Doug Marrone, Who Interviewed With Jets, Named Jags' Assistant Head Coach
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (CBSNewYork/AP) — Doug Marrone probably didn't envision this when he walked away from the Buffalo Bills last month.
After interviewing for at least three NFL head coaching jobs, Marrone landed with the Jacksonville Jaguars as assistant head coach and offensive line coach Tuesday.
He interviewed with the New York Jets -- Todd Bowles got the job -- the Chicago Bears and the Atlanta Falcons, and also was considered in the mix in Denver, but didn't get a single offer — not as head coach or offensive coordinator.
So he ended up in Jacksonville, where he's returning to his roots as an O-line coach.
Marrone replaces George Yarno, who left the team last June to begin cancer treatment. Assistant Luke Butkus served as the interim line coach this season.
With two rookies and two second-year players starting on the line, the Jaguars gave up a franchise-record 71 sacks. Two days after the season, coach Gus Bradley said he expected Yarno to return for the 2015 season.
Clearly, something changed.
Bradley interviewed Marrone last week. The Jaguars, who are coaching the Senior Bowl this week in Mobile, Alabama, still need to hire an offensive coordinator.
Bradley met with six candidates for the job, which opened when Jedd Fisch was fired after the regular season. Oakland offensive coordinator Greg Olson and former Denver offensive coordinator Adam Gase appear to still be in the mix for the opening.
The Jaguars will sell Marrone's hiring as a home run, being able to get someone with his experience to help steer a young offense.
Just about everyone else will see it as Marrone making a questionable choice to leave Buffalo.
Co-Bills owner Terry Pegula said he was "shocked" by Marrone's abrupt departure on New Year's Eve. Safety Aaron Williams blasted Marrone in a tweet, posting "Lost all respect!!"
Running back Fred Jackson referred to Rex Ryan as "an upgrade" at coach. And Ryan said during his introductory news conference that the Bills deserve to have a loyal coach — a clear shot at Marrone.
Marrone stepped down after leading the Bills to a 9-7 finish. It was the team's first winning season since 2004.
The opt-out clause in Marrone's contract went into effect after Pegula and wife Kim bought the team in October. The team was sold after Hall of Fame owner Ralph Wilson died in March.
Marrone went 15-17 in Buffalo. He was hired after four seasons at Syracuse, where he helped revive his alma mater's struggling program.
Marrone spent seven seasons in the NFL (2002-08) before becoming a collegiate head coach. He served as offensive coordinator for New Orleans (2006-08), and was offensive line coach for the New York Jets for four seasons before that.
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