Sports
NHL 2024-25 bold predictions: Breakout players, trades, offer sheets and 40-goal scorers
Will the NHL’s newest club finish as one of the highest-scoring teams in the league? Will Pierre-Luc Dubois finally find a long-term home with the Washington Capitals? Are players like Juraj Slafkovský going to make a significant jump in their production?
Those were among the responses The Athletic got this week when it asked its NHL staff for their bold predictions for the 2024-25 season.
Here’s one prediction for each team as the early regular season continues.
GO DEEPER
Oddly specific NHL predictions for all 32 teams’ 2024-25 seasons
Trevor Zegras will not be traded this season: You want bold? How about running counter to the prevailing theory the Ducks are destined to move their mercurial 23-year-old forward? In the Pretend NHL (i.e., hockey social media), hasn’t he been traded about 1,000 times? But it didn’t make sense for Anaheim to deal Zegras after an injury-plagued 2023-24 season when his trade value took a hit. He’d do well to make this season one of vengeance, and the Ducks ought to at least try putting him in the best position to flourish. Now the “this season” qualifier is in there since he still has next year left on his contract and some kind of trade could get worked on next summer. General manager Pat Verbeek could go the Jamie Drysdale route with a big player-for-player swap, but the Ducks need more gifted offensive players, not fewer. Bonus bold prediction: Cutter Gauthier will win the Calder Trophy. You’ll remember this when it’s wrong but just do the same if it happens to be right. — Eric Stephens
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Jeremy Swayman will struggle early: Swayman missed all of training camp. He is entering his first season without Linus Ullmark as his partner. He has to deal with the pressure of being the fourth-highest-paid active goalie in the league. Thursday’s four-goal start won’t be the last hiccup. — Fluto Shinzawa
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10 bold Bruins predictions: Swayman’s slow start, Coyle’s 30-goal year
Owen Power will double his previous high-goal total: Power hasn’t scored more than six goals in a season during his short NHL career, but he looks poised for an uptick in that department. His shot is noticeably stronger this season as he added strength over the summer. The Sabres have also emphasized creating more traffic in front of the net. As a result, Power had two goals in the preseason and already has one in the regular season. A goal total of at least 12 isn’t out of the question. — Matthew Fairburn
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6 bold predictions, 4 lingering questions for Sabres ahead of season opener in Prague
OP nets the first Sabres goal of the season ⚔️#LetsGoBuffalo | #NHLGlobalSeries pic.twitter.com/cfmt0x7Zws
— Buffalo Sabres (@BuffaloSabres) October 4, 2024
Jonathan Huberdeau will crack the 80-point plateau: Huberdeau has 107 points combined over his last two seasons in Calgary. So, why the optimism around him? Partially because it cannot get any lower than his near-pointless month of December last season. Huberdeau played well after that, even if his season ended with fewer points than his debut Flames campaign. Another part is because the Flames are banking on his establishing chemistry with Anthony Mantha. They’ve played together most of, if not all, preseason and have shown flashes that they can be an ideal duo alongside Martin Pospisil. Huberdeau should also get his usual PP1 minutes to start the year. Finally, the pressure to succeed in Calgary is much lower compared with his first two seasons. — Julian McKenzie
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Seth Jarvis will get a shot at center: The Hurricanes have their No. 1 center in Sebastian Aho, but finding a player to slot behind him has been difficult. Last year’s Evgeny Kuznetsov acquisition flopped, and Jesperi Kotkaniemi has been unable to hold on to the job despite several chances. Jarvis has already proved to be one of the best defensive wingers in hockey, and something this season — ineffectiveness from Kotkaniemi and Jack Drury or an injury — will convince coach Rod Brind’Amour, at least in the short term, to give Jarvis a shot in the middle. — Cory Lavalette
The Blackhawks will finish 25 points better than last season: The Blackhawks might end up being near the bottom of the league again, but they should do so with a much higher point total than their 52 last season. — Scott Powers
Cale Makar will have 100 points: Only one defenseman has reached the century mark in the last 30 years: Erik Karlsson two years ago for San Jose. Makar finished with 90 points in 77 games last year, and I expect an even bigger 2024-25. He finished top 10 in the league (and led all defensemen) with 39 points on the power play a season ago, and Colorado’s power play could be even more potent this season. Makar should play upward of 26 minutes per game, most of which will be shared with the Avs’ high-powered top line with Nathan MacKinnon and Mikko Rantanen. This could be Makar’s best season yet. — Jesse Granger
Yegor Chinakhov will bloom as a goal scorer: Adam Fantilli and Kent Johnson have performed this preseason as if they’re ready to be breakout players in 2024-25, but there’s another youngster who tends to exist below the spotlight. Chinakhov, who had 16 goals in 53 games last season, is going to get a much bigger role than the 15:10 per game he played. With Boone Jenner out long-term with an upper-body injury, Chinakhov has moved up to the top line with center Sean Monahan and right winger Kirill Marchenko. Chinakhov, if he remains healthy, could easily score 25 goals or more. — Aaron Portzline
