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Saturday, November 21, 2009

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Josh McDaniels is the third member of a Bill Belichick staff to get a head coaching job elsewhere.
Associated Press

McDaniels gets Broncos’ job

Pats’ OC inherits dynamic offense

ASSOCIATED PRESS

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ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The Denver Broncos apparently have turned from “The Mastermind” to “The Wunderkid.”

Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels has agreed to take over the Broncos, ESPN reported Sunday night. The network said the 32-year-old McDaniels will be introduced as Denver’s new coach today.

The Broncos did not respond to phone messages and e-mails from The Associated Press seeking comment.

McDaniels would replace Mike Shanahan, who was fired Dec. 30 after 14 seasons with three years and $21 million left on his contract.

McDaniels is a rising star who has spent his entire eight-year NFL coaching career in New England, where he worked his way up from personnel assistant in the scouting department to offensive coordinator for Bill Belichick.

Under his tutelage, Tom Brady threw for a record 50 touchdowns last season and the Patriots came within a whisker of the first 19-0 season in NFL history.

McDaniels’ reputation grew ever larger this year when Brady was lost with a knee injury in the opener and Matt Cassel, who hadn’t started a game since high school, led the Patriots to an 11-5 record.

McDaniels would be the third member of Belichick’s coaching staff to become a head coach in the NFL, following Romeo Crennel with Cleveland in 2005 and Eric Mangini, who joined the Jets a year later. Both were fired this offseason with Mangini replacing Crennel in Cleveland.

McDaniels was the second of seven candidates the Broncos’ brain trust interviewed. Owner Pat Bowlen met with him in Rhode Island on Jan. 4.

McDaniels will inherit an explosive offense that appears to be one healthy running back away from greatness and a dismal defense that needs another overhaul. That led many observers to believe defensive minds such as the Giants’ Steve Spagnuolo or the Vikings’ Leslie Frazier had the inside track for the job.

The other candidates were Raheem Morris of Tampa Bay, Rick Dennison of Denver, Jason Garrett of Dallas and Todd Bowles of Miami.

“Hopefully we can continue to improve. I’m hoping we can keep some of our offensive coaches, keep some of those guys around,” wide receiver Brandon Stokley told the AP on Sunday night. “I think we did a good job. Hopefully we can keep getting better and bring new ideas.”


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