The Daily Briefing Tuesday, January 10, 2023

THE DAILY BRIEFING

AROUND THE NFL

Mike Florio with a harsh tweet during Georgia-TCU:

@ProFootballTalk

This sort of feels like the eventual Vikings-49ers game in the divisional round.

Nobody seems too outraged this year that the 8-9 Buccaneers are hosting the 12-5 Cowboys, but we thought we would take a look at how the seedings and matchups would be if all seedings were by record (we still break things up into divisions and give the division champs the playoff spot).

In this system, any division champ does get a tiebreaker over a wild card.  Dallas and the Chargers get home games as Tampa Bay and Jacksonville drop.

NFC Revised

1 – Philadelphia (14-3)

2 – San Francisco (13-4)

3 –  Minnesota (13-4)

4 –  Dallas (12-5)

5 –  Giants (9-7-1)

6 –  Seattle (9-8)

7 –  Tampa Bay (8-9)

First Round

Philadelphia – bye

Tampa Bay (7) at San Francisco (2)

Seattle (6) at Minnesota (3)

Giants (5) at Dallas

Tampa Bay could have played hard in Week 18 and with a win jumped Seattle whom they beat in the regular season.  Dallas might have advanced all the way to #2 with a win in Week 18.

AFC Revised

1 – Kansas City (13-4)

2 –  Buffalo (13-3)

3 –  Cincinnati (12-4)

4 –  Chargers (10-7)

5 –  Baltimore (10-7)

6 –  Jacksonville (9-8)

7 –  Miami (9-8)

First Round

Kansas City – bye

Miami (7) at Buffalo (2)

Jacksonville (6) at Cincinnati (3)

Baltimore (5) at Chargers (4)

So, the playoff line was at 9-8 for Wild Cards in both conferences.

The NFC won the inter-conference series, 41-39, over the AFC.  The final game was decisive as the 49ers beat the Raiders in overtime.

The AFC North carried the day for the AFC, going 15-5 against the NFC (mainly the NFC South).

The NFC East, meanwhile, was 17-3 against the AFC (mainly the AFC South).

NFC WEST
 

LOS ANGELES RAMS

Sean McVay wants to coach again, he just doesn’t want to coach the 2023 Rams. Sarah Barshop of ESPN.com:

Sean McVay said he will take time before deciding his future with the Los Angeles Rams, but quarterback Matthew Stafford reiterated that he has no plans to retire — regardless of the Super Bowl-winning coach’s decision.

 

In his end-of-season news conference on Monday, McVay spoke at length about why he plans to take the “appropriate time” to make a decision on his future to figure out “the best way to continue to move forward in the right way to be the best coach that you can possibly be.”

 

“Because I don’t get the sense in the least bit I’m done coaching,” McVay said. “It’s just a matter of what does that look like as it relates to the immediate future is more about what you’re really working through right now.”

 

McVay, who signed an extension last offseason, is under contract through the 2026 season. Stafford, who signed a contract extension through the 2026 season in March, said McVay’s decision would not have an effect on his desire to continue to play.

 

Stafford, who ended the season on injured reserve with a spinal cord contusion and twice spent time in the concussion protocol, said he didn’t really think about retiring while dealing with the injuries and feels “really comfortable and confident in moving forward.”

 

McVay said he didn’t want to put a timeline on when he’d determine his path toward the future but said he doesn’t want to “rush into any sort of decision.”

 

“There’s a lot of emotion right after the season,” McVay said. “There’s a lot of layers to this. There’s a lot of people that it does affect that I don’t take lightly and want to be mindful of. And so I’m going to take the next couple days to really be able to kind of reflect.”

 

The toughest part about the decision, McVay said, is “the amount of people that are affected.”

 

“And then just being able to identify the things that will give you that clarity and that peace, while also continuing to acknowledge the things that need to be addressed as you’re trying to become a better and more complete person,” McVay said.

 

The Rams’ 5-12 record under McVay is the worst since he was hired in Los Angeles in 2017, and this season was his first losing season as a head coach. Still, he made it clear that this thought process is not just because of the challenges of this season, but something that “has been years” in the making.

 

“This isn’t a new thing,” McVay said. “This has been something that I think has gone on for those of you guys that know me, for a handful of years. But it’s a beautiful challenge. I wouldn’t change any part of this. And I know this too: A lot of the reflection is based on the culmination of years.”

 

McVay said what he really appreciates through this whole process has been the “unconditional support” from the franchise.

