John Harbaugh and Baltimore Ravens
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Jim Harbaugh wants to be there for his now-unemployed brother John. But the Chargers coach is adamant about one thing — whatever John’s next steps are, they better not be in the AFC. Jim, speaking to reporters Wednesday, one day after the Ravens fired his brother after 18 years at the helm in Baltimore, simply said John is “the best.”
John Harbaugh quickly became one of the most popular head coaching candidates after the Baltimore Ravens fired him on Wednesday, but he's not diving into the interview process immediately.
Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh has no doubt his brother John will rebound from his firing Tuesday to attack his next job 'with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind the next opportunity.'
The Browns, who fired Kevin Stefanski on Monday morning, will undoubtedly have interest in Harbaugh, 62, who went 27-8 against the Browns, including 12-5 in Cleveland. Browns GM Andrew Berry is leading the coaching search, and likely just put Harbaugh high on his list. It will be that way for most teams with a vacancy.
Los Angeles Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh was always going to get lobbed questions about the Baltimore Ravens' decision to part ways with his brother, John, this week. Jim, ahead of his Chargers' playoff game against the New England Patriots, was always going to dip deep into his bag of Harbaughisms to address the topic.
John Harbaugh isn't expected to be out of work for very long. The veteran NFL head coach, fired after 18 seasons with the Baltimore Ravens, has already been contacted by multiple franchises. Every NFL franchise with a head coaching vacancy - except for the Ravens,
The Giants might be the favorites, but how would Harbaugh fit in Atlanta, Cleveland, Tennessee, Arizona and Las Vegas?
The Las Vegas Raiders' future is bright. With the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft and money to spend in free agency, the Raiders are arguably among the top coaching