Many head coaches are determined to keep play-calling in their own hands, but the ones who can pull that off usually need a strong staff around them. That’s where the best coordinator pairings matter most. In 2026, there are several duos worth watching, and the Broncos remain a prime example of how much a coaching staff can shape a team’s ceiling.
Sean Payton made a notable move by bringing Davis Webb back to Denver after Webb removed himself from head coaching consideration. Webb will be the offensive play-caller in 2026, while Vance Joseph is set to return on the defensive side and keep the Broncos’ coaching structure intact. Joseph’s defense has become one of the league’s most consistent units, and Denver’s staff continues to look like one of the stronger ones in football.
The Broncos are not alone in that conversation. A look around the league turns up several coordinator tandems that stand out for different reasons, from aggressive defensive minds to offensive architects who have already helped unlock major production. Here are the five best offensive and defensive coordinator combinations for 2026.
Minnesota’s pairing of offensive coordinator Wes Phillips and defensive coordinator Brian Flores remains near the top of the list, even after a rough year with J.J. McCarthy.
Flores has earned leaguewide respect for the way he attacks offenses, using pressure creatively and aggressively without needing a defense loaded with stars. Since joining the Vikings in 2023, he has kept producing pass rush even after Danielle Hunter left for Houston and after the Jonathan Greenard trade with Philadelphia.
On the other side, Phillips and Kevin O’Connell have already shown what this operation can do when it clicks. The Vikings got a career year from Sam Darnold in 2024 during a 14-win season, and they also got a big 2022 from Kirk Cousins, who threw for 4,547 passing yards and helped deliver an NFC North title. The hope now is that Phillips and O’Connell can get better results with Kyler Murray or help McCarthy get pointed in the right direction in ’26.
San Francisco’s combination of Klay Kubiak and Robert Morris also deserves a spot. Kubiak’s name already carries weight because of his family ties - his brother is first-year Raiders coach Klint Kubiak and his father is Gary Kubiak, who led the Broncos to a Super Bowl title in 2015 - but his own reputation is growing fast.
Since arriving in San Francisco in ’21 and rising to offensive coordinator in ’25, he has helped Shanahan’s offense and played a major role in Brock Purdy’s development. If the 49ers can successfully fold Mike Evans into the offense, Kubiak’s profile could rise even more.
Morris gets a fresh start in San Francisco after a two-year run as the Falcons’ coach that did not produce the offensive results he wanted. Still, he did significantly improve Atlanta’s defense last season, and the numbers back that up: the Falcons went from 18 takeaways in 2024 to 23 the next year. Morris also has a strong track record as McVay’s defensive coordinator with the Rams, where he helped the team win the Super Bowl in ’21.
Jacksonville’s duo of offensive coordinator Grant Udinski and defensive coordinator Anthony Campanile is another pairing with real momentum. Jaguars coach Liam Coen probably didn’t mind seeing his coordinators miss out on head coaching jobs this offseason, because it means Jacksonville gets to keep both for a second season. That kind of continuity matters.
Udinski turned 30 this year, and his relative lack of experience likely worked against him in the hiring cycle. But his résumé is already strong, including his work with O’Connell in Minnesota.
He also helped unlock another level in Trevor Lawrence’s game last season. The Jaguars used more of their weapons, with Parker Washington, Brian Thomas Jr. and Brenton Strange all topping 500 receiving yards, and Lawrence finished the regular season’s final six games with 15 touchdowns and only one interception after settling into the offense.
Campanile made his own mark with an aggressive style that helped Jacksonville jump out fast and pile up 31 takeaways, the second-most in 2025. If that success continues, Coen may not keep both coordinators for long.
The Rams’ pairing of Mike Shula and Chase Scheelhaase rounds out the top group. Their rise is not just about working under McVay, even if that certainly helps. Both coaches drew interviews in the latest hiring cycle for reasons that go beyond the McVay connection.
Shula built on what Morris had started before leaving for Atlanta in 2024, and he did it while working with a front office that did not invest heavily on that side of the ball. After the team stopped neglecting the defense this offseason, there’s a real chance it could become the best unit in football following the trades for Myles Garrett and Trent McDuffie.
Scheelhaase is only in his third year as an NFL coach, but he already has a strong reputation from his time as offensive coordinator at Iowa State. He may not be the one calling plays as McVay’s OC, but he showed his value last season as pass-game coordinator, helping push the Rams’ offense to new heights and helping Matthew Stafford win his first MVP.
That leaves Denver, where Webb and Joseph make for a particularly compelling tandem. Webb has been billed as the league’s next offensive guru, and Payton clearly thought enough of him to promote him from quarterbacks coach to offensive coordinator rather than lose him. Payton also handed Webb the play-calling duties, which is no small vote of confidence.
Joseph, meanwhile, has rebuilt his standing after his difficult run as Denver’s head coach in 2017 and ’18. Returning to a place where he had been fired was not the easy path, but he made it work in ’23 and has kept raising the level of his defense ever since. Last season, Denver ranked second in yards allowed at 278.2 per game and third in points allowed at 18.3 per game, and Nik Bonitto’s growth under Joseph has been another major part of the story.
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The complication, of course, is that not every building makes that easy. Payton pointed to the logistical hurdles of putting grass into covered stadiums, which is where the debate gets less philosophical and more operational for Denver as it looks ahead to its new place in 2030. For the Broncos, the field itself is not just a football choice but a money question too, with maintenance costs part of the calculation as the stadium plans continue to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
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Bolles has earned that respect with his pass protection, and there are people around the league who view him as one of the most consistent in that area. Still, the conversation around him is not finished, because the same evaluation that lifts him up also leaves room for debate about how complete his game really is. For the Broncos, that makes Bolles an easy player to appreciate and a harder one to fully settle on, even as his profile keeps rising. [Read more 🡒]
