Jaguars OC Liam Coen Just Earned Rare NFL Respect

Discover the leading minds behind the NFL's most dynamic offenses as we unveil the top play-callers shaping the league's future.

The NFL’s offensive blueprint still runs through Sean McVay, and that’s the clearest takeaway from a league full of bright minds and aggressive schemers heading into 2026. McVay sits at No. 1 on this list because the Rams keep doing what everyone else tries to copy: stay ahead of the curve, keep defenses uncomfortable, and win with an offense that never looks stale.

That said, the gap at the top isn’t huge. Kyle Shanahan is right there behind him, Andy Reid remains Andy Reid, and a pair of younger play-callers - Ben Johnson and Liam Coen - have already changed the feel of their franchises in a hurry. Josh McDaniels rounds out the group after turning Drake Maye into a star in New England.

Coen’s rise is one of the cleanest examples of what good play-calling can do. Jacksonville jumped from 4-13 to 13-4, piled up franchise records with 474 points and 55 touchdowns, and finished sixth in scoring at 27.9 points per game.

After the Week 8 bye, the Jaguars went 9-1 and averaged 32.8 points, with 25-plus points in 13 games to tie for the NFL lead. Trevor Lawrence was a huge beneficiary, throwing for 38 total touchdowns to rank third in the league and finish as an MVP finalist.

Coen also earned a Coach of the Year finalist nod in his first season, and the continuity should only help.

McDaniels lands at No. 5 because of the way he reset the conversation around Drake Maye. In his first year back with New England, he helped Maye post 4,394 passing yards, 31 touchdowns, eight interceptions and a 72.0 completion percentage.

That season ended with Maye as the MVP runner-up, an All-Pro nod and a Super Bowl LX appearance. McDaniels is entering his 20th season with the Patriots and 15th as offensive coordinator, and his résumé already includes eight top-10 offenses and three No. 1 units.

A healthy A.J. Brown gives him another weapon to work with.

Johnson wasted no time making Chicago matter again. The Bears went 11-6, won the NFC North and picked up their first playoff victory since 2010 after rallying from 21-6 down to beat Green Bay.

His offense climbed to sixth in total yards and ninth in scoring after finishing bottom-five in both categories the year before, and Chicago’s 127 explosive plays were second only to one team. Johnson had already built his reputation in Detroit, where his offenses finished top five in total yards in all three seasons and led the league in scoring at 32.4 points per game in 2024.

Caleb Williams responded with a franchise-record 3,942 passing yards, and Year 2 figures to be even more dangerous.

Reid’s spot at No. 3 is a reminder that a down year doesn’t erase a Hall of Fame body of work. Kansas City went 6-11 in 2025, missed the playoffs for the first time since 2014 and lost the AFC West after nine straight division titles, with Patrick Mahomes’ ACL tear in Week 15 sealing the slide.

But Reid still ranks fourth all-time in coaching wins and has taken the Chiefs to five Super Bowls and three titles. If the list were built on career value alone, he’d be at the top.

With a healthy Mahomes and a retooled backfield, the offense should have a chance to snap back fast.

Shanahan checks in at No. 2 after what may have been his best coaching job yet. San Francisco was battered by injuries, but he still guided the 49ers to a 13-6 record and a playoff berth.

The team went 5-3 in games Brock Purdy missed, with Mac Jones at quarterback. Shanahan’s system continues to set the standard, especially with the way the 49ers use 21 personnel: they led the NFL in usage, posted the best expected points added and generated the most explosive plays from it.

Now he gets Purdy back with a rebuilt group that includes Mike Evans and Christian Kirk alongside Christian McCaffrey.

And then there’s McVay, who remains the league’s reference point. His coaching tree now includes seven head coaches, but the Rams are still the ones everyone else is chasing.

In 2025, McVay’s offense finished first in points and total yards, and Matthew Stafford won MVP at 38 before Los Angeles fell in the NFC Championship in Seattle. McVay keeps evolving, shifting into heavier 12 and 13 personnel and reworking the run-game split to keep defenses guessing.

With Stafford back and Davante Adams joining Puka Nacua, the Rams enter 2026 looking every bit like a Super Bowl favorite.

In Other News...

Jaguars Have An Unexpected Pass Rusher Pushing Into Camp Battle

The Jaguars are spending training camp sorting through their defensive end rotation, and one of the more interesting subplots is the push from an undrafted rookie who turned heads during the spring. He arrived with a productive college rsum at South Carolina, where he finished his final season with 38 pressures and seven sacks, and that kind of disruption has kept him in the conversation as the roster starts to take shape.

The path to a spot is still crowded, with several players already jockeying for position in the same group, but Jacksonville has seen enough from undrafted defenders recently to keep the door open. For a team trying to find the right mix on the edge, the question now is whether that spring momentum can carry into camp and make the battle tighter than expected. [Read more 🡒]

Jaguars Veteran Signing Faces A Real Roster Squeeze In Camp

Ameer Abdullah arrived in Jacksonville in May with the kind of veteran resume that can help a camp battle: more than a decade in the league, a recent stop with the Colts and the sort of versatility teams like to have tucked into the back end of a roster. After spending time on injured reserve with San Francisco and then finishing last season in Indianapolis, he enters Jaguars camp trying to show he still brings enough value to stick around.

The challenge is obvious, though, because Abdullah is fighting for a limited number of spots at running back and will need to carve out a role beyond offense to separate himself. If he does make the 53-man roster, his path likely runs through special teams, where his experience could matter on kickoff returns and in multiple units, but Jacksonvilles roster math will determine whether that opportunity is even there. [Read more 🡒]

Trevor Lawrence Put Together A Notable Finish In Tahoe

Trevor Lawrences trip to Tahoe ended with a finish that at least pointed in the right direction. The Jaguars quarterback tied for 48th at the American Century Championship with a net zero over 54 holes, a modest but meaningful step up from his tie for 75th place a year ago as he continued to navigate the annual celebrity golf event.

Lawrences final round included an 87, and he managed to trim down the double bogeys that had piled up earlier in the tournament. It was not the kind of leaderboard run that threatened former tennis player Mardy Fish, who won with 72 points, but for Lawrence it was a cleaner ending and a small sign of progress in a field that can expose even the most competitive athletes. [Read more 🡒]