The Stars will win the Stanley Cup: Honestly, I’m not even sure this qualifies as “bold.” The Stars have become a model NHL franchise, with general manager Jim Nill building a team that’s deep, talented, and features a perfect blending of youth and veteran savvy. Losing Chris Tanev to Toronto hurt, but the Stars will be buyers again at the trade deadline, and if there are any holes to plug, they’ll be plugged. Much of this prediction hinges on Jake Oettinger and Jason Robertson returning to form after surprisingly ordinary 2023-24 campaigns (by their lofty standards). The guess here is they both do, and the Cup stays in the Sun Belt for the third straight year, and the fifth time in the last six years. — Mark Lazerus
Dylan Larkin will score 40 goals: The Red Wings haven’t had a 40-goal scorer since Marian Hossa in 2008-09. But Larkin came closer than you might realize to changing that last season: He finished with 33 goals in 68 games, which over an 82-game season totals out to a 39.7-goal pace. He’s found a whole new level as a scorer over the past three seasons, and Detroit has finally surrounded him with the kind of talent needed to threaten 40. The question now is just health, as he hasn’t played a full 82 games since 2017-18. He hit 80 just two seasons ago, though, and if he can do that again, I think it’ll be enough to make this prediction come true. — Max Bultman
GO DEEPER
Ten bold Red Wings predictions: Larkin scores 40, a Kane golden goal and more
Stuart Skinner will finish top five in Vezina voting: Skinner was solid in the playoffs save for the Vancouver series and enters the season as an undisputed No. 1 goalie for the first time in his career. He should be primed for a breakout campaign. With a Stanley Cup-contending team in front of him, there’s no reason to think that shouldn’t happen. But this won’t be a case of Skinner simply riding his teammates’ coattails. The defensive group has some major question marks. The PK, so outstanding in the postseason, has undergone significant turnover. Skinner will deserve his roses for an excellent season. A likely spot on Team Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off tourney will only increase the spotlight on him and give NHL GMs — the voters on this award — more reason to cast ballots in his favor. — Daniel Nugent-Bowman
GO DEEPER
Ten bold Oilers predictions: Why this season will end with a Stanley Cup win
Adam Boqvist will break out: Florida didn’t make many offseason changes as it already has a championship core in place. Don’t mess with what works. We’re still going to predict the Panthers work their magic on 24-year-old Boqvist, their latest defensive reclamation project. He showed some power-play chops and transition ability in his time with the Blackhawks and Blue Jackets, and the Panthers have certainly shown an organizational knack for putting their defensemen in position to succeed. — Sean Gentille
Quinton Byfield will become the Kings’ best player: Let’s see, the Kings could be a team in danger of missing the playoffs, but they’ve got enough to at least nab a wild-card spot in the West so I’m not going to provide any receipts for that. But Byfield is giving off the vibe that he wants to be a star after a confidence-building 20-goal, 55-point breakout 2023-24 season. He had a hat trick in the preseason and was clicking with Kevin Fiala, who fed off the big center’s speed. Byfield was winning faceoffs in a decisive manner. He looks more confident with his shot and has the size and improving hands to do damage at the net. The Kings need an heir apparent to Anze Kopitar as their 1C. Byfield will take those big steps toward becoming The Guy. “He’s much more mature than he was a few years ago, physically,” Kings GM Rob Blake said. “We saw his ability to play some there last year, and we expect him to continue to grow there.” — Eric Stephens
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Kings 2024-25 season preview: Playoff chances, projected points, roster rankings
QUINTON BYFIELD.
TOUR DU CHAPEAU 🎩🎩🎩
4-1 LAK pic.twitter.com/pCeGBWtqWp
— LA Kings (@LAKings) October 4, 2024
Matt Boldy will score 40 goals and 40 assists: General manager Bill Guerin has predicted 50 goals and 50 assists at some point in Boldy’s future. We’ll be a hair more conservative for this season, while still being bold enough to establish a new career high (previously 69 points). When John Hynes talks about Boldy, he salivates, and for good reason. Boldy scored 28 goals and 61 points in 63 games (a 36-goal, 79-point 82-game pace) under Hynes last season. Then, Hynes coached Boldy at the World Championship, and the United States right wing led the tournament in scoring with 14 points in eight games. Boldy didn’t play any exhibition games due to a lower-body injury, but the 23-year-old opened 2024-25 with 3 points in his first game. — Michael Russo
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Kaprizov joins 50-50 club, Boldy 40-40: 7 bold predictions for the Wild in 2024-25
Boldy coming in hot 🥵 pic.twitter.com/TIHbV0JAL7
— Minnesota Wild (@mnwild) October 11, 2024
Juraj Slafkovský will hit 70 points: With the way Slafkovský finished last season and entering this season firmly established on the Canadiens’ top line and top power-play unit, the conditions are ripe for Slafkovský to make a 20-point jump in his production from last season. The vastly improved playmaking we saw from him over the second half of last season will be the driving force behind the more than 40 percent jump in production. — Arpon Basu
Juuse Saros will win the Vezina Trophy: Saros begins the season with a lower-body injury, but it won’t be long before the Preds are relying on him, heavily, after he signed an eight-year deal with a $7.74 million AAV in the offseason. Players don’t always reach their highest level right after signing big deals, but Saros now has clarity — the organization chose him over top prospect Yaroslav Askarov — and that figures to help him. So should getting support from skaters in their second season in Andrew Brunette’s system. It’s time for Saros to win one. — Joe Rexrode
