Bill Belichick? Klint Kubiak? Brian Flores (again)? NFL coaching candidates should covet the Giants job

When the New York Giants postthishead coaching opportunity, the waiting room should look like a town hall meeting.

That's how much potential is already on theGiants' roster that Brian Daboll is leaving behindafter his firing Monday.

Let's start with the old heads who are thirsting for another NFL head coaching job. North Carolina's Bill Belichick? He should want it. Former Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy should, too. Ditto forKansas City Chiefsdefensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. Heck, even Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores should want another chance at this one —despite the fact that he's actively suing the Giants(among others) after getting bypassed in the 2022 head coach hiring cycle. Why let a little thing like federal litigation get in the way of a potentially great thing?

[Get more Giants news: New York team feed]

You can tack on the next-big-thing coordinators to the list of candidates interested in the Giants, too. From the offensive-minded guys like the Seattle Seahawks' Klint Kubiak and Buffalo Bills' Joe Brady, to defensive wizards like the Los Angeles Chargers' Jesse Minter and Green Bay Packers' Jeff Hafley. Actually, to save time, let's put it like this:Everyoneshould be interested in this Giants job.

That's not to say the franchise should cast an interview net that includes all these candidates — but it should have no shortage of high-end options, even if general manager Joe Schoen remains in place.

Consider why, starting with …

A young talent base on offense

Unlike many teams that fire their head coaches in the middle of a season, the Giants' roster is not deprived of young foundational talent. If anything, one of Daboll's most legitimate arguments against his own firing would be to point out that a number of his best players hadn't gotten to spend time together as a unit due to injuries. At Daboll's expense, there are going to be some good building blocks to work with for the next head coach — and they'll have gotten some solid experience this season.

It starts with quarterback Jaxson Dart,who will need the right fit in terms of his next offensive coaches. He has already shown a penchant for playmaking and leadership that has impressed Giants opponents. Around Dart, the Giants have the start of a good set of young skill position players, including a potentially elite wideout in Malik Nabers, a tight end in Theo Johnson who has been a bright spot this season, running back Cam Skattebo, and left tackle Andrew Thomas. That's quite a head start when it comes to a coach wanting to hit the ground running on offense.

Jaxson Dart has impressed many in his rookie season, however injuries have limited him in giving a full body of work this season. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)

Some elite pieces on defense

Across from that offense, there are some high-end assets to build around on defense — particularly up front. Defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence II and edge rusher Brian Burns have All-Pro talent. Edge Kayvon Thibodeaux also has the tools to be a plus-level defensive piece, while rookie edge Abdul Carter is just scratching the surface of his talent. That's a disruptive quartet to build around, not to mention a wealth of depth at a premium edge position that could allow for creativity from the next staff. That wealth in the front seven also gives the next staff an opportunity to focus its build on the secondary in Year 1.

A modestly healthy salary cap outlook and good flexibility beyond 2026

The Giants' salary cap situation in 2026 isn't great, but it's not terrible, either. If the franchise can roll the roughly $4.8 million it has under the 2025 cap into 2026, it will give New York roughly $34 million of space next offseason. Right now, that would rank about 18th in the league. The Giants will be flush with space in 2027, although it's hard to know where that could fall, given the reality that the franchise could cut some players loose after 2026 and create even more space. The point being, the cap flexibility gives the Giants the ability to compete with other teams for free agents, rather than a coaching staff coming in and having both arms tied for a year or two (see: Sean Payton when he took over the Denver Broncos).

A recent trend toward patience from ownership

TheGiants were an absolute messfrom 2016-2021 when it came to hiring and firing head coaches, going through three mainstays (Ben McAdoo, Pat Shurmur, Joe Judge) and one interim (Steve Spagnuolo) in that span. Daboll broke the spell, getting through three full seasons and 10 games into his fourth. In today's NFL, that's a solid amount of patience. Most coaches get at least two years. Three years is considered a very fair look. A fourth year, when you haven't had success since Year 1, is a little more hard to come by. That Giants ownership kept its powder dry until a third straight 2-8 start at least suggests the days of pulling out the rug quickly may be over.

Despite the hard times, it's still one of the NFL's cornerstone markets

The Giants job — even when it has had a lot of warts — is still in the league's biggest and most visible market. Even operating out of New Jersey, it's an attractive draw for coaches, players and personnel hires because of the lineage that comes with it. There's a reason Belichick was always rumored to have the Giants as his "back burner" team if he ever left the New England Patriots on his own terms. And it wasn't just because he was an assistant on the Bill Parcells Super Bowl teams. It's also because of the gravity of the job and the reality of what winning in New York means for not only the franchise and the city, but also for the league.

EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - NOVEMBER 26: Head coach Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots and Head coach Brian Daboll of the New York Giants hug after New York's 10-7 win at MetLife Stadium on November 26, 2023 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

But, there is also some downside …

Of course, the job doesn't come without some knocks. It remains to be seen exactly what is going to happen with general manager Joe Schoen, who still has the confidence of ownership to at least put together the next head coaching search. There's already skepticism around the league about how deep the commitment will be for Schoen if a top-tier candidate comes in and says they want to be paired with their own GM. It could be a situation that has a resolution similar to what happened with the Jacksonville Jaguars, when general manager Trent Baalke ran the team's coaching search and then was eventually dispatched by ownership when it became clear that new head coach Liam Cohen preferred James Gladstone as his right-hand man in personnel. Whether that's the case with the Giants or not, it presents an interesting scenario that has yet to play out. It's worth noting that the Patriots retained their head of personnel, Eliot Wolf, after hiring head coach Mike Vrabel.That has been a fruitful partnership in the early going. The same could be said for the Broncos retaining general manager George Paton after hiring Sean Payton.

Aside from Schoen, the Giants are in an NFC East that is at the very least challenging. The Philadelphia Eagles are going to be a problem for years to come. The Dallas Cowboys are a roller coaster that kick up mini spurts of being competitive. And the Washington Commanders have a young star quarterback as their centerpiece in Jayden Daniels. At baseline, it's not a division where the next Giants coach can come in and expect to wipe the mat with the division rivals. And even inside the franchise, there's already some white-knuckling over the reckless abandon that Dart and Skattebo play with — leading to long-term injury concern — and the fact that Nabers has had significant injuries in both of his first two seasons.

But head coaching jobs don't come open when everything inside a franchise is perfect, and the Giants are no exception. Ultimately, it comes down to the breadth of control given to a head coach and the depth of talent he has to execute that control. The next Giants head coach should have an ample amount of both. And that's why everyone should be in on this opening.

Bill Belichick? Klint Kubiak? Brian Flores (again)? NFL coaching candidates should covet the Giants job

When the New York Giants postthishead coaching opportunity, the waiting room should look like a town hall meeting. ...
Athletics' Nick Kurtz runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Sunday, Sept. 28, 2025, in West Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Sara Nevis)

Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz has been unanimously named the American League Rookie of the Year. Kurtzbeat outhis teammate, shortstop Jacob Wilson, and Boston Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony to claim the honor with all 30 votes.

Nick Kurtz is your 2025 American League Jackie Robinson Rookie of the Year!pic.twitter.com/vzz0uIaidS

— MLB (@MLB)November 11, 2025

Kurtz — nicknamed"The Big Amish"for his upbringing in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a community with a large Amish population — becomes the ninth player in A's franchise history to win the Rookie of the Year award. The Athletics' first winner was in 1952, when Harry Byrd earned the honor as a member of the Philadelphia Athletics. The franchise also produced back-to-back winners in 2004 (shortstop Bobby Crosby) and 2005 (relief pitcher Huston Street) and three years in a row from 1986-88 with José Canseco, Mark McGwire andnewly hired Atlanta Braves manager Walt Weiss.

Wilson finished second in the award race with 23 second-place votes (107 total voting points). The Boston Red Sox's Roman Anthony finished third in voting with 72 points, including 15 third-place votes.

With this Kurtz's victory, the Athletics now trail only the Yankees in the American League — and the Braves and Dodgers overall — forthe most Rookie of the Year awards. This is their first such award since 2009, when Andrew Bailey won it.

This season was one of uncertainty for the Athletics, who missed the playoffs for the fifth straight season amid the first year of their temporary relocation to Sacramento. Still, the team's young players provided a bright spot amid the transition.

[Get more Athletics news: A's team feed]

It didn't take long for Kurtz to make his mark. He debuted April 23, just 283 days and 32 minor league games after being drafted. In his debut against the Texas Rangers, Kurtz went 1-for-4 with a single.

A few weeks later, he hit his first home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers. On July 25, he made MLB history,becoming both the first rookie and first Athletics player ever to hit four home runsin a single game. He finished that contest 6-for-6 at the plate.

