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NFL

John Lynch's surprising hire demands patience … and plenty of scrutiny

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jaws are still being picked up off the floor in the Bay Area on Monday morning after the San Francisco 49ers’ stunning, out-of-left-field decision to hire former NFL safety John Lynch as general manager on Sunday evening.

As soon as the initial shock of a 2-14 team hiring a general manager with zero experience evaluating and acquiring talent subsides, there’s plenty left to unpack, much of which will focus on just how unqualified Lynch is for the job compared with the other nine candidates the team interviewed throughout a process that started nearly a month ago.

Hiring Lynch out of the Fox booth sent shock waves through the league, immediately drawing comparisons to the failed experiment the Detroit Lions conducted with Matt Millen, the most recent example of a broadcaster turned team-builder. Millen was in charge of the Lions from 2001 to 2007, with Detroit compiling a 31-81 record before he lost his power and, eventually, his job in the 2008 season.

That doesn’t mean Lynch isn’t capable of stepping in and getting the job done. Lynch was a winning, successful player in his career and he understands what it takes to succeed at the league’s highest level. Former players such as John Elway in Denver and Ozzie Newsome in Baltimore have gone on to successful careers as executives, though it’s worth noting that both had experience in talent evaluation (Elway in the Arena League, Newsome through the Ravens organization) before they became the chief decision-maker.

The 49ers are hiring Hall of Fame candidate and Fox analyst John Lynch to be their new general manager. AP Photo/Jack Dempsey

But while the likes of Elway and Newsome gained their experience in other positions, the Niners are asking Lynch to learn on the job. ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter reported that the team gave Lynch a six-year deal, which is unprecedented, especially for a first-time general manager. While that could be a sign that the Niners simply couldn’t land any of their other candidates and hired Lynch because he was the one willing to say yes, it’s also an indication the team is finally willing to be patient with a new regime.

Presumptive next coach Kyle Shanahan, who can’t be hired until after the Atlanta Falcons play in the Super Bowl but gave his blessing to the Lynch hire, will get the same contract terms as Lynch. From the outset of this process, Niners CEO Jed York made it clear he wanted a general manager and coach who could be on the same page. York didn’t box himself into the idea of hiring a coach then a general manager — or vice versa — but once it became clear that Shanahan was the priority, the goal then became to find a general manager who could work well with Shanahan.

“We need to make sure that the head coach and the general manager know each other, have a good understanding for each other,” York said on Jan. 1. “It doesn’t mean that they had to have worked together in the past but they have to have a good respect for each other and a good understanding and know that they have similar visions and philosophies on building a football team.”

With Shanahan apparently signing off on Lynch — Lynch played for Shanahan’s father, Mike, in Denver — there’s little doubt he will wield the ultimate personnel hammer, assuming he does indeed become the next head coach. But Shanahan has never been a head coach either, meaning the Niners are pinning their hopes of a full-on rebuild on two people who have never overseen such a project.

So while the Niners seem to be set on their two biggest hires in Shanahan and Lynch, the people who surround the pair will be just as, if not more important in helping to shape the future of the organization.

This is a roster that didn’t have a single Pro Bowler in 2016, has little in the way of clear-cut building blocks and could soon have zero quarterbacks under contract for 2017. Although the 49ers are going to have more than $80 million in salary-cap space and the No. 2 overall pick in the draft, there were no miracle workers for either job who figured to come in and offer an immediate turnaround.

By burning through three coaches in as many seasons, York created a situation in which he had to try to convince top candidates to fill the openings, instead of having the ability to pick from the best options available. It’s a point driven home by the fact that the Niners didn’t hire any of the nine executives they interviewed despite spending all but one week of the past month with the only general manager job available, and by the length of contracts they intend to give Lynch and Shanahan.

Only time will tell if the Niners’ big gamble will pay off. Fortunately for Lynch and Shanahan, time is something they’ll have plenty of to lead a once-proud franchise in a new direction.

Soccer

Van Gaal backtracks on retirement; future 'depends on offers'

Agence France-Presse

January 18, 2017 1:51pm

Phil Noble / Reuters

Madrid – Louis van Gaal says he is not definitely done with football just yet, after appearing to suggest earlier this week that he was retiring from the game at 65.

The Dutchman, who was sacked by Manchester United last year after an uninspiring stint at Old Trafford, had told popular daily tabloid De Telegraaf: “I don’t believe I’ll return to work.”

But less than a day later Van Gaal rowed back on that, telling Spanish radio overnight that nothing was final and his future “depends on offers” at the end of what he has called a sabbatical.

“I am not retiring,” Van Gaal, whose decorated coaching career included two spells at Barcelona and with the Dutch national side, told Cadena Ser radio.

“I took a sabbatical year and then maybe I will decide whether or not to retire. There is a strong possibility that I will retire, but it’s not final.”

Van Gaal revealed that he had received an offer from La Liga crisis club Valencia.

“It was about a month ago, but I said no. Next year, it might have been different. That depends on how I feel.”

Clarifying his comments published in Tuesday’s De Telegraaf, Van Gaal — who says he has received dozens of lucrative offers since his United departure last May — added: “I only said that perhaps I was going to retire. But I don’t know, it’s still not the moment to say.

