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The 10 NFL Coaches Who Fared Best — and Worst — at Replacing Legends

Few NFL coaches have ever stepped into a hornets’ nest as big as the one Jimmy Johnson hit in 1989 when he was hired to replace the legendary Tom Landry in Dallas. The circumstances around the firing and hiring made it worse, but Johnson knew taking over for a Hall of Famer would be a challenge regardless. “I don’t expect to replace someone like him,” he said back then. “But just let me do my thing and judge me by what happens later.” It was a quaint notion, but the reality was he was always going to be compared to his predecessor until he had similar extraordinary success of his own. It’s what Mike Macdonald surely felt in replacing Pete Carroll in Seattle. It’s what Mike Vrabel likely felt in Bill Belichick’s New England shadow too, even though another coach (Jerod Mayo) was a buffer in between. Macdonald and Vrabel are doing all right, but only a handful of coaches have had the kind of success Johnson had replacing one of the greatest coaches in NFL history. Here’s a look at the five coaches who had the most success in the shadow of a legend, and the five who were the biggest disasters. Five Most Successful TOM FLORES, OAKLAND/LOS ANGELES RAIDERS (1979-87) Replaced: John Madden, who had a 103-32-7 (.759) record over 10 seasons (1969-78). He went to the playoffs eight times, winning at least one postseason game seven times, and led the Raiders to the Super Bowl XI. He retired for health reasons after going 9-7 in 1978, having never suffered a losing season. Flores’ Record: 83-53 (.610), two Super Bowl championships After serving as Madden’s receivers coach, it took Flores just two years to get back to, and win, the Super Bowl (XV). Then he won another one, three years later (XVIII), after enduring the franchise’s move from Oakland to Los Angeles. He had just two losing seasons in his nine years with the Raiders, and was eventually inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. GEORGE SEIFERT, SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS (1989-96) Replaced: Bill Walsh, “The Genius,” who turned the 49ers into a dynasty by winning three Super Bowls (XVI, XIX, XXIII) and posting a 92-59-1 record in his 10 years in San Francisco (92-59-1, .609). He had 10 wins seven times, including in his last six seasons. He resigned right after the 49ers won Super XXIII. Seifert’s Record: 98-30 (.766), two Super Bowl championships He was handed a Super Bowl-winning team after serving as Walsh’s defensive coordinator, and he just kept running with it. The 49ers went 14-2 in each of his first two seasons and won their second consecutive Super Bowl (XXIV) in his first year. They reached the NFC Championship Game five times in his first six seasons. And, after overseeing the messy QB switch from Joe Montana to Steve Young, he won a second Super Bowl in Year 6 (XXIX). He never won fewer than 10 games in a season. He was pushed out after a 12-4 season in 1996, after the 49ers lost in the divisional round. JIMMY JOHNSON, DALLAS COWBOYS (1989-93) Replaced: Tom Landry, the original Cowboys coach who oversaw their transformation from an expansion team to America’s Team. He spent a remarkable 29 years as the Cowboys’ coach, going 250-162-6 (.607), leading them to five Super Bowls and winning two (VI, XII). He had a stretch of 10 wins or more in 13 of 14 seasons (1968-81) and made the playoffs in 18 of 20 years from 1966-85. It all fell apart in his final three seasons, though, ending with a 3-13 year in 1988 that led to his ugly departure when Jerry Jones bought the franchise. Johnson’s Record: 44-36 (.550), two Super Bowl championships His record looks a lot better if you take out his 1-15 start in QB Troy Aikman’s rookie season. Thanks to the Herschel Walker trade and some shrewd drafting, he quickly built the Cowboys into a powerhouse. They were in the playoffs by Year 3 and won back-to-back Super Bowls in his final two seasons (XXVII, XXVIII). In fact, he went 36-12 (.750) in his final three seasons and 7-1 (.875) in the playoffs before his relationship with Jones went south. He was eventually inducted into the Hall of Fame, too. BILL COWHER, PITTSBURGH STEELERS (1992-2006) Replaced: Chuck Noll, who turned the Steelers and their Steel Curtain defense into the dominant team of the 1970s. He went 193-148-1 (.566) over 23 seasons, winning four Super Bowls along the way — two separate back-to-back championships (IX, X, and XIII, XIV). Noll had an eight-year run from 1972-79 that’s hard to match: Seven 10-win seasons, eight trips to the playoffs and those four championships. He faded at the end, failing to reach the playoffs in six of his last seven seasons, which led to his retirement. Cowher’s Record: 149-90-1 (.623), one Super Bowl championship He was a 34-year-old defensive coordinator in Kansas City when the Steelers hired him to replace a legend, and it didn’t take him long to restore their luster. The Steelers made the playoffs in each of his first six seasons and reached the Super Bowl in his fourth year. His quest for a championship took a while, though, as it came in his 14th season (Super Bowl XL). In all, he made the playoffs 10 times and went 12-9 (.571) in the postseason during his Hall of Fame career. He resigned after an 8-8 campaign in 2006. MIKE TOMLIN, PITTSBURGH STEELERS (2007-2025) Replaced: Bill Cowher (see above) Tomlin’s Record: 193-114-2 (.628), one Super Bowl championship He was only 34 and had spent just one year as the Vikings defensive coordinator when the Steelers hired him, but he still got off to a blistering start. He went 10-6 and made the playoffs in his first season and then won 12 games and went to two Super Bowls, winning