 

“Whether it be with Mr. Kroenke or [general manager] Les [Snead] or [VP of football and business administration] Tony [Pastoors] or [COO] Kevin [Demoff], there’s an unconditional support of they want what’s best for me,” McVay said. “And I think in such a challenging business and such a challenging circumstance and situation in a competitive business, that might not always be the case.

 

“But I do know that with the six years of experience that I’ve accumulated with these guys, you can really feel that. In some instances, it almost creates more challenges. But you are so grateful, and I couldn’t be more appreciative of the unconditional support that I feel from Mr. Kroenke and from those guys as it relates to how we move forward accordingly.”

Jourdan Rodrigue of The Athletic makes a game effort to get inside McVay’s tortured soul:

Sean McVay is in the process of deciding whether he wants to return to the team in 2023, and has been gathering perspective on the matter from confidants, advisers and friends, multiple team and league sources with direct knowledge of the ongoing situation told me over the last week. The people who spoke with me were granted anonymity so they could be candid.

 

McVay’s mind is not made up, they said.

 

There are those within the Rams organization who believe he will take the break we’ve all known was coming at some point. McVay is a both-ends candle-burner who struggles to integrate rest and task delegation into his duties as a head coach. There are also people within the organization who believe he will stay. One league source said that the next two weeks will be pivotal to the Rams’ next steps as an entire entity.

 

McVay has been openly courted by broadcasting companies for years. They keep throwing greater and greater sums of money at him, including up to the moment he signed a contract with the Rams through 2026 this summer that puts him in the company of the highest-paid coaches in the NFL. This, the people who spoke to me universally agreed, is not really about a desire to immediately start a broadcasting career, although McVay has been public about wanting to seek out that path eventually.

 

McVay enjoyed an all-out sprint of success with little criticism, ever since his catalytic 2017 entrance to the league at age 30 as the engineer of an offense nobody could stop, to his remarkable winning percentage since his rookie coaching season. He has never had a season like this, humiliating and out in public for everyone to see like this just months after winning the Super Bowl. He’s never had an offseason like this, where he has had little to no control over an unprecedented short recovery timeline for himself and for players, and few answers to a league rapidly adjusting to combat everything he (and the front office) have built — there simply has not been enough time to find them or to identify the staff he wants to help him problem-solve. McVay has openly referred to this Rams season as a “professional failure,” and said the experience has forced him to admit “insecurities” of which he wasn’t previously aware.

 

His personal life has carried worry and loss. He and Veronika, his wife, sat on their couch in the spring and watched as her native country of Ukraine was invaded just days after the two giddily drank champagne on the rooftops of Super Bowl parade buses. In the fall, McVay lost his grandfather, John — a man who epitomized being whole and human and empathetic even when under intense pressure. Those are qualities McVay prizes in people and works to mirror. When McVay nearly wept at his press conference after the funeral, he also openly addressed the fact that he wouldn’t even have close to the career he has had without his grandfather’s connections throughout the NFL.

 

Who is McVay when circumstances he can’t control — such as the Rams’ catastrophic streak of injuries through the 2022 season — occur within an environment he has spent the last five-plus years meticulously honing to his every specification, at times even to the point of self-insulation? Who is he without his job? Does he know? Does he want to know? Success can be complicated if a person gets stuck in the wheel they built.

 

Even now, he has all of the autonomy here. The Rams, two people who spoke to me said, are totally open to whatever he needs to do, whether he stays or steps away — inclusive of making large-scale changes among his assistant coaches and the roles he delegates to them, or any personal or work habit changes. One person with direct knowledge of the Rams’ contingency plans for either option, who was granted anonymity in order to speak freely, said that even if McVay decides to step away in 2023, the organization does not believe he would permanently retire from coaching.

 

McVay does not have a timeline for making this decision, nor does he have a deadline from the Rams, multiple people with knowledge of the process said.

 

As a human, he should take the time he needs to untangle his mind. I have so much respect for people who feel their feelings and work to understand who they are in the world and in their own heads. But there are layers to this. It’s not simple.

 

If he takes a break, it’s not assured other high-profile players will stay (depending on who the Rams select to fill his role). Quarterback Matthew Stafford, who is scheduled to speak to us Los Angeles beat writers Monday morning, has said publicly he’s not retiring after this year. But McVay and Stafford aligned themselves financially and schematically, and while Stafford would take a significant financial hit if he decided to walk away altogether, that wouldn’t be the only option on the table if he didn’t feel invested in any coaching change (remember, Stafford came to Los Angeles to win a championship, to not get abused behind a tattered offensive line and to play for McVay). Similar to speculation surrounding McVay and any broadcasting opportunities being an annual conversation, retirement speculation annually swirls around three-time Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald since he legitimately considered the option after the Rams won the Super Bowl. If McVay takes a break, who gives the Rams their best shot at keeping Donald around? Or do they blow the whole thing up in the short term and hand McVay back the keys when he’s ready and their trajectory shifts back toward the positive?

