NFL Head Coach Watch: Are Urban Meyer, Joe Judge, Brian Flores and more on the hot seat? – Pro Football Network

We’re rapidly approaching the point of the NFL season where head coaches start getting fired. Bill O’Brien got the axe from the Houston Texans after an 0-4 start in 2020. Washington canned Jay Gruden five games into the 2019 campaign. Hue Jackson lasted a few more weeks in 2018 before getting his walking papers. Which NFL head coaches could be next in 2021?

Five NFL head coaches on the hot seat in Week 6

If you’re a head coach off to a bad start and aren’t coming off a playoff season in 2020, chances are the seat is getting warm. Here’s our list of the five coaches most likely to get fired this year — with an obvious name at No. 1.

Urban Meyer, Jacksonville Jaguars

The team’s performance — 0-5 and outscored by 59 points — alone would be alarming for Jaguars owner Shad Khan.

But his head coach’s behavior has been even worse. Urban Meyer has been an embarrassment since coming out of retirement.

He’s been fined by the league, criticized by the union, mismanaged his rookie quarterback’s development, and been filmed boozing it up with coeds at a Columbus bar — deciding to stay in Ohio after the Jaguars’ Week 4 loss instead of flying home with his team.

Khan put Meyer on notice with a blistering statement after Meyer’s indiscretion. The message might as well have been written in neon colors:

“His conduct last weekend was inexcusable. I appreciate Urban’s remorse, which I believe is sincere. Now, he must regain our trust and respect. That will require a personal commitment from Urban to everyone who supports, represents, or plays for our team. I am confident he will deliver.”

Joe Judge, New York Giants

Joe Judge’s college (or perhaps more accurately, high school) antics have always been viewed with a skeptical eye by industry insiders. He doesn’t seem to grasp the dynamic that comes with coaching grown men. And his act can grow tiresome if a team doesn’t win.

Judge hasn’t done a whole lot of winning. After getting romped by the Cowboys in Week 5, the Giants have now lost seven of their last nine games, and their offense barely has enough healthy bodies to play a game. Play-calling and defensive lapses have both held this talent-bereft team back.

The most damning aspect of the Giants’ 2021 performance? They’re still losing even though Daniel Jones has played well. His QBR ranks inside the top 10. But Jones is now concussed, and New York’s next five games are against the Rams, Panthers, Chiefs, Raiders, and Buccaneers.

Mike Zimmer, Minnesota Vikings

The only reason Mike Zimmer isn’t No. 1 is because Greg Joseph bailed him out on Sunday.

The Vikings were staring at a fourth loss in five games after the Lions went up a point with 37 seconds left. But Kirk Cousins moved the ball 46 yards on three plays with no timeouts, setting up a 54-yard field goal at the gun by Joseph.

And then the post-game celebration got a little fiery. Zimmer was caught on video shoving quarterback Kirk Cousins with a bit of heft.

It might be nothing, or it could be something. We hear that players have grown tired of Zimmer’s edgy coaching style, and the sense is he could be in danger of being tuned out if the season gets away from Minnesota.

Brian Flores, Miami Dolphins

How quickly fortunes change. Brian Flores got some Coach of The Year chatter in 2020. Now, his quarterback is hurt, his rebuild is in shambles, and he has to fly across the ocean for a potentially career-defining game in Week 6. Lose to the winless Jaguars, and the rationale for keeping Flores gets really thin.

A series of tweets from an account operated by Tua Tagovailoa’s trainer, Nick Hicks, brought to light issues about Flores’ coaching style that — for now — have only been discussed in private.

The operator of the account later said, “This coach [Flores] is hard to even talk to. How much harder do you think he is to play for?”

Should Jon Gruden be on the hot seat in 2021?

As Jon Gruden awaits word from the league about potential punishment for using racist language to describe NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith, he also needs to figure out a way to get his offense back on track. The Raiders have scored just 23 points in the last two weeks, and the offensive line is a mess.

Gruden has far more job security than most head coaches, thanks to a 10-year contract that still has over $50 million on the books. Mark Davis has a reputation for thriftiness, and it’s hard to see him writing that severance check unless his hand is really forced.

Additionally, we hear that Gruden’s comments are a bigger deal outside of the locker room than they have been inside of it. Our sense is he’s in no danger of losing the team in the near future.