The Devils will finish with the East’s best record: I’m high on the Devils after their offseason additions. Jacob Markström is a monster upgrade in net, and Brett Pesce and Brenden Dillon are big boosts to a defensive corps that missed Ryan Graves and Damon Severson last year. That, paired with growth in young players, should make New Jersey formidable, at least in the regular season. — Peter Baugh
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Inside the Devils’ offseason overhaul: How Tom Fitzgerald pulled off one of the NHL’s splashiest summers
Noah Dobson will score 70 points again — and get a big extension: Dobson moved into a different tier of NHL defenseman last season, not only producing at an elite level but also playing major minutes while Adam Pelech, Ryan Pulock and Scott Mayfield were out with injuries. A healthy defense will allow Dobson to avoid being overworked while still letting him impress. So he’ll join Denis Potvin as the only Isles defenseman with multiple 70-point seasons and he’ll secure the bag, too: an eight-year extension around Ilya Sorokin’s $8.25 million per year. — Arthur Staple
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Ten bold Islanders predictions: Sorokin starts fewer than 50, no Nelson extension yet
Igor Shesterkin will win the Vezina Trophy: We’ve seen Shesterkin handle pressure well. He has a career .928 save percentage in the playoffs and was by far the Rangers’ best player last postseason. Well, with his contract set to expire next summer, he’s going to be facing pressure this season. Shesterkin already has the cachet to expect to be the highest-paid goalie in the league. A monster season reminiscent of his 2021-22 one will further increase that belief, and the Rangers will have to decide how much they’re willing to pay to keep him. — Peter Baugh
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Ten bold 2024-25 Rangers predictions: A trophy, a rebound, a departure and more
Travis Green will win the Jack Adams Award: If the Senators make the playoffs this season, the coach will get a lot of credit for his team’s upward swing. The young nucleus of talent is already in place and they’ve added a goaltender. The Senators just need a coach who can bring them to that next level. Green has coached a team to the playoffs before, albeit once. If he ends Ottawa’s playoff drought, he should be considered a front-runner for coach of the year. — Julian McKenzie
The Flyers will have a top-15 power play: What, that doesn’t sound bold enough? Well, consider the Flyers have had the league’s worst power play for each of the last three seasons. Last season, at just 12.2 percent, they were nearly 3 full percentage points behind the 31st-ranked Blue Jackets. But with Matvei Michkov now here and coming off of a stellar preseason, and what looks to be a healthy Jamie Drysdale moving well and quarterbacking the top unit, the potential is there for the Flyers to drastically improve with a man advantage. — Kevin Kurz
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Inside the unique way the Flyers are trying to fix their biggest problem
Tic-Tac-Goal. @tfoerster8 nets our first tally of the season with a PPG. Credit @FarabeeJoel and @BobbyBrink19 with the helpers. #PHIvsVAN | #LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/m1vnc3IfKk
— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 12, 2024
Marcus Pettersson will become a trade-deadline commodity: In his prime and a steady top-four defender, Pettersson is an impending UFA. He’s the type of defenseman GMs tend to keep from testing the market. But Kyle Dubas seems to know his Penguins are closer to the lottery than the Cup, and his decision not to sign Pettersson before the season suggests Pettersson will become this season’s Jake Guentzel in Pittsburgh. — Rob Rossi
A marker for Marcus 🚨 pic.twitter.com/SuDgelEwct
— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 11, 2024
San Jose Sharks
William Eklund will lead the team in scoring: Sure, there was the temptation to call Macklin Celebrini the Calder Trophy winner in this space. But is that really a bold pick given that he goes into this season as a leading Calder contender in a strong rookie class? The 18-year-old will no doubt have some impressive moments, and we shouldn’t discount the impact his potential running mate Will Smith could have as a fellow rookie. Eklund, who turns 22 on Saturday, is a slightly unconventional pick. The left wing quietly emerged in the second half of last season with 27 points in his final 35 games. He’s going to start out on the top line with Celebrini and Tyler Toffoli while figuring in their power play. It could be a balanced group atop San Jose’s point list, but to follow our Sean McIndoe’s lead of oddly specific predictions, we’ll say Eklund will have 26 goals and 40 assists for 66 points. — Eric Stephens
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Sharks depth chart analysis: Celebrini, Smith find their linemates
Matty Beniers will score 30 goals: Beniers went through a difficult sophomore slump in his second NHL campaign, but he remains a gifted, assertive young center with a swashbuckling style and game-breaking bona fides, which he proved in his rookie year. Beniers is going to return to form and then some in his third campaign, scoring 30 goals and re-establishing himself as one of the NHL’s most promising young pivots. — Thomas Drance
Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway’s success will lead to more offer sheets: Broberg has been physical and Holloway fast so far. It’s early, so why is that important? Because Broberg and Holloway are exactly what the club needed, and the way general manager Doug Armstrong acquired them from the Oilers was via offer-sheet contracts. In the rare instance when offer sheets are executed, many wonder whether they will lead to more, and in reality, the answer has been no. But with the new ceilings and expected success for Broberg and Holloway in St. Louis, there could be an uptick. — Jeremy Rutherford
GO DEEPER
10 bold Blues predictions for 2024-25: Thomas’ point total, Neighbours’ contract — and playoffs?