Don't ever let Nick Kurtz borrow a baseball ⚾(MLB x@MattressFirm)pic.twitter.com/nnUZ0vPK04

— MLB (@MLB)November 11, 2025

Although Wilson had a strong start to the season, Kurtz's late surge made him the clear choice for the award. The Wake Forest product finished the year with 36 home runs, 86 RBI and a .290 batting average, ranking third in MLB with an OPS of 1.002.

The Athletics appear to be trending in the right direction. Their 76-86 record was their best since 2021, and a young core featuring Kurtz, Wilson, Tyler Soderstrom, Shea Langeliers and Lawrence Butler offers promise for the future.

Athletics 1B Nick Kurtz unanimously wins AL Rookie of the Year

Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz has been unanimously named the American League Rookie of the Year. Kurtzbeat outhis teammate, shortstop...
Doncic scores 38 points as Lakers use strong third quarter to earn 6th win in last 7 games

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Luka Doncic had 38 points, Rui Hachimura scored 13 of his 21 points in a pivotal third quarter and the Los Angeles Lakers pulled away in the second half to beat the Charlotte Hornets 121-111 on Monday night.

Austin Reaves added 24 points for the Lakers, who have won six of their past seven games.

Miles Bridges had 34 points on seven 3-pointers and rookie Kon Knueppel flirted with his first career triple-double before finishing with 19 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists for the Hornets, who continued to struggle without their top two scorers in LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller.

The Lakers broke open a close game by outscoring the Hornets 31-15 in the third quarter behind Hachimura, who knocked down three 3s with Charlotte focused on blitzing Doncic, the five-time NBA All-Star.

Doncic thrilled the crowd with five 3-pointers and some dazzling passes, but even got himself hyped when he drove down the lane for a flying two-handed dunk in which he hung on the rim in traffic.

He even flicked the ball from three-quarters and swished it moments after the Lakers called a timeout in the fourth quarter, drawing a roar from the Lakers contingent.

Charlotte cut the lead to eight with 4 1/2 minutes left behind Bridges and Knueppel, but Doncic scored on a drive down the right side of the lane and drew a foul to complete a three-point play.

Marcus Smart added a dagger 3 with 2 1/2 minutes remaining to put the Lakers up by 14.

The Hornets started strong with Bridges scoring 16 points in the first quarter behind four 3s. But the Hornets cooled off in the third quarter, quickly running out of answers on offense while struggling to stop the methodical scoring presence of Doncic.

Nets: At Oklahoma City on Wednesday night.

Hornets: Host Milwaukee on Wednesday night.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/NBA

Doncic scores 38 points as Lakers use strong third quarter to earn 6th win in last 7 games

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Luka Doncic had 38 points, Rui Hachimura scored 13 of his 21 points in a pivotal third quarter an...
Solo Ball, No. 3 UConn blow past Columbia with first-half surge

Solo Ball scored a team-high 23 points to lead No. 3 UConn to an 89-62 win over Columbia on Monday night in Storrs, Conn.

Ball and Alex Karaban (20 points, six rebounds, four assists) combined for 5 of the 10 3-pointers for the Huskies (3-0), who shot 56.6% from the floor and led by as many as 29.

The UConn lead was 50-27 at halftime before Tarris Reed Jr. scored 13 of his 19 points after the break while pulling down eight rebounds and recording two blocks and three steals.

Jayden Ross (10 points) rounded out double-digit scorers for UConn, which has won 36 straight non-conference home games including three in a row to begin this season.

Miles Franklin and Blair Thompson scored 10 points apiece, and Mason Ritter pulled down seven rebounds for Columbia (1-1).

Columbia trailed just 14-13 after an early 6-2 lead on the strength of back-to-back 3-pointers by Thompson and Zine Eddine Bedri.

The middle of that span featured the first key swing in UConn's direction though, with Karaban scoring seven straight points to begin an 8-0 spurt.

A 14-0 run across six-plus minutes changed the game for good, giving the hosts a 28-13 lead with 6:30 left in the half. Ross hit two threes during the segment, including a transition shot to trigger a timeout for Columbia, which was in the midst of an 0-for-10 stretch.

After the visitors sank two of the next three baskets, the Huskies extended their lead to 24 with another double-digit run of 11 straight points. Three UConn players nailed a 3-pointer before Karaban made a steal and dunk in transition to extend the advantage to 41-17.

The Huskies were 6-of-8 at the foul line in the first four minutes of the second half. Reed highlighted that stretch with a tough driving finish.

Just past the halfway point of the half, Franklin scored consecutive Columbia buckets including a two-handed, fastbreak dunk with 7:49 left, temporarily bringing the deficit inside 20 points at 69-50.