one (XLIII) over the next three years. That started an impressive run of consistent success which featured 13 trips to the playoffs and not a single losing season in 19 years. He didn’t win a playoff game over his last nine seasons, though, which is part of what led him to step aside in January. Five Least Successful PHIL BENGTSON, GREEN BAY PACKERS (1968-70) Replaced: Vince Lombardi, the most iconic of NFL coaches, who helped the Packers dominate the 1960s and the early Super Bowl era. All he did in nine seasons in Green Bay was go 89-29-4 (.754), make the playoffs six times and win five NFL championships/Super Bowls. He didn’t suffer a single losing season yet resigned — and stepped in the GM role — after winning three straight championships, including Super Bowls I and II. Bengtson’s Record: 20-21-1 (.488) Never mind that the Packers’ core was beginning to age and that he had a legend looking over his shoulder from the front office. He had the ultimate, no-win situation, taking over a dynasty that had clearly run its course. Lombardi’s longtime defensive coordinator went 6-7-1 in his first season and only had one winning season in his three, finishing in third place in the Central division each time. He was fired after going 6-8 in 1970. His stint on Lombardi’s staff, though, earned him a spot in the Packers Hall of Fame in 1985. RAY HANDLEY, NEW YORK GIANTS (1991-92) Replaced: Bill Parcells, the coach who put the franchise back on the NFL map after they had missed the playoffs in 19 of 20 seasons from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. He was 77-49-1 (.610) in his eight years with the Giants, winning two Super Bowls (XXI, XXV) and making the playoffs five times. He retired (briefly) several months after the 1990 season and his second championship. Handley’s Record: 14-18 (.438) A trusted and brilliant “offensive backfield coach” under Parcells, he was GM George Young’s hand-picked successor over then-defensive coordinator Bill Belichick. But Parcells’ late retirement meant Handley didn’t get the job until May. He botched it from the start, too, beginning with his first big decision — opening up a training camp competition between two Super Bowl-winning QBs, Jeff Hostetler and Phil Simms. That quarterback mess haunted him for two years, as he lost the locker room. His rough relationship with the media didn’t help, and the fans turned on him quickly, too. He was fired after going 6-10 in Year 2. RICHIE PETITBON, WASHINGTON COMMANDERS (1993) Replaced: Joe Gibbs, who turned Washington into one of the NFL’s power teams of the 1980s. In 12 seasons (during his first of two runs as Washington’s head coach), Gibbs went 124-60 (.674), went to the playoffs eight times, reached four Super Bowls and won the championship three times (XVII, XXII, XXVI). He made the playoffs and won a postseason game in his final season (1992), but two months after it ended, he retired (briefly) for health reasons. Petitbon’s Record: 4-12 A four-time Pro Bowl safety and Gibbs’ longtime defensive coordinator, he built the defense that was the backbone of Washington’s three Super Bowl titles. But that defense collapsed when he took over as head coach, along with the rest of his aging team, which was hurt by injuries and some questionable free-agent and coaching staff decisions. Doomed by a 1-6 start, Washington was 2-9 by December. He was fired a few days after Washington’s worst season in 30 years. JOSH McDANIELS, DENVER BRONCOS (2009-10) Replaced: Mike Shanahan, who finally got the Broncos out of their Super Bowl-losing rut and helped QB John Elway to his two championships (XXXII, XXXIII). Shanahan spent 14 years in Denver (1995-2008) and went 138-86 (.616), making the playoffs seven times. His final three seasons were mediocre, though, and he was fired after the Broncos went 8-8 in 2008, missing the playoffs following an 8-5 start. McDaniels’ Record: 11-17 (.393) Hailed as one of the brains behind the offense that powered the Patriots dynasty, McDaniels was instead one of many Belichick proteges who couldn’t approach his boss’ success. His season-plus in Denver was filled with controversy, starting with a quick falling out with QB Jay Cutler, that led to him being traded. He later had a similar falling out with star WR Brandon Marshall, too. And he got caught in a mini-Spygate incident, taping a 49ers walkthrough practice (though the NFL determined his video director, Steve Scarnecchia, acted alone). McDaniels was fired 12 games into his second season, after going 3-9. JEROD MAYO, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS (2024) Replaced: Bill Belichick, arguably the greatest coach in NFL history. He took the Patriots to nine Super Bowl in his 24 seasons, winning an unprecedented six times. He also made 13 trips to the AFC Championship Game and missed the playoffs just three times in a 21-year stretch (2001-21). He went 266-121 (.687) and his 302 regular-season wins (including his time with Cleveland) rank second among coaches in NFL history, and his 333 total wins rank third all time. Mayo’s Record: 4-13 The former Patriots linebacker spent five years as Belichick’s inside linebackers coach, and early on he was identified by owner Robert Kraft as an eventual successor for his head coach. He was handed a rebuilding team that had just one winning campaign in the last four and went 4-13 in Belichick’s final season, but the 37-year-old Mayo somehow made it worse. He seemed unprepared. His team lacked discipline. And there were worries about how he was handling rookie quarterback Drake Maye. He was fired as soon as his first season ended.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Big Picture: GM John Schneider Shares How Seahawks Became a Super Bowl Contender Again