Andrei Vasilevskiy will be a Vezina Trophy finalist: Vasilevskiy will show that his lackluster 2023-24 season was due to back surgery. With a healthy offseason to train and time to get back on track, he will pick up where he left off in 2022-23 with his usual game-breaking play. Vasilevskiy showed he can be the difference despite defensive struggles in front of him in 2022-23. With the return of Ryan McDonagh and the addition of Jake Guentzel, he should have more two-way support, which will help him get back to his former heights. — Shayna Goldman
Mitch Marner will score 40 goals: This is a kind of a long shot given Marner’s primary skill and instinct is passing and he happens to play with the top goal scorer in the NHL today, Auston Matthews. Yet, Marner scores more than he gets credit for. In the last three seasons, he scored only one goal fewer (91) than John Tavares and did so in 18 fewer games. Marner scored at a 30-goal pace last season, hit 30 on the nose the year before that, and buried 35 goals in only 72 games during the 2021-22 season, a 40-goal pace. Getting to 40 would require Marner to look for his own shot more than he often does and probably garner some shooting luck along the way, more than his current career best of 16.5 percent. At some point, maybe even this season, I expect him to get there or come close at the very least. — Jonas Siegel
They will finish as one of the NHL’s highest-scoring teams: It’s a given Utah is going to be an exciting hockey club to watch, what with the energy in the new market, weird building and all its young stars. But its collection of talent is such that it could quickly rise to the ranks of the most dangerous offensive teams, too. Clayton Keller could score 40, as could Dylan Guenther. It’s not out of the question as many as eight Hockey Clubbers hit the 20 mark, which should push them into the top 10 leaguewide. — James Mirtle
Elias Pettersson will bounce back and lead the team in scoring: Pettersson struggled enormously down the stretch and into the playoffs last season, and Canucks fans are beginning to lose patience with their superstar center. In the club’s first game of the campaign, after Pettersson lost the handle on a deke by the offensive blue line, the Rogers Arena crowd reacted with something of a Bronx cheer. Granted the club had frittered away two separate 3-goal leads, so frustration was running high, but it still encapsulates the pressure Pettersson is under. Despite all of that noise, Pettersson remains a star performer. A pivot with 40-goal, 100-point upside. With Vancouver emphasizing attacking off the rush this season, and talented wingers like Daniel Sprong and Jake DeBrusk on his line, we predict Pettersson will bounce back and outscore all other Canucks skaters during the 2024-25 regular season. — Thomas Drance
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Pavel Dorofeyev will finish second on the team in goals: Dorofeyev showed he could score as a rookie with 13 goals in 47 games last year for the Golden Knights. He has a deceptive release on his wrist shots and a knack for finding pucks in front of the net. Now, projected to play alongside pass-first forwards such as Mark Stone, William Karlsson and/or Tomas Hertl, Dorofeyev is in a great position to produce at an even higher rate in 2024-25. — Jesse Granger
GO DEEPER
Ten bold predictions for the Golden Knights in 2024-25
Washington Capitals
The Pierre-Luc Dubois deal will pay off: It’s hard to imagine predicting anything bolder than Dubois finally finding a long-term home, so we’ll go with that. He’ll give the Caps what he was supposed to give the Kings — productive two-way play from a high-end second-line center. Does that mean they’ll get their $8.5 million worth? Let’s not get greedy. Still, 70 points would go a long way toward rehabbing his reputation and putting the Caps back in the playoff conversation. — Sean Gentille
Nikolaj Ehlers will play out the season and then walk as a UFA: As part of a longer conversation about his future, Ehlers said: “We talk. Chevy, my agent. There’s communication.” Ehlers understands we all want answers about his future but conveyed that, at his core, he himself is unsure what comes next — a contract extension, a trade, or a summer 2025 departure to free agency. The idea of ongoing conversations could create a sense of optimism: Winnipeg has certainly shown itself to be capable of signing big-ticket players late in the game. It would also be sensible for Winnipeg to shop Ehlers at the deadline if it can’t sign him, instead of losing him for nothing next summer. My wild October stab at it says the Jets keep Ehlers for the playoffs, address their defense a different way if need be, and then Ehlers picks a team that gives him more than the sixth-most minutes per game among forwards. — Murat Ates
(Illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic. Photos: Jamie Sabau, Jason Mowry / Getty Images; Vincent Ethier / Icon Sportswire)
Sports
High school football: Playoff results and schedule
THURSDAY’S RESULT
SOUTHERN SECTION
Quarterfinals
Division 11
El Rancho 40, Los Amigos 20
FRIDAY’S SCHEDULE
(Games at 7 p.m. unless noted)
CITY SECTION
Quarterfinals
Open Division
Dorsey at Narbonne
Gardena at Birmingham
Banning at San Pedro
Garfield at Carson
Division I
Cleveland at Eagle Rock
Palisades at North Hollywood
Franklin at King/Drew
Westchester at Kennedy
Division II
Angelou at Arleta, 1:30 p.m.
