Mike Tannenbaum News - MinnesotaSportsFan https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/tag/mike-tannenbaum/ Minnesota sports, but different Thu, 19 Sep 2024 14:55:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=32,height=32,fit=crop,quality=80,format=auto,onerror=redirect,metadata=none/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-cropped-MSF-favicon-1.jpg Mike Tannenbaum News - MinnesotaSportsFan https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/tag/mike-tannenbaum/ 32 32 Video of Kevin O’Connell Being Ruthlessly Cut by Well-Known Former Jets GM https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-vikings/minnesota-vikings-news/kevin-oconnell-once-cut-jets-mike-tannenbaum-hard-knocks/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 14:33:00 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=55200 Before Kevin O’Connell became one of the best up-and-coming head coaches in the NFL, he was a washout 2008 2nd round draft pick who failed over and over again to make a roster, out of multiple different training camps.

In three years, from August 2009 to August 2012, KOC was signed, cut or traded 11 different times, by 5 different teams (Patriots, Jets, Dolphins, Chargers, Lions). But from what we know, only one of those moments was caught on video.

That time Kevin O’Connell was cut by the New York Jets on Hard Knocks

On August 31, 2010, O’Connell was called in by then New York Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum. Now, Tannenbaum is an NFL in-studio analyst for ESPN shows like Get Up and SportsCenter. In his prime, though, he was one of the most well-known and ballyhooed front office leaders in the league.

That day, his conversation with a 25-year-old Kevin O’Connell was short and… not so sweet. The entire conversation lasted only 30 seconds. It was caught on camera by HBO’s Hard Knocks, which was in its 6th season, at that time.

Mike Tannenbaum’s cold approach helped shape KOC, the coach

In most scenarios, firings or break-ups are best served cold and clean. Trying to sugarcoat conversations like that only make the situation worse. In a professional environment, when everyone knows the cut-throat nature of the job, less is usually more. And without a doubt, watching this video back, that was Mike’s policy back in 2010.

Nobody will call Kevin O’Connell’s playing career “disappointing” faster than he will. Looking back now, KOC knows that his brain just did not process the live playing field fast enough for him to play at the NFL level.

Related: Pat McAfee Show Blown Away by One of Us Minnesota Vikings ‘Cash Man’

But going through that three-year NFL speed-dating carousel, full of cold moments like what you see above, helped mold our head coach into the leader he is, now. If you want to know why Kevin bases his coaching style on empathy and gratitude.

Why he constantly pushes back on the old school “football guy” coach methodology, it’s in part because of everything he went through, as a player.

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Thu, 19 Sep 2024 09:55:26 +0000 Minnesota Vikings News Minnesota Vikings
Rex Ryan Believes Kevin O’Connell to be the Smartest Player He Ever Coached https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-vikings/rex-ryan-jets-kevin-oconnell-smartest-player-he-ever-coached/ Wed, 07 Jun 2023 17:31:32 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=42806 Current Minnesota Vikings head coach, Kevin O’Connell, completed four passes for a total of 23 yards during his NFL playing career. Given he was a top-100 draft pick (Patriots – 3rd rd, 94th pick overall), calling him a bust wouldn’t be hyperbolic.

Still, KOC used his big brain and exceptional communication skills to open all sorts of eyes during his four years bouncing around the the NFL (Patriots, Lions, Jets, Dolphins, Chargers) from 2008-2012.

Backup QB, Kevin O’Connell, impresses Rex Ryan and Mike Tannenbaum in New York.

O’Connell’s longest stop was in New York from fall-2009 through the 2011 season. KOC spent most of three-straight seasons with the Jets because then up-and-coming head coach, Rex Ryan, believed him to be the smartest player he had ever coached. That’s what ESPN analyst Mike Tannenbaum — who was general manager of the Jets from 2006-2012 — told the “Ross Tucker Podcast” on Wednesday.

