Eagles CEO says coach following Kelly needs people skills
Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie talks to reporters during an NFL football press conference, Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2015, in Philadelphia. The Eagles fired head coach Chip Kelly with one game left in his third season. |
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- In the end, Chip Kelly created a poor culture and a beatable scheme.
A
day after firing Chip Kelly, CEO Jeffrey Lurie made it clear he wants a
coach who can relate to his players and everyone else in the building.
"You've
got to open your heart to players and everybody you want to achieve
peak performance," Lurie said Wednesday. "I would call it a style of
leadership that values information and all of the resources that are
provided and at the same time values emotional intelligence. I think in
today's world, a combination of all those factors creates the best
chance to succeed."
Kelly didn't have close
relationships with many of his players, and former Eagles running back
LeSean McCoy and cornerback Brandon Boykin were critical of his
personality after he traded them.
Lurie said he wants "someone who interacts and communicates very clearly with everyone he works with."
Eagles
right tackle Lane Johnson, who was Kelly's first draft pick, said his
former coach was considered "unapproachable" by many players.
"I
want to see a guy who really cares about his players and isn't so set
in his ways so we can all go in the same direction," Johnson said. "I
think Chip had good intentions. I just think that he didn't have a good
way to go about it, and sometimes it came off a little bit standoffish
toward y'all. That's just his way. I don't know if he had anybody to
confide in but I think all in all, I know he cared about the players."
Kelly
was fired after missing the playoffs for the second straight season and
failing in his first year in charge of personnel. The Eagles entered
the season with Super Bowl expectations, but are 6-9.
Players
prepared for the season finale at the New York Giants on Sunday with
offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur serving as interim coach, largely
going about business as usual.
"I had a good
relationship with Chip. We communicated well together and maybe that was
just me," linebacker Connor Barwin said. "Obviously you want a great
leader, you want somebody that knows the game obviously very well,
someone that can relate to the players, somebody the players can trust."
Quarterback
Sam Bradford, who could be a free agent after the season, said he still
wants to return next year despite all the uncertainty.
"Chip was great to me. It's tough to lose him," Bradford said.
Lurie
said he decided to fire Kelly before the end of the season to get a
jump start on a coaching search and meet with players to talk to them
about the decision. He said he met with players as a group on Wednesday
and had smaller meetings planned with them later in the day.
"It
was a clear and important decision that had to be made," he said,
adding that he didn't offer to keep Kelly on as the coach and strip him
of personnel control.
Howie Roseman, who was
general manager before Kelly insisted on making all the decisions, will
remain in his role as the executive vice president of football
operations and oversee the personnel department headed by Tom Donahoe.
The former Bills and Steelers GM is the new senior director of player
personnel.
Lurie doesn't plan to hire a GM.
Roseman, Donahoe and the new head coach will manage the roster with a
"collaborative" effort, he said.
Despite a
losing record, the Eagles could have won the NFC East by finishing 8-8.
But they were eliminated with a loss at home to Washington on Saturday.
Lurie said he fired Kelly based on an assessment of the last three years, not a string of recent losses.
"It was more the lack of progress and the trajectory where we were going," he said.
Lurie
acknowledged giving Kelly full control of personnel decisions last
January was a mistake. Lurie said for the first time that Kelly demanded
full control so he gave it to him so he would be "accountable for his
decisions." Until this point, Kelly had said it was Lurie's decision -
not his - to oversee all player moves.
Kelly quickly tore apart a winning team and made several bold moves that backfired.
Since
March 2014, Kelly released three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver DeSean
Jackson, traded McCoy, didn't re-sign 2014 Pro Bowl wideout Jeremy
Maclin, cut two-time Pro Bowl guard Evan Mathis and traded quarterback
Nick Foles and a 2016 second-round draft pick for Bradford.
He
also gave big money in free agency to running back DeMarco Murray and
cornerback Byron Maxwell.
Murray has been a bust and Maxwell has
underperformed. Kelly even signed Tim Tebow, but released him after he
won the competition for the No. 3 quarterback job.
Philadelphia missed the postseason in 2014 following a 9-3 start and were 7-12 in Kelly's last 19 games.
Kelly famously said on the sideline during a rout over the Giants in October 2014: "Culture will beat scheme every day."
It turns out players lost faith in his innovative approach and defenses caught up to his up-tempo offense.
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