Wilson at South Gate
Verdugo Hills at Chatsworth
Sylmar at El Camino Real
Division III
Washington at Panorama
Fremont at Los Angeles, 1:30 p.m.
Fulton at Chavez
Van Nuys at Taft
8 MAN
Semifinals
New Designs University Park at Animo Robinson
Valley Oaks CES at Sherman Oaks CES
SOUTHERN SECTION
Quarterfinals
Division 1
Sierra Canyon at Mater Dei
Corona Centennial at Mission Viejo
JSerra at Orange Lutheran
Santa Margarita at St. John Bosco
Division 2
Murrieta Valley Los Alamitos
San Juan Hills at Oaks Christian
Gardena Serra at Yorba Linda
Newbury Park at San Clemente
Division 3
La Habra at Simi Valley
Crean Lutheran at Loyola
Edison at Bonita
Vista Murrieta at Cajon
Division 4
Redondo Union at St. Bonaventure
Culver City at Apple Valley
Long Beach Poly at Oxnard Pacifica
El Modena at Thousand Oaks
Division 5
Huntington Beach vs. Summit at Miller
Rio Mesa at La Serna
Lakewood at Foothill
Mayfair at Palos Verdes
Division 6
Muir at St. Francis
Northwood at Murrieta Mesa
Glendora at Rancho Verde
Dana Hills at San Dimas
Division 7
West Torrance at Oak Park
Rio Hondo Prep at Riverside King
Golden Valley at Warren
Peninsula at Yucaipa
Division 8
Beckman at Lancaster
Serrano at Hemet
Salesian at Irvine
St. Pius X-St. Matthias at Segerstrom
Division 9
Highland vs. Burbank at Burroughs
Quartz Hill at Sonora
Long Beach Wilson vs. Village Christian at Glendale College, 7:30 p.m.
Great Oak at St. Genevieve
Division 10
St. Anthony at Shadow Hills
Garden Grove Pacifica at Brentwood
South Pasadena at Valley View
Silverado at Chino
Division 11
Portola at Santa Paula, 6 p.m.
Baldwin Park at Big Bear
San Gorgonio at Grand Terrace
Division 12
Mary Star at Dos Pueblos
Palmdale at Chaffey
Carter at Canyon Springs
Estancia vs. Hacienda Heights Wilson at Los Altos
Division 13
Gahr at Artesia
Arrowhead Christian at Anaheim
Lynwood at El Monte
San Marino at Pasadena
Division 14
Nordhoff at Duarte
San Gabriel at Costa Mesa
Century at Ganesha
Pioneer vs. Westminster La Quinta at Bolsa Grande
8 MAN
Division 1
Semifinals
California School for the Deaf vs. Cate at Carpinteria
Division 2
Quarterfinals
Cornerstone Christian at Coast Union
Santa Clara at Lancaster Baptist
Thacher at Valley Christian
SATURDAY’S SCHEDULE
SOUTHERN SECTION
8 MAN
Division 1
Semifinals
Flintridge Prep vs. Santa Clarita Christian at Canyon, 1 p.m.
Division 2
Quarterfinals
Avalon at Hesperia Christian, 12:30 p.m.
Sports
Bill Belichick, Mike Vrabel, Deion Sanders top star-studded 2025 NFL head coach candidate list
Two teams, the New York Jets and New Orleans Saints, have already fired their head coaches, and they surely won’t be the last teams to make a change at the top. This is shaping up to be a star-studded hiring cycle with a mix of proven candidates and up-and-coming talent, which could lead to ownership groups acting a bit more aggressively if they believe the grass is greener with coaches on the market.
With that in mind, let’s take a look at 18 possible candidates.
Current/former NFL head coaches
Bill Belichick
The head coach of six Super Bowl victories, Belichick is gearing up to try to get one more gig after an historic 24-year run with the New England Patriots. He’s got a few of his top lieutenants preparing to join him, too, so Belichick’s staff could look awfully familiar if he gets another job.
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Belichick, who turns 73 in April, needs 15 wins to break Don Shula’s record. He might be a perfect candidate for a team that has a talented roster but needs a new voice, so the Dallas Cowboys have been pegged as an obvious fit.
Wherever Belichick goes, the timetable is paramount for both sides. Belichick won’t want to take over a full rebuild, and the organization would have to be comfortable knowing he’d likely only be there for a few years.
The question is how much Belichick covets personnel control. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has said numerous times that he’ll never hire a general manager, and there’s no way he’d diminish Will McClay’s role. Belichick might be OK with that structure in Dallas because it’s been in place for so long. But if the Cowboys stick with Mike McCarthy or go in another direction, would Belichick be good with getting paired with a less-experienced GM?