Big brother, little brother. When asked about the difference between winning a Super Bowl with the ageless Pete Carroll and reaching the precipice of accomplishing that same feat in two years with Mike Macdonald, Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider compared those relationships to something most folks understand — brotherly love. “It’s kind of like Pete was my older brother and he’s kind of my younger brother,” Schneider told me. “That’s what it feels like. That’s the best way I can describe it.” In a conversation with me, Schneider discussed roster building with the exacting Macdonald, the maturation of his star quarterback Sam Darnold and the difference between two dominant defenses for the Seahawks — the Legion of Boom and the Dark Side. Carroll, 74, was 20 years older than the 54-year-old Schneider when the two worked together for 14 seasons. While Macdonald, the third-youngest coach in the NFL at 38, is 15 years younger than the Seahawks’ general manager. Yes, the two have different personalities; the always-positive Carroll brings a larger-than-life persona to every room he enters, and Macdonald offers a no-nonsense, workmanlike approach. However, Schneider said both were similar in the way they attacked football. “It’s the same as when Pete and I walked in the door in 2010,” Schneider told me. “It’s a daily effort to improve football operations. How can we improve our football team every single day? He’s open-minded like Pete was. He knows what he wants, like Pete does. So, it’s not really different, to be honest. “He’s very open to making the toughest decisions and the tough discussions you have to make — decisions that you believe are going to affect the franchise in a positive manner. He doesn’t shy away from those.” In his 16th season with the Seahawks, Schneider now serves as general manager and president of football operations, picking up the new title after the franchise parted ways with Carroll in 2024. The Seahawks have posted a 147-96-1 mark during Schneider’s tenure, sixth-best in the NFL over that time. Seattle had 15 players earn first-team All-Pro honors in that span. Schneider has been particularly effective in building one of the youngest rosters in the league. Over the past four drafts, Schneider has drafted 20 starters or solid contributors currently on the team’s roster. Players like wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, cornerback Devon Witherspoon, running back Kenneth Walker III, defensive lineman Byron Murphy II, offensive tackle Charles Cross, offensive tackle Abe Lucas, safety Nick Emmanwori and guard Grey Zabel emerged as the franchise’s new core of players. For his effort in getting the Seahawks back to the Super Bowl for the third time during his tenure, Schneider earned the Pro Football Writers Association’s executive of the year for the first time in his pro career. “It’s the ultimate organizational award,” Schneider told me about the honor. “It’s a cool representation of people in the background that help us, like our video guys, strength and conditioning, the trainers, the PR people — everyone who affects our team on a daily basis who help support the players and the coaches.” Schneider has a good relationship with the man who leads the personnel department of the team that’ll try and take down his Seahawks in Super Bowl LX. Schneider worked with New England Patriots executive vice president of player personnel Eliot Wolf when the two were with the Green Bay Packers. Schneider’s mentor and the first person to offer him a job in the personnel business as an intern over 30 years ago in his hometown of Green Bay was Hall of Famer Ron Wolf, Eliot’s father. Schneider said the two remained close. “He was at the facility, so I kind of took him under my wing,” Schneider said about the younger Wolf. “I’d play basketball with him. I literally taught him how to get out on fastbreaks and dribbling drills, stuff like that. He was that young. And I was the youngest of the [personnel executive] group between Reggie McKenzie, Ted Thompson, John Dorsey, Alonzo Highsmith and myself. “We had a natural bond. And I like to think when he’s gone through some tough times, hopefully he feels like I’ve been there for him. We still talk a bunch.” One of the primary reasons for Seattle’s success this season has been the play of quarterback Sam Darnold. Schneider took a significant risk in trading a good performer in Geno