The 2026 NFL coaching carousel is spinning at warp speed: six vacancies, four prime candidates and one seismic domino—Sean McDermott to Las Vegas—that flips the balance of power in both conferences.
The Market in One Sentence
After the Ravens axed John Harbaugh, the Dolphins dumped Mike McDaniel, Mike Tomlin walked in Pittsburgh and the Bills shocked the league by firing Sean McDermott, six franchises are scrambling for identity before free agency opens in March.
Why McDermott-to-Raiders Makes Instant Sense
Las Vegas has hired and fired five head coaches since 2018; stability is the new sexy. McDermott brings it in spades: nine straight winning seasons in Buffalo, four top-four scoring defenses and a scheme that maximized lesser rosters. Pair him with presumptive No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza and an edge group anchored by Maxx Crosby, and the Raiders finally have a defensive backbone to match their Vegas flash.
Cardinals Pivot to Vance Joseph
Arizona whiffed on Robert Saleh when the Titans closed faster, but general manager Monti Ossenfort keeps a short list of retreads he trusts. Joseph, 53, turned Denver’s pass rush into a 68-sack monster in 2025—most in the league per NFL Next Gen Stats. His 2019-22 stint in the desert means he already knows the facility, the training staff and the altitude.
Ravens Go Back to the Harbaugh Tree—Just Not John
Baltimore wants continuity without nostalgia. Enter Jesse Minter, 42, who coached linebackers for John Harbaugh from 2017-20. In Los Angeles he just produced the NFL’s No. 1 scoring defense and eighth-ranked unit in EPA per play. The Ravens keep the same vernacular, the same practice tempo and the same playoff expectations—only the face in front of the team meeting changes.
Buffalo’s In-House Gamble: Davis Webb
Sean McDermott’s firing signals a philosophical flip to offense. The smartest hedge is promoting Davis Webb, the 31-year-old passing-game coordinator who molded Bo Nix into a back-to-back playoff quarterback. Webb already has locker-room equity: he held a clipboard behind Josh Allen from 2019-21. If Allen is the franchise, why not hire the coach who speaks his language literally and schematically?
Steelers Choose Flores Over Nostalgia
Mike Tomlin’s shadow is 19 seasons long. To escape it, Pittsburgh needs a defense-first coach who can keep the streak alive. Brian Flores, 44, transformed Minnesota’s defense from 32nd to 1st in pressure rate (41.4%) in three seasons. His blitz-heavy, disguise-rich system is AFC North weather-proof—and his 2022 season on Tomlin’s staff gives him insider knowledge of the Steelers’ way.
Cleveland’s Youth Movement: Nate Scheelhaase
Kevin Stefanski’s playoff exits convinced the Browns to bet on upside over experience. Scheelhaase, 35, helped Matthew Stafford throw 46 touchdowns against eight picks in 2025. His college roots (four-year starter at Illinois, six-year Iowa State assistant) translate to QB whisperer credentials—exactly what Cleveland needs to salvage Deshaun Watson’s contract and finally stabilize the league’s most unstable position.
What Happens Next
- Second interviews wrap by Super Bowl week; contracts are queued for league approval the moment the confetti hits the turf.
- Don’t rule out a surprise pivot—if the Chargers bow out early, Jim Harbaugh could still re-enter the chat.
- Coordinator salaries are spiking: expect Joseph and Flores to top $5 million annually, setting a new market floor.
Bottom Line
This carousel isn’t just about jobs—it’s about seismic conference power shifts. McDermott in silver and black flips the AFC West arms race. Joseph in the desert reboots a rivalry with San Francisco’s offensive brain trust. Minter in Baltimore keeps the Ravens’ defensive standard intact. Bet on these moves to ripple through free agency and the 2026 draft board.
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