According to Tannenbaum, not only did O’Connell contribute in big ways to coaching and gameplanning offensively, but he was a big help for Rex Ryan in designing and executing his unstoppable and infamous blitz schemes back then. KOC made such an impact on the Jets from 2009 through 2011 that, over a decade later, his former GM has Kevin O’Connell in his top-3 “young” head coaching options, if starting a brand new NFL franchise today.

(Captions are built into the video so I did not transcribe below).

O’Connell was drafted by the Patriots (April, 2008) and waived 16 months later (Aug. 31, 2009). He was picked up by the Lions the next day (Sept. 1, 2009), who then flipped him to the New York Jets for a 7th round pick not even a week later (Sept. 6, 2009).

Player/Coach, Kevin O’Connell

KOC never played a regular season down for the Jets and actually spent a large chunk of his time in New York on the Injured Reserve list. The organizational braintrust, at the time, saw him as a valuable game-planning tool on both sides of the ball.

The New York Times wrote about his sideline contributions in December, 2011. Offensive coordinator, Brian Schottenheimer, knew he was a valuable asset on gameday and teammates, even then, were already calling him “Coach O’Connell”.

O’Connell, however, is much more than a bit player. Coaches and players describe him as a quasi coach, sticking close to Sanchez during games and consulting with Coach Rex Ryan’s assistants. O’Connell has an uncanny knack for reading a game, recognizing defensive coverages and contributing insights like helping to explain how cornerbacks defended receivers.

“He’s a coach with a lot of football talent,” said the rookie quarterback Greg McElroy, who is on injured reserve. “That’s really what it is. He has a great mind for it, a great eye for it. He has a tremendous feel on game days. He can see the entire field from the sideline. He can see the game vertically, as if watching film, from the sidelines.”

“He’s great on game day,” Schottenheimer said. “He has a clipboard. He’s charting coverages and things like that. He really gets the game. He really gets the game and I think, obviously, when he’s done playing, he’ll be a great coach.”

New York Times (Dec. 2011)
KOC the defensive mastermind…?

But now that we know he was also helping out on defense, per Mike Tannenbaum, guess what… he may have been keeping that side of the ball afloat too. The numbers from back suggest that might be the case.

New York’s defense ranked 1st in the NFL in both yards and points allowed in 2009, before ranking 3rd and 6th in both categories in 2010. KOC was with the Jets both seasons, before he was waived in July, 2011. Tannenbaum signed him back a month later (**see table below) but, by then, the damage had been done.

YearTmDef Yds AldDef Pts AldKOC
2009NYJ11Yes
2010NYJ36Yes (IL)
2011NYJ520Yes**
2012NYJ820No
2013NYJ1119No
2014NYJ624No
**The Jets cut O’Connell on 7/29/11 before signing him again on 9/4/11 — He was picked up and waived by the Dolphins for the month+ in-between.

Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 6/7/2023.

The Jets’ defense wasn’t terrible after cutting their backup QB (and defensive blitz specialist) in the 2011 offseason but — whether it had anything to do with his departure or not — Rex Ryan’s mojo was never the same again.

While they remained in the top-10, in points allowed, for most of Ryan’s coaching tenure; they really struggled to keep teams off the scoreboard from 2011 through when Rex was fired, following the 2014 season. Calm down, I’m not saying Kevin O’Connell was the key to Rex Ryan’s impressive defensive or the Jets’ playoff runs back in 2009 and 2010. I’m strictly presenting facts.

Just saying…

What is clear, however, is that KOC has positively impacted many peers and superiors, while making his way through the player and coaching ranks during his 15 years in the NFL. Hopefully, we’ve found found a good one the right one. We need that big ole’ brain of his to find a way to finally put the Minnesota Vikings over the Super Bowl hump.

Eric Strack | Minnesota Sports Fan

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Wed, 07 Jun 2023 12:36:33 +0000 Minnesota Vikings