 

If I were in players’ or assistant coaches’ shoes, I would feel a certain sense of frustration about this entire situation while also wanting the best for McVay. Both can be true, but let us not forget the significant physical, emotional and circumstantial adversity most players have been through to make it to the NFL, often from backgrounds much different than his own. Let us not forget that until McVay makes a decision, many assistants may not know their own futures, nor will their families.

 

It is necessary to feel empathy and concern for what McVay is working through, while also feeling empathy and concern for those this decision affects. According to people familiar with his thought process, McVay is cognizant of the large-scale impact any decision he makes will have on people who, unlike him, do not have their financial or professional futures guaranteed. He can walk away and come back with a major contract still in place. Nobody else affected by this situation can say the same.

 

“You gotta control what you can control,” said Bobby Wagner, who McVay says he has leaned on because of Wagner’s consistency and leadership in a spiraling season, after the Rams lost their final game of the season in Seattle. “Obviously, there are a lot of things that he has to figure out, things of that nature. I’m not in his shoes. So, you just control what you can control and react to whatever happens. … He has an eternal friend in me.”

 

Quarterback Baker Mayfield, who started for the Rams after joining the team in Week 14, has gotten to know McVay more closely since their initial meeting on a flight to the NFL combine ahead of his rookie season in 2018. Multiple players said postgame that they aren’t sure what will happen with McVay, and Mayfield noted further, “(McVay) is so truly invested in (putting) everything he has into this game. Everything he thinks about is about football.

 

“That’s why you see the toll that it takes on him.”

 

Sunday night at Lumen Field, as the Rams’ season formally ended, McVay stood at the lectern with that toll — with that emotion — printed all over his face. Normally, I can see his open frustration with a loss, or his thinly-veiled bravado after a win. For years, we’ve joked about how he has no poker face; you can see exactly where he’s at, good or bad or in between.

 

This time, I saw a person who wants badly to discern answers that won’t reveal themselves to him. A person on the verge of something — tears? An angry outburst? Even here, he didn’t seem sure; seemed at odds with his feelings and it was fitting because that’s exactly where he is. There is no question in my mind that McVay isn’t simply navigating burnout or the sting of losing for the first time in his life. There is no question in my mind that McVay is working through something more importantly psychological, that perhaps he doesn’t fully understand yet.

 

I wondered, then, what it must be like to be a person who believed he would truly find himself once he reached the mountaintop, who might now be fearful of realizing that even when he did, he stayed lost.

AFC WEST

LAS VEGAS

Vinny Bonsignore of the Las Vegas Review-Journal hears that Coach Josh McDaniel still has the locker room:

@VinnyBonsignore

In talking to multiple @Raiders players over the last few days, on and off the record, it’s pretty clear that in spite of the disappointing record, there is a belief and confidence in Josh McDaniels and Dave Ziegler. A lot of work is ahead, but the buy-in is there.

And this from Vic Tafur:

@VicTafur

Jacobs: “Gruden was a great offensive mind, but these guys take it to another level.” #Raiders

AFC SOUTH
 

HOUSTON

Here are the five interview requests from the Texans as they start their third interview request in as many years.  Sam Robinson of ProFootballRumors:

The Lions made major strides on offense this season, and their young coordinator received an interview request Monday. Not long after their Lovie Smith firing, the Texans requested an interview with Ben Johnson, Tom Pelissero of NFL.com reports (on Twitter). Other interview requests are coming in fast.

 

49ers DC DeMeco Ryans, Eagles DC Jonathan Gannon and Broncos DC Ejiro Evero are on the team’s candidate list, with Ian Rapoport of NFL.com adding the Texans have requested interviews with each defensive play-caller (Twitter link). While KPRC’s Aaron Wilson reported Evero, Johnson and Gannon are expected to be in the mix, he added Ryans is not expected to pursue the job. It will be interesting to see how the former Texans linebacker proceeds regarding this request.

 

Johnson has been with the Lions since Matt Patricia‘s hire in 2019. Dan Campbell not only kept Johnson on but promoted him this past offseason. The production of Jared Goff and Jamaal Williams certainly will boost Johnson’s chances, and this probably will not be the only job he winds up being linked to during this cycle.

