The Bears, who interviewed Anthony Weaver for their head coaching vacancy, are going in a different direction.
The Chicago Bears are licking their wounds from yet another season of under-accomplishment.A generational talent in rookie QB, Caleb Williams; a receiving corps bristling with weapons in DJ Moore, Keenan Allen and #9 overall pick,
We’re tracking all the latest coaching and staff developments with news, notes and nuggets from the search — and what comes next.
Clearly impressing New Orleans with his first interview, Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver is brought back as a finalist for the Saints’ head coaching job.
After speculation that the Chicago Bears may target Darren Rizzi as a special teams coordinator, this reports says that’s no longer the plan:
Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver is one step closer to landing ... interviewed with New Orleans and the Chicago Bears. Last offseason, he interviewed for head coaching openings ...
Tom Pelissero of the NFL Network reports that the New Orleans Saints are bringing in Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver for a 2nd interview on Wednesday for their open head coaching position. Weaver has also met with the Chicago Bears this offseason about their head coaching vacancy.
The Commanders hedged their bets with most acquisitions under Peters. Very few signings received long-term commitments. Most got one-year, prove-it deals with the promise of more
The coordinators hired by Chicago Bears coach Ben Johnson enter their new jobs with vastly different amounts of coaching experience.
The Miami Dolphins are 29th in the NFL in salary cap space, according to Spotrac, at -$14.2 million. But general manager Chris Grier must address key team needs in NFL free agency, which begins March 12 at 4 p.m.
After Ben Johnson hired former Saints HC Dennis Allen as the Bears' defensive coordinator, the new DC explained how Chicago recruited him.
For 30 of the 32 NFL teams, the offseason is officially here. Before the NFL Draft comes free agency, where teams will throw money at established talents. Last year, we saw a couple of notable running backs in Saquon Barkley and Derrick Henry switch teams,