football Playoff-contending Wolverines worse and better for my beloved Georgia Bulldogs, but that is not the point. What is is he straight up refuses to lose!

Harbaugh's competitive spirit can get the best, and worst, of him from time to time. What the Broncos have not been since winning Super Bowl 50 is competitive. The offense has been mediocre at best, whereas the defense comes and goes, particularly on how well the offense plays. It is a rough culture, or lack thereof, in place in The Mile High City. Harbaugh would have implemented one about the work.

Overall, we are simply running out of time for Screech's much older cousin getting back into the NFL as a head coach. He had a strong connection with Denver during the interview process. Harbaugh also could have conceivably gotten the Indianapolis Colts gig over former Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Shane Steichen. Keep in mind that Harbaugh is in the Colts' Ring of Honor.

Hiring Harbaugh may have been tumultuous, but he would have made the Broncos more competitive.

1. Dan Quinn may have avoided a dumpster fire by staying put in Dallas

The fact Dan Quinn is back in Dallas as the Cowboys' defensive coordinator is shocking to say the least. While he bombed in the latter part of his tenure as the former head coach of the Atlanta Falcons, Quinn is flourishing in his current role in Dallas. He had been up for coaching gigs the two previous cycles, including the last two hirings the Broncos made with Nathaniel Hackett and Payton.

There are things I liked about Quinn in Atlanta, and there were things I hated. In terms of what I liked, his players seemed to love playing for him. He always seemed to have a good eye for coaching talent around him. And lastly, he could his players to buy in ... when they were winning. And therein lies the problem. Once he lost momentum after the Super Bowl 51 defeat, his cliched schtick wasn't sticking.

Ultimately, for any of Quinn's perceived shortcomings as a head coach, he is still worthy of a second stab at being in the big chair. Even though Payton's Broncos proved victorious for the first time this season, that win came on the road vs. Justin Fields, Matt Eberflus and the usually toothless Chicago Bears. Payton may still be able to turn this thing around, but Quinn could have been their guy in 2022.

How the Broncos play over the next month will signify if they are capable of turning this thing around.

Tags nfl dallas cowboys denver broncos ben johnson listicle michigan wolverines detroit lions jim harbaugh russell wilson dan quinn sean payton