 

Johnson’s age (36) and the experience levels of the other candidates are notable here. The Texans made two odd hires in 2021 and ’22, adding 60-somethings in Smith and David Culley despite neither being on the radar for other teams at the time. GM Nick Caserio made each a one-and-done, leading to rumblings about his own future. Evero is the oldest of this bunch, at 42, with Gannon being 40 and Ryans — a Texans inside linebacker from 2006-11 — having entered the profession a bit later. The 38-year-old DC, however, will be one of this interview cycle’s top names, considering what he has done with the 49ers’ defense this season.

 

Robert Saleh‘s successor, Ryans has rocketed onto the HC tier — to the point he is expected to land a job — after elevating San Francisco’s defense to the No. 1 spot. The 49ers launched their 10-game win streak by mounting a four-game streak in which they held opponents without a second-half touchdown. It will certainly be interesting if Ryans passes on a meeting with his former team, but the Texans’ past two coaching searches — each involving Josh McCown, despite no NFL staff experience — have surprised. The Broncos also requested a Ryans meeting.

 

The other Eagles coordinator — OC Shane Steichen — joins Gannon among the Texans’ interview requests, Rapoport adds (via Twitter). Considering Jalen Hurts‘ progression and the Eagles’ run to the NFC’s No. 1 seed, it should be expected Steichen — the former Chargers OC — receives attention during this year’s cycle. Steichen is 37. The Eagles, who were linked to veteran QBs via trade this past offseason, rank third offensively and have shown malleability under Steichen. Nick Sirianni gave Steichen the play-calling reins midway through the 2021 season, and the Eagles’ pivot to a run-heavy offense drove them to last year’s playoff bracket. Hurts’ progression as a passer this year led to the team’s latest crack at the NFC’s top seed.

 

The reported frontrunner, Gannon was a finalist for Houston’s HC position last year. That makes his inclusion in Caserio’s third HC search in three years more intriguing. The Eagles also progressed significantly on defense, using a menacing pass rush — one that fell two sacks shy of the 1984 Bears’ single-season record — to spearhead a unit that ranks second in total defense. It is entirely possible the Eagles lose both their coordinators this year, but candidates might be choosey with regards to the Texans, given their recent history.

 

Evero makes for one of the more unusual candidates in recent years. The Broncos finished 5-12 and fired the coach who brought in Evero — Nathaniel Hackett — after 15 games, making him just the third coach since the 1970 merger to be canned before his first season wrapped. But Evero was on Sean McVay‘s first five Rams staffs and was rising before Hackett hired him. Despite steady injuries and Denver’s offense cratering under Hackett, Evero’s defense finished seventh this season.

 

– – –

We usually aren’t big fans of “trade demands” but this seems reasonable:

@MySportsUpdate

#Texans WR Brandin Cooks indicated today that he hopes to be traded this offseason because at this point in his career he doesn’t want to be a part of a rebuild.

 

INDIANAPOLIS

There were stories that Jeff Saturday knew that coaching an NFL team was too big for him at this point and that he would not strive to get the full-time Colts job.  He tells a different tale in his post-season press conference.  Nick Shook of NFL.com:

Despite struggling to a 1-7 record as Indianapolis’ interim coach, Jeff Saturday doesn’t want to walk away from the Colts.

 

The former center and rookie coach told reporters Monday he hopes he’ll get the permanent job in Indianapolis. If so, Saturday is promising things will be different — much different.

 

“If I get this job, there’s going to be significant change,” Saturday said, via ESPN’s Stephen Holder. “… It would look different.”

 

Saturday spoke reverently of his time with the Colts, while also defending himself and the unique circumstances under which he operated as Indianapolis’ head coach. Unlike other interim coaches — Carolina’s Steve Wilks was used for comparison Monday — Saturday didn’t have experience with the remaining staff when he became head coach.

 

For this reason, Saturday believes their performances aren’t comparable, and he shouldn’t be held to the same standard of judgment.

 

“I commend the heck out of what he did,” Saturday said Monday, via the Indianapolis Star’s Nate Atkins. “I also know (Ben) McAdoo who is their offensive coordinator and (James) Campen who is their offensive line coach. They worked together in Green Bay for a number of years. I would tend to believe a guy coming in after nine weeks, walking into a room with a short offensive staff and a guy who is walking in who has been together for however long they’ve been together before and after should have a different level of success.

 

“I do think as you look at things, you can go ‘This is how this went.’ And I respect the heck out of Steve and what he’s done, and I love those two guys in particular. I worked with them in Green Bay (as a player). But not every situation is exactly the same when you get behind closed doors.”

