AFC East Coaching Updates: Duggan, Dolphins, Bills

New Dolphins head coach Jeff Hafley has worked quickly to fill out his first NFL coaching staff. We’ve reported several confirmed hires, but one addition hasn’t yet been publicly made official. According to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald, it’s believed that former Packers linebackers coach Sean Duggan has followed Hafley from Green Bay to Biscayne Bay.

Duggan has been a longtime Hafley disciple. After serving as a linebackers coach at Hawai’i and UMass, Duggan took a graduate assistant position at Ohio State, where Hafley was co-defensive coordinator/defensive backs coach. When Hafley was named head coach at Boston College, Duggan followed, getting promoted to linebackers coach and, eventually, adding co-defensive coordinator to his title. When Hafley was hired as defensive coordinator in Green Bay, he brought along Duggan, who served a year as a defensive assistant before being named linebackers coach this past season.

Now, while Duggan’s hire in Miami hasn’t been officially announced, the hire of new Dolphins linebackers coach Al Washington has been, per Jackson. Washington was also on staff with Duggan and Hafley at Ohio State back in 2019. He followed up his tenure with the Buckeyes with a four-year stay as Notre Dame’s defensive line coach. With Washington occupying the LB coach position, though, Duggan’s position in Miami becomes a mystery. Tom Silverstein of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has ventured that Duggan could end up being Hafley’s pick for defensive coordinator. The Dolphins have reportedly only interviewed one candidate for that position, so they may not be able to officially announce Duggan into the job until they’ve satisfied the Rooney Rule.

Here are a few other coaching updates coming out of the AFC East:

  • On the offensive side of the ball in Miami, the Dolphins have also hired Matt Applebaum to serve as assistant offensive line coach, per Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports. Applebaum was Hafley’s offensive line coach at Boston College for the first two years of Hafley’s four-year tenure. Applebaum then, oddly enough, left the Eagles to accept a job as the Dolphins offensive line coach, his first position coaching role in the NFL. He was let go after only a year at the job, though, and returned to his old position in Chestnut Hill for Hafley’s last year with Boston College, remaining with the team until Hafley called him to Miami. On the other side of the ball, the team also added assistant defensive line coach Chuka Ndulue, per Aaron Wilson of KPRC 2. Ndulue made the jump to the NFL ranks of coaching last year in the same position for the Chargers. He represents the minority of coaches on staff in Miami who do not have a working history with Hafley prior to this.
  • Lastly, in the AFC East, the Bills are reportedly hiring respected veteran offensive line coach Pat Meyer, per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. A former collegiate strength & conditioning coach, Meyer started coaching offensive line in 2008 at Colorado State. He made the jump to the Canadian Football League in 2012 before landing as an assistant offensive line coach with the Bears the following season. After two years in Chicago, he spent another two seasons as an offensive assistant in his first stint with the Bills. That led to his first NFL full-time position coaching job as the Chargers offensive line coach/run game coordinator, a role he performed for three years before a two-year stint as the Panthers OL coach and a four-year stint in Pittsburgh. He returns to Buffalo now to serve as a position coach with the Bills for the first time.

Coaching Notes: Fangio, Kocurek, Broncos, Dolphins, Falcons, Gray, Lions, Bills, Bears

The 49ers showed interest in Vic Fangio, joining almost every other DC-seeking team. But Fangio’s former team did not have the chance to bring him back in for an interview; Fangio finally committed to the Dolphins on Thursday morning. The 49ers were interested in a Fangio reunion, Eric Branch of the San Francisco Chronicle notes, and 9News’ Mike Klis adds Fangio was also intrigued by coming back to San Francisco. The 49ers’ usage of a 4-3 scheme throughout Kyle Shanahan‘s tenure would not have been a major issue regarding a reunion with the 3-4 guru, Branch adds. That would make sense, as the 4-3/3-4 divide is not nearly as big an issue — thanks to sub-packages’ rise — as it was several years ago.

San Francisco remains on the hunt for a DeMeco Ryans replacement, placing Steve Wilks and Chris Harris (not the cornerback) on its interview list. The 49ers also are considering promoting defensive line coach Kris Kocurek, Josina Anderson of CBS Sports tweets. The well-regarded staffer has been Nick Bosa‘s position coach throughout the All-Pro’s career and has fostered development from others as well. Ryans, meanwhile, is interested in bringing Kocurek to Houston as his DC.

Here is the latest from the coaching ranks:

  • Some recently dismissed assistants may be on the Broncos‘ radar. Ex-Sean Payton staffers Joe Lombardi, Kris Richard and Dan Roushar are in the mix for Broncos gigs under their new coach, Klis notes. Lombardi worked on Payton’s Saints staff for 11 years, the final five as QBs coach, but lost his Chargers OC gig recently. The Saints parted ways with both Richard and Roushar recently. The ex-Seahawks DC was in New Orleans for just one season (2021) under Payton, while Roushar had been on the Saints’ staff for the past 10 years. Richard may be in the running for Denver’s DC post, though Klis adds the Ejiro Evero-Payton talks began Wednesday night. The parties continued discussions today. Evero, who is under contract, staying on staff and leaving for a head coaching job in 2024 would net the Broncos two third-round picks.
  • The Falcons brought in former DC Jerry Gray as an assistant head coach. Gray, 60, spent the past two years as the Packers’ secondary coach but worked with Arthur Smith in Tennessee. Smith and Gray were both Titans staffers in the early 2010s, when the latter was Tennessee’s DC. The Falcons hired Ryan Nielsen as their defensive boss last week, but Gray will be a key assistant. Green Bay let Gray’s contract expire, with ESPN’s Rob Demovsky noting (via Twitter) Gray and DC Joe Barry were not on the same page.
  • Once again, the Dolphins will look for a new offensive line coach. Miami fired Matt Applebaum after one season, Outkick.com’s Armando Salguero notes (Twitter link). Mike McDaniel‘s next hire will be the Dolphins’ eighth O-line coach in nine seasons. Applebaum, 39, joined McDaniel’s staff in 2022 after spending his previous coaching years in the college ranks.
  • The Lions added two fairly recent NFLers to their staff. They brought in Dre’ Bly and Steve Heiden to coach cornerbacks and tight ends, respectively. Bly, who played for the Lions from 2003-06 and made two Pro Bowls with the team, has not coached in the NFL previously. He spent the past four seasons coaching cornerbacks at North Carolina, his alma mater. Heiden will come over from the Cardinals, who employed the ex-NFL tight end as their tight ends coach throughout Kliff Kingsbury‘s tenure. The ex-Cardinal had been on Arizona’s staff for 10 years.
  • Acting quickly after making a change late last week, the Bills filled their safety coach role by hiring Joe Danna. Working under Lovie Smith with the Texans this season, Danna was in Jacksonville under Doug Marrone and Urban Meyer for the previous five yeras.
  • After the Falcons hired Nielsen, they fired Jon Hoke. But the veteran position coach will land in Chicago. The Bears hired Hoke as their cornerbacks coach and passing-game coordinator. This is a reunion for Hoke, who coached Bears DBs for six seasons (2009-14) previously. The team also promoted Omar Young from the quality control level to assistant QBs and wide receivers coach. Young is a 14-year coaching veteran who spent time with OC Luke Getsy in Green Bay.