Bills promote OC Joe Brady to head coach as team aims to end Super Bowl drought

Bills promote OC Joe Brady to head coach as team aims to end Super Bowl drought

The Buffalo Bills stayed in-house by promoting offensive coordinator Joe Brady as their new head coach on Tuesday on a five-year deal.

The 36-year-old just completed his fourth season in Buffalo and his second full season as coordinator. He previously served as quarterbacks coach before taking over the offense after Ken Dorsey was fired midway through the 2023 season.

Brady’s promotion came a little more than a week after Sean McDermott was fired following a nine-year tenure.

Brady, who has no previous head coaching experience, broke into the league with the New Orleans Saints, spending two seasons as an offensive assistant under Sean Payton. He left the Saints to serve as passing game coordinator on LSU’s 2019 national championship team. Considered an up-and-coming head coaching candidate, Brady returned to the NFL by taking over as the Carolina Panthers offensive coordinator before being fired late in the 2021 season.

Aside from Buffalo, Brady interviewed for five other NFL openings, including still-existing vacancies in Arizona and Las Vegas. Buffalo met with nine candidates in an interview process led by general manager Brandon Beane, and which included franchise quarterback Josh Allen. Buffalo was the 10th and final NFL team to have a coaching vacancy this offseason, and missed out on interviewing John Harbaugh, who was hired by the New York Giants.

Among the candidates were former Giants coach Brian Daboll, who was Buffalo’s offensive coordinator before landing the job in New York. The Bills also interviewed Jacksonville offensive coordinator Grant Udinski and 44-year-old quarterback Philip Rivers, who removed his name from consideration three days after meeting with Buffalo.

Under Brady, the Bills offense took a far more balanced approach in part to take the burden off Allen. Brady also introduced what became known as an “Everybody Eats,” share-the-wealth approach to the passing game, which followed Buffalo trading leading receiver Stefon Diggs to Houston in April 2024.

The approach worked the following season, with Allen earning AP NFL MVP honors for his 28 touchdowns passing (plus 12 rushing) and a career-low six interceptions and a receiving group led by Khalil Shakir’s 76 catches for 821 yards.

This season, the Bills offense ranked fourth in the NFL in total yards and tied for fourth in scoring. Though Buffalo were knocked for a middling group of receivers, running back James Cook finished with 1,621 yards rushing to become the first Bills player to lead the NFL in rushing since OJ Simpson in 1976.

It’s now on Brady to get the Bills over the hump in the postseason. In nine seasons, McDermott transformed a longtime loser – ending Buffalo’s 17-year playoff drought in his first season – into a franchise that became the NFL’s only team to qualify for the postseason in each of the past seven years.

Buffalo had 10 or more wins in each of those seven years and enjoyed a five-year stretch as AFC East champions before going 12-5 and finishing second to Super Bowl-bound New England this season.

On the downside, the Bills became the NFL’s first team to win a playoff round in six straight years but not make the Super Bowl. The closest Buffalo came were AFC championship game appearances in the 2020 and 2024 seasons, both ending in losses at Kansas City.

The coaching change comes with Allen entering his ninth NFL season and set to turn 30 in May. The franchise is beginning a new era with the Bills moving across the street into a newly constructed $2.1bn stadium.

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