 

Saturday’s first foray into NFL coaching began with shock, as owner Jim Irsay bucked convention by looking outside the organization after firing Frank Reich. He found a venerated former player who hadn’t coached at a level higher than high school, yet Irsay trusted Saturday enough to hand him the keys to the Colts for the remainder of the season.

 

Saturday won his first game as Colts coach, then lost seven straight to end the season. The Colts showed minimal signs of improvement and ended the season spinning their wheels with an eye (if not both) toward the draft.

 

No matter who becomes coach, Indianapolis once again has a massive question to answer under center. The Colts’ offseason acquisition of Matt Ryan simply didn’t work out, leading to his benching (twice) during the season.

 

Ryan still carries a significant cap number and doesn’t sound as if he’s ready to retire, but knows his future is likely not in Indianapolis.

 

“I still love playing,” Ryan said, via The Athletic’s Zak Keefer. “I think… obviously I’m not committed to anything, here, wherever. I gotta see how it shakes out (with the coaching search). But I still love playing. Honestly, I still like there’s a lot of good football in my body.”

 

Saturday will be one of at least a handful of coaching candidates subjected to the interview process before Irsay and general manager Chris Ballard — whose job doesn’t appear to be in danger — make a decision on the job. Saturday said Monday his time with the Colts was “a tremendous learning experience,” which could benefit him if he manages to convince Irsay to keep him around.

 

“I have a very clear vision of how I can turn this football team around,” he said. “I’m not one that wavers. I’m pretty steadfast.”

 

We’ll see if that’s enough to land him the full-time position.

 

TENNESSEE

Mike Vrabel makes a slew of changes on his coaching staff, including jettisoning OC Todd Downing.  Mike Moraitis of USA TODAY:

The Tennessee Titans have finally made the move fans were hoping for: the team has fired offensive coordinator Todd Downing, along with three other coaches.

 

The team made the announcement on Monday evening, also revealing that offensive line coach Keith Carter, secondary coach Anthony Midget and offensive skill assistant Erik Frazier were given pink slips.

 

“I want to thank Todd, Keith, Anthony and Erik for their service and commitment to our team over their time here in Tennessee,” head coach Vrabel said in a statement. “Each of them made an impact on our organization, were dedicated to the process and loyal members of our coaching staff.”

 

Downing took over from wildly-successful former offensive coordinator Arthur Smith, who left to take the Atlanta Falcons’ head-coaching job following two successful seasons.

 

Since then, Tennessee’s offense has fallen off big time. Under Downing, the Titans went from elite offenses in 2019 and 2020, to around average in 2021 to one of the worst in the NFL in 2022.

 

Granted, injuries and a ton of personnel changes in those two years no doubt played a part, but Downing also wasn’t good at his job and there was never a time we could say his play-calling elevated this offense in either year.

 

The embattled former offensive coordinator also ran into trouble off the field, when he was arrested for a DUI back in November following the Titans’ last win of the season in Week 11 against the Green Bay Packers.

 

Carter served as the offensive line coach from 2018-22. During that time, the Titans saw some absolutely putrid offensive line play in pass protection. It wasn’t all Carter’s fault, though, as injuries and bad personnel decisions upfront also contributed.

 

Whatever the case may be, the Titans definitely needed some new blood on the offensive coaching staff, so this is definitely the right start.

The Titans have also made four requests in the start of their GM search – more from Moraitis:

The Tennessee Titans have already begun their search for a new general manager after the team parted ways with Jon Robinson this during the season.

 

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the Titans have put in requests to interview executives from the Chicago Bears, San Francisco 49ers and Cleveland Browns.

 

Three of the four are assistant GMs in Adam Peters (49ers), Glenn Cook (Browns) and Ian Cunningham (Bears). The fourth is Niners director of player personnel, Ran Carthon.

 

Along with those four, the Titans will interview two in-house candidates in current interim GM and Vice President of Player Personnel Ryan Cowden and Director of Player Personnel Monti Ossenfort.

AFC EAST
 

MIAMI

Can RB RAHEEM MOSTERT play Sunday in Buffalo with a fractured thumb?  Ian Rapoport:

 

@RapSheet

Sources: #Dolphins RB Raheem Mostert suffered a broken thumb in the playoff-clinching win over the #Jets. He gained 71 yards on 11 carries and was explosive. Now, status is in doubt against the #Bills.

 

NEW ENGLAND

Bill Belichick on his plans for 2023 per Chris Mason of MassLive.com:

Bill Belichick is on to the 2023 season.

