SI’s MMQB Staff Debates the NFL GMs Who Had the Biggest Impact This Offseason

SI’s MMQB Staff Debates the NFL GMs Who Had the Biggest Impact This Offseason

Welcome to the NFL offseason, where receivers get paid lots of money (just ask Justin Jefferson, A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jaylen Waddle and Nico Collins), the NFL continues to push for an 18-game season, the league and NFLPA discuss ways to ruin the offseason calendar and teams continue to go through their OTAs and mandatory minicamps.

So we asked our MMQB staff of NFL experts to answer a series of eight questions. Today, they’re going to weigh in on the general managers who have had the biggest impact this offseason.

Let’s get to their answers as we get closer to the NFL taking a break before July training camps.

Matt Verderame: Dan Morgan, Carolina Panthers

Carolina Panthers general manager Dan MorganCarolina Panthers general manager Dan Morgan

Morgan was aggressive in free agency, improving the roster around his young quarterback. / Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Morgan is saddled with the responsibility of trying to resurrect a franchise which went a league-worst 2–15 last season. He’s also charged with trying to placate owner David Tepper.

Yet this offseason seemed like a positive step for the Panthers due to Morgan’s aggressiveness in free agency. Carolina didn’t have its first-round pick, but still added a host of talent including edge rushers D.J. Wonnum and Jadeveon Clowney, linebacker Josey Jewell, receiver Diontae Johnson, guards Robert Hunt and Damien Lewis, corner Dane Jackson and defensive tackle A’Shawn Robinson among others.

If second-year quarterback Bryce Young doesn’t improve, none of Morgan’s moves are going to amount to much. But if Young can take a big step under new coach Dave Canales, the Panthers are positioned to be a much tougher out.

Gilberto Manzano: Adam Peters, Washington Commanders

Washington Commanders general manager Adam PetersWashington Commanders general manager Adam Peters

Peters hired Quinn, drafted Daniels and quickly rebuilt the team's roster this offseason by signing several free agents. / Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

It has to be Peters for quickly transforming one of the worst rosters in the NFL into one that could compete for the postseason in 2024.

Obviously, it helped that Peters had the No. 2 pick to draft quarterback Jayden Daniels and spark the rebuild in Washington. But Peters managed to form a compelling defense for new coach Dan Quinn. Also, hiring a proven coach such as Quinn was a major get for Peters and a franchise that probably needed an experienced head coach for this new era.

Peters, the former San Francisco 49ers front office executive, spent plenty of money in free agency, but did it wisely to maintain cap space flexibility for the future. He bet on underrated players such as edge rusher Dorance Armstrong and linebacker Frankie Luvu, and he also retooled the offensive line for Daniels.

Conor Orr: Joe Hortiz, Los Angeles Chargers

It used to be that Baltimore Ravens personnel folks didn’t leave the house, even after Eric DeCosta succeeded the great Ozzie Newsome. However, we’ve seen recent success stories such as Joe Douglas in New York, who was a Baltimore and Philadelphia Eagles disciple, nailing both Sauce Gardner and Garrett Wilson in one draft. Now we have Hortiz, who has been the team’s personnel director since 2019. This is as strong an ideological marriage as any coach and GM tandem I’ve seen this offseason and the Chargers already have a roster that will be fun to play around with and build. Hortiz’s job, to toughen up the place around Justin Herbert, won’t be easy.

Albert Breer: Hortiz

The reason I’m going with Hortiz is something I remember saying to his old boss, DeCosta, about how the Ravens operate—you could explain most of their moves to an 8-year-old. It’s a compliment. It means they operate with a certain level of logic, and Hortiz, and Jim Harbaugh, have done that this offseason.

Where they’ve invested in talent tells that story. Coming into the offseason, they had a messy cap situation with four veteran players—Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, Joey Bosa and Khalil Mack—needing to be dealt with contractually. So what did they do? They leaned into Harbaugh’s line-heavy ethos, reworking the deals for Bosa and Mack, trading Allen and releasing Williams.

From there, they signed two warhorse tailbacks, in J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards, who’d need no adaptation to the Harbaugh style of play (having been in it in Baltimore), then doubled down in the draft, selecting Notre Dame tackle Joe Alt over replacing Williams and Allen with a Malik Nabers or Rome Odunze. Then, they turned around and took Ladd McConkey in the second round to address a need at receiver.

Easy to explain, right? So logical, a kid would get it.

