NFL ‘Black Monday’ primer: Where all 32 NFL head coaches stand

Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

Black Monday is not a friendly day for head coaches around the NFL. Typically one day after the regular season ends, multiple coaches find themselves on the unemployment line.

That will come to fruition once again as teams look to move off mistakes following terrible 2022 seasons.

Could a couple head coaches end up being one-and-done? What about some surprise firings? Below, we look at all 32 NFL head coaches and where they stand on Black Monday around the league.

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Arthur Smith, Atlanta Falcons

Falcons owner Arthur Blank is among the most-loyal in the NFL. It’s in this that most believe he’ll give Smith more than two years to turn this thing around in Atlanta. But the head coach’s body of work over this two-year span leaves a lot to be desired.

Having earned his keep as an innovative offensive mind during his time with the Tennessee Titans, that has not transitioned to Atlanta. The Falcons finished 28th in scoring in 2011 and ranked in the bottom 10 this past regular season.

Josh McDaniels, Las Vegas Raiders

Josh McDaniels’ first season in Las Vegas was an unmitigated disaster. The team boasted a 6-11 record with nine of those losses coming by one score. The Raiders blew four double-digit leads throughout the season.

The only thing potentially saving McDaniels’ job is the fact that he still has four years remaining on his current contract and the fact that owner Mark Davis is cheap.

Ron Rivera, Washington Commanders

Embattled Commanders owner Daniel Snyder will play a major role in the decision-making process here. As for Rivera’s complete body of work on D.C., Washington is 22-27-1 since he was hired ahead of the 2020 season.

With a talented young defense and some good skill-position players, this is not what we’d call a success. It ccould make him one of the first victims of Black Monday.

Victims of NFL Black Monday

Kliff Kingsbury, Arizona Cardinals

An argument can be made that Kingsbury was one of the worst head coaches during his tenure in Arizona. Here’s a guy who posted a 28-37-1 record since joining the Cardinals. Arizona has lost 17 of its past 22 games, too.

Now that Arizona is coming off a disastrous 4-13 season, its brass made the decision to move off Kingsbury. It’s somewhat surprising in that the Cards singed him to a contract extension less than a calendar year ago. But with the product we’ve seen in the field recently in the desert, this was the right move.

Lovie Smith, Houston Texans

David Culley went one-and-done with the Texans a season ago. Smith has now followed him after posting a 3-13-1 record for a Houston team that lacked the talent to compete.

At this point, there’s a question about the direction of the Texans’ organization. They have fired two consecutive head coaches after one season. And in reality, the decision to hire Smith last offseason didn’t seem to make much sense.

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