Ball's steal-and-score helped a late 10-2 run back UConn's way. He banged in a 3-pointer for a 29-point Husky lead with 2:25 left.

--Field Level Media

Solo Ball, No. 3 UConn blow past Columbia with first-half surge

Solo Ball scored a team-high 23 points to lead No. 3 UConn to an 89-62 win over Columbia on Monday night in Storrs, ...
Rob Gronkowski smiles and yells while wearing his old Patriots uniform. He is surrounded by others in Patriots gear

Rob Gronkowskispent nine years as a member of the New England Patriots.

On Wednesday, that stint will become nine years and one day as thefun-loving and ever-popular tight endwill sign a one-day contract with the Patriots so he can officially retire as a member of the team with which he won three ofhis four Super Bowl rings.

"I am signing a one-day contract with the Patriots this week coming up to retire as a Patriot and be a Patriot for life," the "Fox NFL Sunday" analyst announced during this week's broadcast.

Are@RobGronkowskiand@TomBradygoing for the Bucs or Pats today?!Gronk says he's rooting for New England ahead of signing his one-day contract this week to retire a Patriot! 🙌pic.twitter.com/OUOxnOfhwy

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX)November 9, 2025

The next day, the Patriots revealed when the ceremonial signing would take place.

"The greatest tight end in @NFL history is retiring a Patriot!" the team posted Mondayon X. "Watch @RobGronkowski sign his one-day contract this Wednesday at 12:15 PM LIVE on Patriots digital & social."

A second-round draft pick for New England in 2010, Gronkowski quickly became a key and beloved member of a Patriots dynasty that was already going strong under coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady. He retired after the 2018 season but returned to the NFL in 2020 to join Brady with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Two seasons and one Super Bowl victory later, Gronk retired again.

Last summer, theidea of Gronkowski re-retiring with the Patriotswas floated publicly by Susan Hurley, the founder and president of the CharityTeams fundraising firm for nonprofits. Speaking at a ribbon-cutting ceremony forGronk Playgroundin Boston, Hurley threw in a personal plea toward Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who was also in attendance.

Read more:Rob Gronkowski says he will sign a one-day contract to retire (again) as a Patriot

"Can we just make it official and sign [Gronkowski] for a day so he can retire as a Patriot?" Hurley asked. "What do you say?"

Kraft and Gronkowski both indicated their approval in the moment, with Gronkowski telling reporters that Hurley was the spark behind the idea of his ceremonial signing.

"The reason we're really going to do that is because of Susan Hurley," Gronkowski said. "She wants to see that happen and has been dreaming about it happening for a while."

Hurley died Nov. 1 at age 62 after a long battle with ovarian cancer.

Patriots spokesperson Stacey James told The Times in a statement that the Patriots were initially planning on honoring Gronkowski's "legendary contributions to our franchise and the bond he shares with Patriots Nation" with a ceremonial contract upon his induction to the team's Hall of Fame. Gronkowski is eligible for that honor starting next year.

However, James said, "we chose to expedite the honor when Susan Hurley, a former Patriots cheerleader and dear friend of Rob's, made it her dying wish to see Rob retire a Patriot. Her love for the team and for Rob was deeply moving, and we were looking forward to hosting her for the announcement. Sadly, she passed earlier this month. While she won't be present, her presence will surely be felt."

Gronkowski posted a lengthy tribute to Hurley last week on social media.

"We lost a good one over the weekend,"Gronkowski wrote. "Susan Hurley has known my family and I for a long time, she became a good friend of ours and supported our foundation more than words can express over the years.

Read more:Chargers make Aaron Rodgers look like a 41-year-old QB in defense-driven win

"But even beyond our team, Susan took care of so many charity teams for the Boston Marathon and their bibs, helping raise so much money to give back to charities. She always did it out of love, her love of the game, her love of people, her love of helping others, and her love for the kids.

"She always had a smile on her face and the utmost positivity, staying an inspiration for runners and charities every single day, even while she was fighting cancer. Her strength and resilience were truly inspirational, and she will be greatly missed.

"Without Susan, there would be no Gronk Playground. I'm thankful that her legacy can live on through the playground, making a huge impact not only on all the Gronk Nation Youth Foundation kids she helped, but all the kids she continues to inspire every day."

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This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Rob Gronkowski will be 'a Patriot for life' after signing one-day contract this week

Rob Gronkowskispent nine years as a member of the New England Patriots. On Wednesday, that stint will become nine years and one day as th...

 

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