“That’s why I took a sabbatical for a year, and then I would decide. It depends also on what offers I get.”

NFL

Chiefs' Ballard will replace Grigson as Colts GM

INDIANAPOLIS — The Colts have named Chris Ballard their new general manager, the team announced Sunday.

Ballard replaces Ryan Grigson, who was fired Jan. 21 after five seasons with the organization.

  • The Colts will have to rebuild their roster through the draft, and Chris Ballard’s body of work suggests that he is up to the task.

  • Chris Ballard was No. 3 in the Chiefs’ chain of football command, and as such had an important voice in a lot of their player personnel moves.

1 Related

“Chris has a solid reputation throughout the National Football League as a heavyweight executive and our extensive discussions with him confirmed that reputation,” Irsay said in a statement released by the team. “He’s a savvy, organized, and thorough talent evaluator, but beyond that, he’s a terrific person our community will be proud of.”

Ballard joined the Kansas City Chiefs as director of player personnel in 2013 and was later promoted to director of football operations. The Chiefs have been a balanced team that won at least nine games in each of those four seasons, and all three first-round draft picks in that span have been significant contributors. The Chiefs were the No. 2 seed in the AFC playoffs this season.

Ballard interviewed for general manager jobs with Tennessee and Chicago in recent years.

“I am so thankful to Mr. Irsay and his entire family for this opportunity to join the Colts organization,” Ballard said. “I appreciate everyone who has been involved in the search process. I look forward to working with [coach] Chuck [Pagano] and his staff, the personnel staff and all the outstanding Colts employees.

Ballard is set at quarterback with Andrew Luck and has talented skill position players such as receivers T.Y. Hilton and Donte Moncrief. His first order of business will be to improve a defense that finished 30th overall in the NFL and tied for 19th in sacks with just 33.

Chris Ballard beat Jimmy Raye III of the Colts, Scott Fitterer and Trent Kirchner of Seattle, George Paton of Minnesota and Eliot Wolf of Green Bay for the job. George Gojkovich/Getty Images

The Colts, who will have more than $50 million in salary-cap space during free agency, are coming off back-to-back seasons in which they missed the playoffs with 8-8 records.

Irsay said Jan. 21 that Pagano will return as coach for the 2017 season.

“I am extremely excited about Chris coming in as our general manager,” Pagano said. “He brings a wealth of knowledge and a ton of experience to the organization. I’m looking forward to rolling up our sleeves and going to work alongside him.”

Ballard beat Jimmy Raye III of the Colts, Scott Fitterer and Trent Kirchner of Seattle, George Paton of Minnesota and Eliot Wolf of Green Bay for the job.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Soccer

FIFA's Van Basten reveals radical vision: No offside rule, timed penalties

Berlin – Time penalties instead of yellow cards, no offside rule and more substitutions: legendary ex-striker Marco van Basten, FIFA’s technical director, has a radical vision of football’s future.

“We must keep looking for ways to improve the game, to make it more honest, more dynamic, more interesting, so that what we offer is attractive enough,” the 52-year-old Dutchman told German magazine Sport Bild.

“There are lots of variations which need to be tested in the coming years.”

Van Basten, who became FIFA’s technical director last October, has a string of revolutionary suggestions, some of which he hopes could be in place for the expanded 48-team World Cup in 2026 – and some of which would be hugely controversial.

He wants to see football copy rugby union, where only the captain can directly address the referee and a yellow card means a player is temporarily sent off.

“A yellow card (in football) against an opposing player doesn’t currently give the attacking team much,” said Van Basten.

“One idea is to replace the yellow card with a time penalty of five or 10 minutes. That would frighten teams.

“It is hard to play 10 against 11, let alone with eight or nine. We’re also thinking about allowing more than three substitutions during games.

“Last month I met (Manchester City coach) Pep Guardiola, who asked, ‘Why aren’t six substitutions possible?'”

Van Basten also wants to introduce a “shoot-out” where a player has eight seconds to beat the goalkeeper – to replace extra time and traditional penalty kicks.

“Each team would have five attempts. The referee whistles, then the player runs at the goalkeeper from 25 metres out,” he said.

“The goalkeeper can’t leave his area and if he parries, it’s over. It would be spectacular for the spectators and more interesting for a player.

“In a penalty shoot-out, it is over for the taker in a second.”

Former AC Milan, Ajax and Netherlands goal machine Van Basten is head of FIFA’s technical areas, ranging from football technology innovation to refereeing.

However, any of the far-reaching changes he wants would need to be ratified by the executive committee of world football’s governing body.

If he gets his way, he would dump the offside rule.

“Football currently resembles handball where nine players, plus the goalkeeper, pack the penalty area and (the defence) is like a wall,” he said.

“They abolished the offside rule in field hockey and there were no problems.”

If that is revolutionary, Van Basten is also concerned at how some teams have become experts at slowing the game down in the dying stages when they are narrowly ahead.

“We’re discussing how to make the time more effective in the last 10 minutes,” he said, adding that he wants to see the number of competitive matches reduced to protect the game’s top stars.

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“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
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