 

In his season-ending press conference after an 8-9 finish, the 70-year-old-coach confirmed that he planned on returning to New England for a 24th year. By Monday afternoon, Belichick said he’ll have turned the page to next season.

 

“Our record is right around .500, which is kind of what it’s been all year,” Belichick said. “Some good things and some not-so-good things. Nobody’s satisfied with that. That’s not our goal, and we need to try to improve on that. We need to improve on it. So, that’s on all of us. Accountability everywhere, starting with me, coaching staff, players, each unit. All things that we will address, and that process will start probably later today.”

 

That process will include a year-end sit down with Robert Kraft, which is standard procedure, though it could be more eventual than past years because the owner has reportedly told people in the building he’s not happy with the offensive coaching situation.

 

“As we do every year, we’ll evaluate everything and try to make the best decisions that we can to move forward, to be more competitive, to have a stronger team in the future,” Belichick said. “So Robert and I will talk about that, we’ll talk about that as a staff, and certainly individual conversations with many of the players, as we always do. Well, all the players, but there’s some that are obviously more urgent, will be more timely than others, but it will be a comprehensive course of action, as it always is. I don’t see the process being really any different, but we need to have better results. That’s really the bottom line.

 

“The process will start today.”

 

THIS AND THAT

 

THE SUSPENSION, THEN CANCELLATION, OF BUFF-CIN

ESPN has not taken kindly to the NFL’s denial of the report that there was contemplation of resuming last Monday night’s game after a five-minute warmup.  And they have sicced one of their top investigators, Don Van Natta, Jr., to get the truth out there.

An hour after Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed on the field and about 35 minutes after he was rushed to a Cincinnati hospital, a small knot of people gathered amid a chaotic scene outside the locker rooms beneath Paycor Stadium.

 

Bills coach Sean McDermott, Bengals coach Zac Taylor, referee Shawn Smith and a few team executives and staffers stood anxiously in a semicircle with NFL chief football administrator Dawn Aponte. Passing Aponte’s cellphone back and forth, they spoke with NFL executives at the league’s command center in Manhattan.

 

It was 9:55 p.m. ET and the stadium’s scoreboard read: “THE GAME IS TEMPORARILY SUSPENDED. PLEASE STAND BY FOR FURTHER INFORMATION.” League officials still had not decided the game’s fate. But for both teams’ coaches and players, there was never a doubt: They would not play another down that Monday night.

 

“The Lord himself could come down, and we were not going to play again,” a high-ranking official from one of the teams told ESPN on the condition of his and the team’s anonymity. “She [Aponte] was getting pressure. She was not getting consistent and direct messaging that she deserved to receive.”

 

Aponte appeared caught between two teams who didn’t want to play and league officials inside the command center, led by NFL executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent, who left open that possibility for nearly an hour, the official said. “Whatever crazy nonsense she was getting,” the official added, “man, she held it. She held it strong.”

 

While NFL officials insisted that they never intended to restart the Bills-Bengals game, the accounts of coaches, players, union officials and team executives tell another story: Postponing the game was a ground-up decision.

 

“The league did not cancel the game,” the team official said. “The Bills and the Bengals canceled the game.”

 

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said Monday that the league would have no further comment. Last week, McCarthy answered some questions about why ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” broadcast initially reported that the teams would resume play after a five-minute warmup. He said at the time Vincent and other league officials would not comment.

 

According to Rule 17-1-4 of the NFL rulebook, the decision to postpone a game due to extraordinary circumstances lies with commissioner Roger Goodell.

 

The next day, in a memo to all 32 teams, the commissioner indicated he had made the call: “After speaking with both teams and NFLPA leadership, I decided to postpone last night’s game and have our focus remain on Damar and his family.”

 

On Sunday, Goodell addressed the question for the first time, telling Boston’s The Sports Hub the decision to postpone the game that night came “with a lot of discussion.”

 

“A standard practice would be to resume play, but when you get feedback that it may not be appropriate, that’s when Troy made the decision to suspend play,” Goodell said. “Which was the right decision, and allow everyone to go back and let’s gather ourselves and get more information, which was clear we needed to do. So, and then I made the decision to postpone shortly thereafter.”

 

That final decision might have belonged to Goodell, but the first instinct not to play came on the field in Cincinnati.

 

“The ambulance left the field … and it was crystal clear from everyone’s perspective that we could not play,” the top team official said. Aponte was speaking nonstop to NFL executives in New York and coaches and officials at the game. “The only chaos was coming … from the command center.”

