MainePatsFan26
Rotational Player and Threatening Starter's Job
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2011
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Hey all, I just had a brief topic about assistant coaches I'd like to discuss.
Are coaching salaries the great loophole in the NFL? As far as I know, there is no salary cap or similar structure for coaches. Obviously with how much is going on in your average NFL game, having an elite coaching staff -- not just head coach -- goes a long way towards success. My question, then, is why don't some teams pay an absurd premium to keep great assistant coaches? The conventional wisdom is you seek a head coaching job because it pays more and creates a greater legacy. However, with McDaniels and Patricia meshing well with Belichick, why not back up the Brink truck?
We pay Belichick 7.5 million versus McDaniels 1.5 million. Why not give an assistant like McDaniels 5 million a season to keep him happy? Is there some sort of ratio in the NFL about how much an assistant coach should make in relation to the head coach? If so, pay Belichick 10 million a year and give McDaniels and Patricia a huge salary.
Having a great staff is what keeps you a winner as much as elite talent on the field. With Kraft being Mr. Money Bags with the Pats success, why not exploit the lack of a coaching salary cap by throwing a ton of money at the coaching staff?
Thoughts?
Are coaching salaries the great loophole in the NFL? As far as I know, there is no salary cap or similar structure for coaches. Obviously with how much is going on in your average NFL game, having an elite coaching staff -- not just head coach -- goes a long way towards success. My question, then, is why don't some teams pay an absurd premium to keep great assistant coaches? The conventional wisdom is you seek a head coaching job because it pays more and creates a greater legacy. However, with McDaniels and Patricia meshing well with Belichick, why not back up the Brink truck?
We pay Belichick 7.5 million versus McDaniels 1.5 million. Why not give an assistant like McDaniels 5 million a season to keep him happy? Is there some sort of ratio in the NFL about how much an assistant coach should make in relation to the head coach? If so, pay Belichick 10 million a year and give McDaniels and Patricia a huge salary.
Having a great staff is what keeps you a winner as much as elite talent on the field. With Kraft being Mr. Money Bags with the Pats success, why not exploit the lack of a coaching salary cap by throwing a ton of money at the coaching staff?
Thoughts?












