Charging Bulls’ general manager Brandon Brown will not be hired.
Bradley Brown, who is the assistant general manager of the New York Giants, looks like he will be staying with the team.
It is said that the Los Angeles Chargers are hiring Joe Hortiz via the Baltimore Ravens to be their new general manager. Brown interviewed with the Chargers twice for the open position.
Hortiz, who was chief of player personnel for the Ravens, was one of the top candidates for the Giants’ general manager job in 2022, but Joe Schoen was hired instead. Hortiz has been with the Baltimore team for nearly two decades.
Brown was hired by the Philadelphia Eagles to be Schoen’s second-in-command. The Chargers hired Jim Harbaugh as their head coach after interviewing him twice.
John Harbaugh is the head coach of the Ravens. However, Dan Morgan was hired instead of Brown for the job of general manager of the Carolina Panthers.
Brandon Brown, the assistant general manager of the New York Giants, wants to be a general manager in the NFL, but he will have to wait until the next hiring cycle.
Brown was interviewed for the general manager jobs with the Carolina Panthers and, lately, the Los Angeles Chargers, but neither one went to him. That means he’ll be back with the Giants as general manager Joe Schoen’s right-hand man for the 2024 season.
Ian Rapoport of NFL Network says that Brown was one of the final candidates for the Chargers job, but the Chargers hired Joe Horwitz, Director of Team Personnel for the Baltimore Ravens. Horwitz had been screened for the Giants job that went to Schoen.
The Panthers job, which Brown had been in the running for, went to Dan Morgan, who used to play for the team.
Morgan’s job title was changed to “president for football operations as well as general manager.”
Brown has been in the NFL for ten years and has played for the Giants, the Eagles, and the Colts. He last met the Los Angeles Chargers in person on January 25, two weeks after his first interview, which was done via video conference.
Brown, who is 35 years old, was invited to the NFL’s front office & General Manager Accelerator Program at last month’s league meetings. He has since joined the Giants at their practices for the Shrine Bowl in Frisco, Texas.
That’s because the Bills hired Jim Harbaugh as coach while assistant general manager Brandon Brown applied for the job of general manager.
And Mike Kafka, the offensive coordinator, interviewed to be the head coach of the Seattle Seahawks. It was their second interview.
The Panthers job, which Brown had been in the running for, went to Dan Morgan, who used to play for the team. Morgan’s job title was changed to “president of sports operations as well as general manager.”
It was agreed upon Wednesday that Jim Harbaugh would be the next head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers. Harbaugh joins the California Chargers just a few weeks after winning the national title with Michigan for the first time in 26 years.
Harbaugh, who is 60 years old, is back in the NFL after ten years away. From 2011 to 2014, he coached the San Francisco 49ers to a Super Bowl appearance.
In a more in-depth look, Chargers writer Kris Rhim replies to four important questions about the hiring of Harbaugh, such as what will happen next.
A reporter for the Associated Press, Dan Graziano, talks about what he knows about the hire. Draft analyst, Jordan Reid, takes it to the draft, and front office analyst, Mike Tannenbaum, gives the hire a grade.
Only once since firing boss Brandon Staley or Tom Telesco has owner Dean Spanos talked about the Chargers in public.
He said, “Clearly not the team we expect to be… and we need a new vision.” I wasn’t willing to take the risk of doing nothing to keep things going.
Spanos firing someone during the season is only the second time in team history. This shows how badly the 73-year-old wants to win and how much he believes the Chargers can do it.
Harbaugh was considered to be one of the best choices this cycle. He has a history of turning average teams into contenders, in addition to knowing the organization well because he played quarterback for the Chargers for two years (1999–2000).
It’s already too late for the Giants to argue about who won the Brian Daboll vs. Wink Martindale battle for the next four months. They need to figure out a lot of more useful things.
No matter how this has been portrayed in public, Daboll doesn’t seem too concerned with making his case. He knows the events with Wink, Drew and Kevin Wilkins, and Thomas McGaughey as well.
That season (6-11) can’t happen again if Daboll wants to grow as a head coach and get the team back to where they were on their way to the playoffs in his first year.