Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports
Ownership plays a big part in whether or not a coach stays with an organization. In fact, it was the sale of the New York Jets to new ownership that compelled Bill Belichick to resign as coach despite being on the job for about a day.
“Due to various uncertainties surrounding my position as it relates to the team’s new ownership, I have decided to resign as the head coach of the New York Jets,” Belichick’s statement read at his resignation.
Belichick even mentioned that was one of the frequent conversations he had with Bill Parcells after the 1999 season.
The Broncos are ran by an ownership group, the Walton-Penner Ownership Group with Greg Penner as the CEO. While chairman and CEO Cal McNair has had a different coach in each full season he has been in control of the team since 2019, it has been extenuating circumstances that compelled him to go through a coach each year.
The Walton-Penner Ownership Group demonstrated after one season they will fire a coach, too, and they have barely been in the NFL a full year. There is less a coaching prospect would know about the Walton-Penner Ownership Group than he would the McNairs.
For a coach like Ryans, he would have enough capital and good grace with the McNair family to carve out some stability, as long as the Texans showed improvement on the field.
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