Smith to the Las Vegas Raiders so the West Virginia product could reunite with Carroll. Seattle then signed the well-traveled Donald for less money, a three-year, $100.5 million deal in free agency. On his fifth NFL team, the USC product had a history of struggling in big moments. However, Darnold bought into Macdonald’s team-building philosophy and had one of his best games as a pro in the postseason, throwing for 346 yards and three touchdowns in leading Seattle over the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC title game. Darnold and Tom Brady are the only quarterbacks in NFL history to win 14 games in consecutive regular seasons. Darnold is the only signal caller to accomplish that with two different teams. “He’s continued to evolve as a leader, the way he interacts with his teammates,” Schneider told me about Darnold. “The way he carries himself as a pro. He’s really shown his resilience. He plays the game like a good corner would. He can make a mistake, and he doesn’t lose his mind. He can just turn the page and go on to the next one. “Somebody described it to me the other day like a really good 3-point shooter, and I agree.” Along with Darnold, Schneider made another impactful midseason trade in securing speedy receiver Rashid Shaheed. The Seahawks gave up fourth and fifth-round picks for the San Diego native, who has three returns for touchdowns since joining the team in November. Schneider said he’d been in conversation with the Saints for about three weeks before completing the trade and didn’t know what other teams were involved in the negotiations. “They did a really good job of not letting us know who we were competing with,” Schneider told me. “But it wasn’t like a big negotiation. It was basically, ‘It’s going to take this and this. If you want him, that’s what it’s going to take.’ At the end of the day, that’s what it was. “Tory Horton was still playing at the time. He got hurt right around that time. Otherwise, we would have had two guys who could really fly. We were looking for that in the draft. And Klint [Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak] had coached Rashid in the past, so we knew what we were bringing in the locker room.” One of the attractions of hiring Macdonald for Schneider was his reputation as one of the top defensive innovators in the league, playing in the toughest division in the NFL in the NFC West and having to face Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan twice a year. That vision has come to fruition with the development of one of the top defenses in the league in the Dark Side, which has grown to rival one of the best defenses in league history in Seattle’s Legion of Boom. So, which defense is better? Schneider wouldn’t bite. “It’s a different generation,” Schneider told me. “Those guys [Legion of Boom] were a little more edgy. They kind of demanded your attention. They were in your face. “Much like that group, these guys [The Darkside] are bonded. They’re connected and really playing together, with each other and for each other. I think that’s the easiest way to explain it, without getting into the details for every position group.” Schneider’s core philosophy hasn’t changed since he arrived in Seattle in 2010 — plan, communicate and work. It’s a simple strategy that bears fruit each season. “We have so many decisions to make on a daily basis, to try and figure out what the landscape is going to look like in the National Football League,” Schneider told me. “So, I try to keep it simple, stupid, so we’re not overthinking things — paralyzed through evaluation. “Let’s just keep it real.” A devout Catholic, Schneider also leans heavily on his faith. On game days, he can be seen handing out little Jesus statues to fans before the game. He has a statue of Jesus on his desk at Seahawks headquarters, given to him by his mother with a scripture from the Bible — Matthew 10:27. “My mom gave me this really cool little statue on my desk that says, ‘With God, anything is possible,’ Schneider told me. “It’s really important to me and I want to help. You have a platform where hopefully young adults and kids look at me and our like, ‘Wow, I can do that someday, with prayer and hard work.'” In the Big Picture, we contextualize key moves and moments so you can instantly understand why they matter.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Blake Shelton + Gwen Stefani Are ‘Trash Talking’ Each Other