Regardless, the hiring cycle will revolve around Belichick.
Mike Vrabel
Vrabel, who turns 50 in August, went 54-45 in six seasons with the Tennessee Titans before he was fired after the 2023 season. It was mildly surprising Vrabel, currently with the Cleveland Browns as a coaching/personnel assistant, didn’t land a job in this past cycle, so he is expected to get a strong look this time around.
The former linebacker has a no-nonsense approach that players have loved. At their best, the Titans were physically imposing, disciplined and fundamentally sound because of Vrabel’s coaching style. He’s more of a throwback in that sense, but he can relate to players because he performed at a high level during his own career.
Vrabel can quickly establish a strong culture. He should be a high-priority candidate for a roster that’s already built to win.
Mike McCarthy
McCarthy is on an expiring contract with the Dallas Cowboys, which naturally makes him a free agent. But with the Cowboys badly underperforming, it might be time for the two sides to go in a different direction.
McCarthy, who coached the Green Bay Packers for 13 years before his five-year stint with the Cowboys, may not be on many short lists, but he could make sense for the New York Jets because of his history with quarterback Aaron Rodgers. There’s also no need to worry about the way the 61-year-old would handle the pressure of the New York spotlight, which is a necessary personality trait for that media market.
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Brian Flores
It’s unclear if an owner would hire Flores after his lawsuit accused the league of racial discrimination, but the defensive mastermind has at least worked himself back into the conversation due to a phenomenal season as the defensive coordinator with the Minnesota Vikings.
Flores, 43, made plenty of mistakes during his three seasons coaching the Miami Dolphins. Teams will need to be convinced Flores learned from that time, notably with his handling of quarterback Tua Tagovailoa.
Flores is an incredibly smart football mind and a natural leader, but things got away from him in Miami. If he’s softened his approach, he might be ready for a second chance.
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Steve Spagnuolo
Spagnuolo turns 65 in December and hasn’t been a full-time head coach since his stint with the St. Louis Rams from 2009-11, so it’s possible his time has passed. It’s also possible Spagnuolo could be perfectly happy remaining as the architect of the Kansas City Chiefs defense considering they’ll be annual Super Bowl favorites for the foreseeable future.
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Spagnuolo is a strong communicator with a warm personality who gets the best out of his players. He’s been a well-respected defensive coach for the better part of two decades.
Perhaps teams will look at Dan Quinn’s early success with the Washington Commanders and think Spagnuolo could be a comparable example as a second-time head coach who would inject a professional mentality into the building.
Kliff Kingsbury
The Washington Commanders offensive coordinator is back in the spotlight due to quarterback Jayden Daniels’ impressive start. Daniels, the runaway NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year favorite, has played very well since the start of the season, and Kingsbury’s play calling has been an integral piece of that equation.
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Jayden Daniels is the key to Kliff Kingsbury’s NFL second chance
Kingsbury, 45, had a topsy-turvy four-year run as the Cardinals head coach. He was criticized for a lack of offensive adjustments as the season progressed, and it led to late-season losing streaks each year on the job.
Kingsbury’s work with Murray and Daniels is enough to warrant an interview request. And while meeting with Kingsbury, teams need to determine if he has evolved to the point where he could be more successful as a second-time coach.
Vance Joseph
The 52-year-old Denver Broncos defensive coordinator appears ready for a second head coaching opportunity. He previously led the Broncos (2017-18) to an 11-21 record, although that team was deep into a rebuilding mode and not set up for success.
Joseph has led the Broncos’ surprising defensive turnaround, as the group ranks fourth in points allowed and fifth in yards. He’s a strong leader and communicator who is respected by his players. Joseph could bring a commanding presence to a team in need of a culture change.
Potential first-time NFL head coaches
Ben Johnson
The Lions offensive coordinator has been one of the hottest names over the past two hiring cycles, and that’ll again be the case in January. However, there’s no guarantee he will leave Detroit.
Johnson, 38, is one of the league’s best offensive minds, and he’s an elite play caller. He not only helped revive Jared Goff’s career but also turned him into one of the better quarterbacks in the NFL. In an era when QB development is more valuable than anything, Johnson will be a top candidate for any team leaning toward an offensive-leaning coach.
One problem: Teams are well-versed in Johnson’s selective approach, and the Lions appear to be on the verge of another playoff run, which will limit his interview availability.
Deion Sanders
The 57-year-old Colorado coach has said he has no plans to leave for the NFL, but that won’t prevent teams from trying to line up an interview. The money, the spotlight and the right opportunity could be enough to sway Sanders. So, too, could a team with a top-five pick and the opportunity to draft and coach his son Shedeur Sanders, the starting quarterback at Colorado
Deion Sanders, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, would command instant credibility in the locker room. It’s fair to wonder whether his style would work as well in the NFL as it has in college, but there’s no doubting his ability to lead a program.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones may salivate over the opportunity to hire his former player and welcome the marketing opportunities that come with Sanders. Really, any team in a prominent market looking for good PR would do well to target Sanders.
