Super Bowl-Winning Head Coach Mike McCarthy Linked To Multiple Job Openings
The NFL coaching lifecycle is a flat circle. You win a Super Bowl, you eventually get fired, you take a year off to “study analytics” in a barn somewhere, and suddenly, you’re the prettiest girl at the dance again. That seems to be exactly where Mike McCarthy finds himself right now.
After being unceremoniously shown the door in Dallas following a 7-10 stumble in 2024, McCarthy looked like he might be heading for the broadcast booth or a quiet retirement. But with the New York Giants and Tennessee Titans both desperate for an adult in the room, the former Packers champion is back on top of the wish lists.
Giants Looking for Stability After Daboll
Let’s start in the Big Apple. The Giants finally pulled the plug on the Brian Daboll era after a disastrous 2-8 start to his fourth season. It’s hard to blame the front office; when the ship is taking on water that fast, you don’t wait for the band to finish the song.
According to the oddsmakers at Sports Betting AG, McCarthy is now the 3/1 favorite to take over the Giants. There is a rich irony here that shouldn’t be lost on anyone. Remember 2020? McCarthy interviewed for this exact job. The Giants said, “No thanks,” and hired Joe Judge instead. New York made the wrong decision.
With promising rookie Quarterback Jaxson Dart and offensive weapons like Malik Nabers on the roster, New York needs a CEO type. They don’t need a hotshot coordinator learning on the fly; they need a guy who has navigated the frozen tundra of Lambeau and the media circus of “Jerry World.” McCarthy fits the bill.
Titans Eyeing McCarthy for Quarterback Development
Down in Nashville, the vibe is different, but the need is the same. The Titans are moving on from the Mike McCoy experiment and have zeroed in on “experience” as their primary criterion.
Tennessee is looking for someone to mold rookie Quarterback Cam Ward. When you have a young signal-caller with Ward’s ceiling, you can’t afford to whiff on the head coach.
This is where McCarthy’s resume does the heavy lifting. Despite the ending in Dallas, the man boasts a career .608 winning percentage and has coached 22 playoff games. He’s a quarterback guru by trade. The Titans are also reportedly looking at Matt Nagy, given his connection to the Chiefs dynasty, but McCarthy brings a different level of autonomy.
The Bottom Line On the Coaching Search
Look, hiring McCarthy isn’t the “sexy” pick. It won’t win the press conference in the same way hiring the latest 30-year-old genius from the Sean McVay coaching tree would. But at some point, you just need to win football games.
Both the Giants and Titans are sitting on potential goldmines with their young quarterbacks. They can’t afford another two-year rebuild with a coach who needs training wheels. McCarthy might have his flaws, but he raises the floor of every building he walks into. Whether he ends up wearing Giants blue or Titans two-tone blue, one thing is clear: Mike McCarthy isn’t done yet.