Blake vs Gwen… Who you got? Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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Blake Shelton + Gwen Stefani Are ‘Trash Talking’ Each Other

Blake vs Gwen… Who you got? Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Justin Baldoni Praised ‘Beautiful’ Blake Lively in Voice Memo Before Filming

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Things started off so friendly.

A few years ago, Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively started off amicable.

Lively and other actresses from the film have accused Baldoni of wrongdoing. There’s a whole legal war going on.

Just a few months ahead of the trial, a friendly voice message from Baldoni has come out. He praised Lively as “beautiful.”

Blake Lively in April 2025.
Blake Lively attends the “Another Simple Favour” photocall at the Corinthia Hotel on April 15, 2025. (Photo Credit: Gareth Cattermole/Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

‘Thank you for sending those pictures’

TMZ has obtained a voice memo from before It Ends With Us began filming.

“Hey Blake,” Baldoni says in the audio recording.

“I hope the fitting was, uh, super successful,” he expresses.

“Thank you for sending those pictures,” Baldoni tells her.

He then praises: “It was really cool.”

“I was in the department head meeting and they came through,” Baldoni details. “And I was, like, waiting for them to load.”

He raved: “And I legit got the chills when I saw it.”

Baldoni tells Lively: “You look beautiful.”

He concludes by assessing: “It’s gonna work so well.”

That is a very friendly and, in the context of responding to a wardrobe fitting, very professional work interaction. Sadly, the good times did not last.

Justin Baldoni in December 2024.
Actor/filmmaker and VOS Honoree, Justin Baldoni speaks onstage at the Vital Voices 12th Annual Voices of Solidarity Awards at IAC Building on December 09, 2024. (Photo Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Vital Voices Global Partnership)

That’s so different from later communications

Per TMZ‘s reporting, this memo came so far before filming that they had yet to even cast the actress who would portray the younger version of Lively’s character.

(Though that discussion is not public, it was apparently under discussion at the same time)

That is pretty normal. Wardrobe fittings can somehow help to define large portions of the aesthetic of a film.

In many cases, a boss telling someone at work that they are “beautiful” would cross a line.

But this, at least, is pretty normal for the entertainment industry (where evaluating someone’s look in a specific outfit is part of the job!) and sounds professional.

Blake Lively in November 2024.
Actress Blake Lively attends the LACMA Art+Film Gala at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in Los Angeles, California, on November 2, 2024. (Photo Credit: ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via Getty Images)

At this point during the movie-making process, it seems that Lively and Baldoni were still friendly.

In fact, Lively referred to Baldoni as a “friend” during another old communication.

They were, at the time, still figuring out the filming schedule.

Obviously, things went downhill pretty dramatically after this.

Lively accuses Baldoni of, among other things, sexual harassment. And she is not the only actress to have filed a complaint.

Justin Baldoni in August 2024.
Actor Justin Baldoni attends the New York premiere of “It Ends With Us” at at AMC Lincoln Square in New York, August 6, 2024. (Photo Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

Their legal war plays out in full force in May

Fast-forward to late 2023, and now-released text messages tell a very different story.

Several disturbing conversations and alleged sexual harassment incidents later, and Lively was clearly counting down the days until the film hit theaters and she could detach herself from Baldoni.

That was before the smear campaign against her overshadowed the actual film.

Lively and Baldoni’s film came out in the summer of 2024. It’s now 2026, and they’re set to go to trial in May.

We’re sure that even more past communications and witness statements will come out at that time.

Justin Baldoni Praised ‘Beautiful’ Blake Lively in Voice Memo Before Filming was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Lainey Wilson Names Her Favorite Country Duet of All Time

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RIP to an Icon: Minute Maid Frozen Juice Concentrate Discontinued

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