SI’s MMQB Staff Debates the NFL’s Best Coaching Moves

SI’s MMQB Staff Debates the NFL’s Best Coaching Moves

Welcome to the NFL offseason, where receivers get paid lots of money (just ask Justin Jefferson, A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jaylen Waddle and Nico Collins), the NFL continues to push for an 18-game season, the league and NFLPA discuss ways to ruin the offseason calendar and teams continue to go through their OTAs and mandatory minicamps. 

So we asked our MMQB staff of NFL experts to answer a series of eight questions. Today, they’re going to weigh in on the offseason’s best coaching move. 

Let’s get to their answers as we get closer to the NFL taking a break before July training camps.

Matt Verderame: Los Angeles Chargers hiring Jim Harbaugh

Harbaugh isn’t the type to come into a situation, sit back and assess. Instead, he’s going to quickly turn the culture around, something desperately needed in Los Angeles after the Brandon Staley era.

While the Chargers are somewhat low on talent after moving several veteran players including receivers Keenan Allen and Mike Williams, Harbaugh’s influence will be obvious. Los Angeles might not be a contender in 2024, but it won’t give away games as it has in the past, instead forcing opponents to win the game and not simply avoid losing it.

The big question for the Chargers is how long it will take to get a quality roster around Harbaugh and quarterback Justin Herbert. Once that happens, they should compete in the AFC West with the Kansas City Chiefs.

Gilberto Manzano: Carolina Panthers hiring Dave Canales, retaining Ejiro Evero 

Carolina Panthers coach Dave CanalesCarolina Panthers coach Dave Canales

Canales stays in the NFC South as coach of the Panthers after having the offensive coordinator job with the Buccaneers. / Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Harbaugh is probably the right answer, but I can make a compelling case for the two-for-one coaching special the Carolina Panthers pulled off in the offseason. 

Panthers owner David Tepper finally got something right after he hired Dave Canales as head coach and retained Ejiro Evero as defensive coordinator. Evero could have easily left after the dysfunctional season in Carolina, but Canales and Tepper convinced him to stay after the defensive guru didn’t land a head-coaching opportunity. (He probably will in the near future.) Continuity should help a Panthers’ defense needing plenty of help outside of stud defensive tackle Derrick Brown.

The arrival of Canales should put Bryce Young on the right track after a rocky rookie season, too. He helped Geno Smith and Baker Mayfield reignite their careers during coaching stops with the Seattle Seahawks and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 

If the Panthers’ offensive line holds up, Young and new weapons Xavier Legette and Diontae Johnson could do wonders in Canales’s offensive scheme. 

Conor Orr: Harbaugh

I agree with Matt. I think Harbaugh was the move of the offseason because it offers the highest degree of potential success with the largest sample size of prior success and it also signified that the Spanos family was finally willing to spend additional funding on the kind of moves that could separate the Chargers from the rest of the pack. 

We can also like different hires for different reasons, right? I think the Dan Quinn hire was smart because the Washington Commanders needed a calming presence after finally fumigating the building of all things Dan Snyder. I thought the organization’s anonymous bashing of Ben Johnson when Johnson decided he did not want to pursue the opportunity was reprehensible. 

I thought the Mike Macdonald hire was smart, too, because he gives Seattle the best chance out of any of the available coaches to match wits with Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan. Does that mean he will? No. That doesn’t mean it’s not worth a shot. 

I thought the Canales hire was also good because it was the best option at the moment for Bryce Young. 

Albert Breer: Harbaugh

Atlanta Falcons head coach Raheem MorrisAtlanta Falcons head coach Raheem Morris

Morris is getting a second chance at being an NFL head coach. / Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

I’m with Matt and Conor, too. This can’t not be Harbaugh. And my reasoning goes beyond the wins and losses, though the fact that he’s got the fifth-best winning percentage of all-time (behind Guy Chamberlin, John Madden, George Allen and Vince Lombardi) doesn’t hurt.

To me, it’s that he’s got this rare thing where his brand of football, the identity of his teams, has traveled everywhere with him. From Stanford to San Francisco to Michigan, his teams featured powerful offensive lines, dominant run games, efficient quarterbacks, tough skill guys, and smart, versatile defenses that are, similar to the offenses, particularly great up front. I’m betting on it happening again, and all of it has a chance to supercharge Justin Herbert as a quarterback.

But, twist my arm, and make me go somewhere else with this one, and I’d take Raheem Morris with the Atlanta Falcons or Brian Callahan with the Tennessee Titans—Morris because coaches I respect most believe his second shot (after 12 seasons to learn from his mistakes) will be spectacular, and Callahan because he’s so perfectly suited for today’s NFL. Also, those two happen to be among the smartest coaches I’ve dealt with over 19 seasons covering the league.