 

The NFL’s senior-most executive inside the command center was Vincent, who oversaw staff on the field and others in communication with broadcast partners. In a conference call hours after the game was suspended, Vincent adamantly denied reports on ESPN’s broadcast that the game would resume after a five-minute warmup.

 

“And I was the one … that was communicating with the commissioner,” Vincent said. “We never, frankly, it never crossed our mind to talk about warming up to resume play. That’s ridiculous. That’s insensitive, and that’s not a place that we should ever be in.”

 

Last Wednesday, an indignant Vincent sounded near tears during a news conference as he repeated that the league never intended to resume play. Any other suggestion, he said, is “insensitive and frankly it lacked both empathy and compassion for Damar’s situation.”

 

Vincent said that he was in constant communications with staff at the stadium.

 

“My mic was completely open in talking to Shawn [Smith] and at that time I’m the center resource,” Vincent said. “At no time in my discussion in that hourlong time frame did we ever even — myself — reference [or] give any directives about getting players ready to play.”

 

The team official placed blame for the league’s vacillation squarely on Vincent.

 

“The league screws this s— up because Troy Vincent screws this stuff up,” the official said. “That’s the wrong person in the wrong position at the absolute wrong time … He wants to be the hero, but he will never take accountability. That’s him to a T.”

 

In his comments to reporters last week, McDermott said there had been no word from New York on whether the game would be suspended when he and Taylor pulled players off the field and returned to their locker rooms.

 

“I went in and addressed the team and just felt like overall it was going to be really hard to put them back out there,” McDermott, who felt the need to be at the hospital with Hamlin, said. “But I wanted to give them the option to go back out there if they wanted to. And led by Josh [Allen] and a couple of the other captains they decided not to go back out there.”

 

Union officials echoed that view late last week.

 

“It sounds like there was a lot of checking to see what everybody’s opinion was,” NFL Players Association President JC Tretter said. “Moments like that are time for leadership, time to step up and make the right decision. And I think sometimes when you spend a lot of time asking for everybody’s answer, you’re looking for a specific answer. … It’s why it probably took an hour, is my opinion.”

 

An hour after Hamlin fell, with the game still not officially postponed, some team officials were confused why NFL executives were delaying the inevitable. Multiple ideas and contingencies were floated from New York, two people with knowledge said, including the idea that the Bills would stay overnight in Cincinnati. That was “almost instantly shot down,” a source said.

 

“We felt confusion and nonsense more than pressure,” the team official said. “They were still discussing things. In our mind there was nothing to be discussed … If they would have said, ‘If you leave you’re forfeiting the game,’ we’re still leaving.”

 

Paramedics spent 9 minutes working to revive Hamlin, who fell to the field at 8:55 p.m. after making a routine tackle. A ring of weeping and kneeling players surrounded them. During those agonizing minutes, TV viewers got almost no new information as ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” broadcast went to four consecutive commercial breaks. Eventually, Hamlin was taken off the field in an ambulance.

 

At roughly 9:10 p.m. — 15 minutes after Hamlin fell — DeMaurice Smith, the leader of the players’ union, said he called Goodell. “I was on the phone with Roger immediately,” Smith said, “and once I realized just how serious it was, made it clear that I believe that the game should be postponed.”

 

At 9:14 p.m., Taylor crossed the field to talk with referees and McDermott, who covered his mouth as he spoke. “I said to Shawn Smith, ‘Hey, we’re gonna need some time here,'” McDermott said.

 

At that moment, on the ESPN broadcast, play-by-play announcer Joe Buck told viewers: “They’re going to try to continue to play this game.”

 

Multiple first-hand sources told ESPN that it was a senior NFL rules analyst inside the NFL command center who conveyed the plan to resume play to John Parry, an officiating expert working in the ESPN broadcast booth.

 

What Buck had relayed to more than 23 million TV viewers came from Parry, who had an open line of communication with the NFL rules analyst in the command center. Four times during the stoppage, Buck told viewers that the game would continue, saying one time it was an NFL decision.

 

The broadcast simultaneously showed Bills WR Stefon Diggs trying to rally his teammates and Bengals QB Joe Burrow throwing passes to warm up.

 

“People were saying we were going to play again,” Burrow said. “It was just a lot of chaos, a lot of emotions, a lot of people saying different things. We really didn’t know what was going on at that point.”

 

Taylor said he “didn’t feel any directive that guys need to start warming up.”

 

“We’ve been through this situation a million times where there’s an injury on the field,” Taylor said. “There was no push for anything to happen. It was just, let’s let these moments play out, see what the next step is, as people get a chance to get their minds right. Ultimately, that’s what led to the decision.”