Sanders would need to show that he can hire a solid staff, and he’d need a strong general manager in charge of personnel. Team building is a lot different without an endless supply of NIL money.
There’d be risk involved. But if it works for Sanders in the NFL, teams will be kicking themselves for not going after him when they had the chance.
Aaron Glenn
The Lions defensive coordinator has had a strong reputation around the league while working his way up the ranks over the past decade. The former cornerback had a decorated 15-year NFL career before he started coaching.
There’s already plenty of speculation Glenn will get a look with the New Orleans Saints, as he played his final season there in 2008 and worked under Sean Payton for five years. General manager Mickey Loomis and key front office personnel from the Payton era remain in the building, so they’re familiar with Glenn. His adjustments after losing star pass rusher Aidan Hutchinson, particularly as the Lions shut down the Houston Texans during their wild comeback, will work in the 52-year-old’s favor.
The question is whether the Saints want another Payton disciple after Dennis Allen’s firing or if they’ll seek a different style.
Aaron Glenn knows his call sheet like the back of his hand. 😅 pic.twitter.com/Bwz0IrRMd5
— Sunday Night Football on NBC (@SNFonNBC) November 11, 2024
Zac Robinson
The Falcons offensive coordinator is a first-time play caller this season, and they’ve gotten improved production out of running back Bijan Robinson, wide receiver Drake London and tight end Kyle Pitts despite quarterback Kirk Cousins coming back from a torn Achilles.
Zac Robinson, 38, was Atlanta head coach Raheem Morris’ top choice at OC, as they worked together for the previous three years with the Los Angeles Rams. But beyond that, Morris knew Robinson would be a head coach in very short order, so there’s been an emphasis on developing the rest of the offensive staff for his inevitable departure.
Robinson is ready for a top job. He’s widely believed to be the next Sean McVay disciple to take over his own program.
Bobby Slowik
The Texans offensive coordinator had a fast rise in 2023 as the man behind C.J. Stroud’s development. He’s seen around the league as a good play caller who wowed his peers with a tremendous game plan during their playoff victory against the Cleveland Browns.
The Texans offense hasn’t exactly been a fireworks show this season, so the hype around him has died down a little, but if Houston wins the AFC South and shines in the postseason, it could easily dial right back up.
Slowik, 37, is a Kyle Shanahan disciple who actually coached on defense when he arrived in San Francisco in 2017. But Slowik was promoted to the 49ers’ passing game coordinator by 2022 before he got his first crack at calling plays last year with the Texans.
Slowik deserves an interview from any team looking for a new offensive approach.
Liam Coen
Quarterback Baker Mayfield is playing the best football of his career for the first-year Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator. They hit it off so well together with the Rams in 2022 that Mayfield personally helped recruit Coen to the Bucs last offseason, which speaks to the OC’s ability to connect with his players.
Coen, 39, bounced around the New England college coaching circuit before McVay hired him in 2018. He had two one-year stints as Kentucky’s offensive coordinator (2021, 2023) that bookended his season as McVay’s OC. Now a full-time play caller for the first time in the NFL, Coen has impressed those around the league with his creativity and feel for the game while designing plays with a purpose. Tampa’s offense is fifth in the NFL right now, putting up 27 points per game.
Coen is inexperienced on the interview circuit, so he might be at least a year away from a head coaching offer. But he should garner interview requests, particularly after Dave Canales turned his one season with the Bucs into the Carolina Panthers’ top job — and the Bucs offense has been better in 2024.
Drew Petzing
The Arizona Cardinals offensive coordinator has gotten the best out of Kyler Murray, and rival coaches and executives have been impressed with Petzing’s work for the past couple of seasons.
Petzing, 37, worked under offensive coordinators Norv Turner, Pat Shurmur, John DeFilippo and Kevin Stefanski during his six seasons with the Minnesota Vikings before joining Stefanski with the Cleveland Browns.
Petzing was somewhat of an unknown commodity when he joined the Cardinals, but they’re an up-and-coming team that’s been well-coached under Jonathan Gannon. It’s only a matter of time before teams interview Petzing to get a longer look at his head coaching potential.
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Frank Smith
The Dolphins offensive coordinator has done solid work for head coach Mike McDaniel. Smith, 43, has worked for many types of head coaches, including Payton, Jon Gruden and Brandon Staley, so he’s been influenced by a mix of philosophies.
Smith has a lot of allies around the league because of his ability to cultivate relationships with coaches and players alike. He’s had a unique journey with humble aspirations, which is partly why his supporters have beamed with pride over his ascension.
Smith hasn’t earned a lot of shine because McDaniel is the face of the Dolphins’ offense, but the coordinator could bring that flare to a new organization. Smith is a high-level teacher and communicator, and those qualities will show if he’s invited for interviews.
Jesse Minter
The 41-year-old Chargers defensive coordinator worked for John Harbaugh for four seasons (2017-20) with the Baltimore Ravens before linking up with Jim Harbaugh over the last three seasons with Michigan and Los Angeles. Minter has been around a lot of quality coaching over those stretches.
He is seen as a leader who relates well to everyone in the building, and he’s in charge of a group that’s allowed the fewest points in the NFL this season. He is expected to draw interview requests in January.
