TAMPA, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have lined up three head-coaching candidates to interview: Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy, Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator George Edwards and Dallas Cowboys secondary coach/passing game coordinator Kris Richard.
Bucs general manager Jason Licht flew to Kansas City to meet with Bieniemy on Wednesday, and Edwards will interview Friday. Richard’s interview with the Bucs was still to be determined because the Cowboys are playing in the NFC wild-card game Saturday night, so the earliest he could interview would be Sunday.
Here’s a closer look at the three candidates:
Eric Bieniemy
Key traits: Passion, intensity, attention to detail, no-nonsense
Core philosophy: While Bieniemy’s background is as a running backs coach, he believes in the importance of attacking downfield, and you’ll see that in his playcalling. While the Chiefs passed the ball 583 times in 2018, more than any other team in the league, Bieniemy’s playcalling at the University of Colorado from 2011 to ’12 was nearly a 50-50 split, suggesting he can adapt. Perhaps more balance for Bucs quarterback Jameis Winston, as opposed to outgoing head coach Dirk Koetter’s vertical attack, will work?
Bragging rights: He helped lead Kareem Hunt to a league rushing title as a rookie with 1,327 yards in 2017. The Bucs were second to last in yards per carry (3.92 average) and had the fewest rushing yards from a running back (1,050) in 2018 (Winston had 281 rushing yards). Former Vikings coach Brad Childress also credits Bieniemy for his work with Adrian Peterson, calling him “unmerciful.”
Key question that must be answered: How much can he help Winston after spending a year working with Patrick Mahomes? While Andy Reid calls the offensive plays, Bieniemy has been responsible for assembling playbooks, game plans and running offensive meetings. It’s also his voice in the headset that Mahomes hears, not Reid’s.
Quotables: “[Quarterback] is a detailed position … It’s very easy to go, ‘Ah, we can let that one slide.’ That’s [not] how [Bieniemy] goes about it. He’s going to make sure everything is covered. I trust him for that. I can’t be there every second. He jumps in and just takes charge, and I have full confidence in him so I can go be the head coach and he can run the offense. He does a heck of a job with it.” — Reid
“He does not let me miss any detail of what the play is supposed to do, what the protection is supposed to be, and that helps me a ton, because when we get to the game, everything is a little bit easier,” Mahomes said.
George Edwards
Key traits: Calm, steady, excellent teacher, very detailed.
Core philosophy: A 4-3 defense utilizing pressure, disguises and zone blitzes. A defense that is in constant attack mode.
Bragging rights: Since taking over for Alan Williams in 2014, the Vikings have gone from allowing a league-high 30 points and 397.6 yards per game (second most in the league) in 2013 to giving up 19.31 points and 317.9 yards per game (both third fewest in the league) from 2014 to 2018. The Vikings finished the 2017 season allowing a league-low 275.9 yards per game. The Vikings also have had 16 Pro Bowl selections on defense in that span.
Key question that must be answered: While Edwards would inherit Jason Pierre-Paul, Lavonte David, Vita Vea and possibly Gerald McCoy (depending on his contract situation) and Justin Evans, he had a whopping nine first-round draft picks on defense in Minnesota. Can he succeed with fewer blue-chip players? Also, though Mike Zimmer has been the one calling defensive plays over the years and not Edwards, Zimmer began delegating more and more responsibility to Edwards so he could focus on the team as a whole.
Quotable: “George does everything. He helps with the game plan. He runs a lot of the meetings, the defensive meetings. Him and I really sit down and talk about all the different things that are going on. He studies the game just like he’s calling the game, so he’ll come in and talk to me about second down and whatever, they’re doing this or they’re doing that. Really, I mean, he does everything other than call the game on Sunday.” — Zimmer
Kris Richard
Key traits: High-energy, relates well to players, known for his passionate speeches. As one former assistant put it, “He is the kind of coach a team can feed off of, because his standard for play is set high.”
Core philosophy: 4-3. A former NFL safety who latched on to Pete Carroll’s coaching tree and spent five years as a secondary coach before becoming a coordinator (and again with the Cowboys), Richard believes in a hard-hitting defense and taking the ball away, as seen by the vaunted Legion of Boom in Seattle. Defensive backs play closer to the line of scrimmage and much more aggressively than with the cushion seen under former Bucs coordinator Mike Smith.
Bragging rights: Taking over defensive playcalling for Rod Marinelli this season, Richard helped the Cowboys to the league’s sixth-best ranking in points allowed (20.25 per game). Prior to that, Richard served as the Seahawks’ defensive coordinator from 2015 to 2017 (replacing Dan Quinn). In that span, the Seahawks allowed 311.2 yards per game, second best in the league, with the third-fewest passing yards allowed (215.1 yards per game), second-fewest yards per rush allowed (3.68) and third-fewest points per game allowed (18.77).
Key question that must be answered: The Bucs don’t have Seattle’s secondary or Dallas’ pass-rushers. Richard would have less to work with. The Bucs don’t have a strong ground game either — a defense’s best friend. The Cowboys also have had one of the league’s worst third-down defenses (42.3 percent, 27th in the league), an area the Bucs have had serious struggles with as well.
Quotable: “Guys respect you when you’re consistent each and every single day. They love you when they know it’s real. That it’s who you really are. That’s the point. I want to show them how much that we love doing this, and if we say it and if we mean it, then let’s go show it. That’s the bottom line. Each and every single time that we step out there, we are blessed. We can’t forget that. Not everybody has the opportunity to do this, so when you’re out there, let it go. Lay it all out there.” — Richard
“I think he might be as good as any acquisition coming in,” Marinelli said. “I mean that now. This guy is really good. … This guy is special. I mean, he’s special. … You know that ‘it’? He’s got ‘it.’”
Fun fact: He wears cleats to practice so he can illustrate how to perform drills … and just to get in on the action.
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