 

At 9:16 p.m., as cameras showed referees huddled with the coaches, Buck told the national TV audience: “They’ve been given five minutes to quote-unquote get ready to go back to playing. That’s the word we get from the league and the word we get from down on the field, but nobody’s moving.”

 

Also about the same time, ESPN Deportes’ Spanish-language play-by-play team, relying on the same information, reported that the teams were operating on a five-minute warmup before resuming play.

 

“The league is telling us that they’ve given five minutes to warm up again and that the match will begin,” Eduardo Varela told the audience.

 

Immediately after their huddle with officials, both teams’ coaches sent the players to their locker rooms, and the referee told fans in the stadium that the game was being “temporarily suspended.”

 

“Joe just talked with New York in the command center,” Parry said on the air. “The situation has risen to a point where they want to give both teams, coaches, personnel, an opportunity to go back into the locker room, regroup themselves and so the game has temporarily been suspended to give them the opportunity — whatever they need at this point, teams are driving it.”

 

Over the next half hour, as ESPN bounced among Buck, studio analysts and commercial breaks, players gathered themselves in their locker rooms while team and league officials huddled over what to do. In the Bills’ room, emotions were high as players consoled each other and took an informal poll.

 

“It wasn’t like one person standing up kinda saying this thing, it was really a back and forth between the coaches, the players, and it was pretty cool to see,” Bills center Mitch Morse said.

 

On the Westwood One national radio broadcast, Rich Eisen told listeners at 9:42 p.m.: “There was a moment after the ambulance left the field where both teams repaired to their sidelines and appeared to be getting ready to come back out on the field after a five-minute warmup.” Eisen said he heard the information from watching the ESPN broadcast and not from the league. “I figured, if Joe said it, it’s gotta be true,” Eisen said in an interview. “I know this goes against what I was taught at Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism about verifying every piece of information, but I was sure Joe had it right.”

 

The league suspended the game at 10:01 p.m. ET, 66 minutes after Hamlin’s collapse.

 

Hours after Hamlin was transported to the hospital and the game was suspended, Vincent told reporters that the NFL had never decided that the game would continue and league officials never told anyone that had been decided.

 

“I’m not sure where that came from,” Vincent said. “Five-minute warmup never crossed my mind, personally. And I was the one … that was communicating with the commissioner. We never, frankly, it never crossed our mind to talk about warming up to resume play. That’s ridiculous. That’s insensitive, and that’s not a place that we should ever be in.”

 

In a statement after Vincent’s initial comments, ESPN disputed Vincent’s denials, saying, “There was constant communication in real time between ESPN and league and game officials. As a result of that, we reported what we were told in the moment and immediately updated fans as new information was learned. This was an unprecedented, rapidly-evolving circumstance. All night long, we refrained from speculation.”

 

Parry declined to comment to ESPN beyond saying, “The ESPN statement was accurate.”

 

Last week, McCarthy said the NFL rules analyst in the command center was “adamant that at no time did he say anything related to a five-minute warmup period to John Parry … John is just plain wrong.”

 

“We stand by Troy Vincent’s comments and strongly refute this characterization,” McCarthy said.

 

Buck told ESPN that what he conveyed to a national audience came from Parry, who was in constant communications with the league office.

 

In an interview, Buck said he was “surprised” to hear Vincent had said that the information about the intended resumption of the game did not come from the league office.

 

“If what I said on national TV with the eyes of the world watching was wrong in the view of the league, I would have been corrected — immediately,” Buck said. “And I was not.”

 

Four separate times in a span of 45 minutes, Buck indicated that the game would resume.

 

No one from the league ever asked for a retraction. “We were on the air for another 40 minutes and no one corrected the idea that the game would resume,” Buck said. “No one.”

 

“I can’t imagine what was going on in that room and the different scenarios and the heartache in that command center,” Buck continued. “It’s unprecedented, what we all witnessed and went through. Nothing is going to be perfect. I just know that we went with the information we were given by the league. I went on the air with a piece of information by John Parry through an open line of communication with the league that they gave us in real time.”

 

But, Buck added, “The important piece of this is Damar Hamlin is fighting for his life and beyond that nothing else really matters.”

 

Last Thursday, the NFL announced that the Bills-Bengals game would be canceled. It was the same day as news arrived that Hamlin’s condition and prognosis had dramatically improved. On Monday, a week after he collapsed, Hamlin was transferred from a hospital in Cincinnati to another in Buffalo to continue his remarkable recovery.