Jesse Minter had Mahomes guessing– that’s hard to do. pic.twitter.com/zY9d76rgIW
— Ted Nguyen (@FB_FilmAnalysis) October 18, 2024
Todd Monken
The 58-year-old Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator has never been a head coach at the NFL level, but he did lead a fairly incredible turnaround as the boss at Southern Miss from 2013-15, turning a winless program in 2012 into a Conference USA championship game appearance in just three years.
More notably, Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson has played at an elite level during his two seasons with Monken, winning MVP in 2023 and leading the race by a wide margin again this season.
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Monken might not deliver the same sizzle as the younger offensive minds who have been in vogue over the past decade, but it’d be malpractice to overlook his results.
Joe Brady
The Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator has gone through quite a bit over the past five years.
He was viewed as the next wunderkind after guiding quarterback Joe Burrow and LSU to a historic offensive output during the 2019 national championship run, and the Carolina Panthers scooped him up as their OC the following season. That experiment failed, but hindsight has since indicated that it was more about the organization than Brady.
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He joined the Bills staff in 2022 and was promoted to offensive coordinator midway through 2023, putting more emphasis on the ground game, which helped spark quarterback Josh Allen’s midseason revival.
With the Bills back in contention and the offense scoring the third-most points in the league, the 35-year-old Brady should get some interview requests.
(Photo of Bill Belichick and Mike Vrabel: George Walker IV / Tennessean.com via Imagn Images)
Sports
Chiefs' Harrison Butker's injury sparks feminist celebrations and Trump Cabinet conspiracies on social media
The Buffalo Bills aren’t the only beneficiaries of the knee injury to Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker.
News of Butker’s injury came out Thursday evening ahead of the Chiefs-Bills showdown Sunday, and, for many liberals disgruntled with the outcome of the recent election, the news was a reprieve and cause for celebration on social media.
Several social media users posted in celebration of Butker’s injury, referencing the kicker’s previous comments on the benefit of women accepting domestic roles as mothers and wives and his endorsement of Trump.
One widely circulated post had a caption that said, “Women seeing Harrison Butker get injured,” attached to a video of a television audience standing up and cheering passionately.
Another user wrote, “Please take all of Harrison Butker’s pain and have it stay exactly where it is.”
Some users took the injury as an opportunity to knock Butker’s masculinity.
One post said, “real men don’t miss work.”
“Too busy bending the knee to Trump huh,” another post said.
However, some fans stepped up to defend Butker from the harsh responses.
“Any of y’all, Chiefs ‘fans’ that are celebrating the Butker injury because of his ‘politics’ go find another team for we don’t need that kind of negative energy,” one fan wrote.
Some used the injury as an opportunity to push conspiracy theories and make jokes about Butker being appointed for Trump’s Cabinet.
HARRISON BUTKER’S FAITH-DRIVEN COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS AT BENEDICTINE COLLEGE: READ THE SPEECH HERE
One user jokingly wrote, “Donald Trump announces that Harrison Butker will lead the Department of Women’s Rights and Home Affairs.”
Another user falsely wrote, “He’s holding out for a few weeks hoping for the ‘Director of Family Services’ cabinet position.”
The jokes and false claims about Butker come amid recent announcements of Trump’s Cabinet appointments, many of which have drawn praise and controversy. The appointments of Matt Gaetz as attorney general, Pete Hegseth as secretary of defense and Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to lead a new Department of Government Efficiency have been among the most discussed appointments in recent days.
Butker endorsed Trump and Republican Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley in the recent election. The kicker announced his Upright PAC along with Hawley, earning the praise of Chiefs owner Clark Hunt.
The kicker’s shift into politics accelerated after he made remarks about women and their careers during a commencement address at Benedictine College.
“Some of you may go on to lead successful careers in the world, but I would venture to guess that the majority of you are most excited about your marriage and the children you will bring into this world. I can tell you that my beautiful wife Isabelle would be the first to say that her life truly started when she began living her vocation as a wife and as a mother,” Butker said at the time.
Shortly after the speech, Butker’s jersey sales soared. His jersey ranked 11th in NFL sales, from March 1 to May 31, the NFLPA said.
However, Butker’s speech also incited fierce and oftentimes emotional backlash from many in the mainstream media. Washington Post columnist Sally Jenkins mocked Butker for being a kicker after delivering the remarks, while NBC’s “Today” host Hoda Kotb scolded the kicker, telling him “not to speak for women.”
Butker later told Fox News host Laura Ingraham he’s “saddened” some people took his words in a “poor manner.”
“I was trying to speak life for so many women that have dedicated their life to being the homemaker, being the one that raises the children. And it’s a beautiful role, but it’s not a role that should be diminished,” he explained.
“There’s nothing shameful if you are a woman, and you want to spend time with your family and raise your children. So, it’s not putting down anyone who maybe wants to go get a great education and have a career.
“But it’s more talking about how beautiful it is for women to maybe just step aside and prioritize their family and spend time with their children and raise their family. And that’s what I was just trying to speak love about.”
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