Rex Ryan Buffalo introduction ORCHARD PARK, NY – JANUARY 14: Rex Ryan speaks at a press conference announcing his arrival as head coach of the Buffalo Bills on January 14, 2015 at Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park, New York. (Photo by Brett Carlsen/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Rex Ryan

After the New York Jets fired Rex Ryan following a 4-12 2014 season, Ryan was discussed as a hot coaching prospect for multiple opportunities despite his teams not making the playoffs since 2010. He was hired by the Buffalo Bills, though, who just fired him Tuesday following a 8-8 2015 and a 7-8 mark to date this year, records that definitely did not live up to his introductory press conference promises. Ryan’s firing provides an excellent excuse to look back at many of the prominent media figures who thought he’d be a great fit for numerous jobs in the 2014-15 offseason. Let’s start with a couple of “Falcons or 49ers” takes:

Virk’s take there is particularly notable, as it made sense at the time. In San Francisco, Colin Kaepernick was coming off three reasonably impressive seasons, while Buffalo’s quarterback picture was uncertain, but they had conceded the fourth-fewest points that year (18.8 per game). This was also before the massive offseason attrition the 49ers experienced in 2015. It seems less true now, though; the Bills’ defense regressed under Ryan, to 15th in points allowed in both 2015 and 2016 so far, while quarterback Tyrod Taylor has outperformed Kaepernick in both of those seasons and put up impressive numbers. Ultimately, it wasn’t the quarterback that doomed Ryan.

There were plenty of others who thought the 49ers were a great fit for Ryan, such as NFL Network analyst Willie McGinest, who said “Rex Ryan going to the San Francisco 49ers, who have one of the best defenses in the league? Let me tell you, Rex, do everything in your position to land this football. They have a good offense, in every position. You go up and down the roster, there’s players throughout. But they’ve got a dominant defense and a dominant run game. If I recall, when you went to the AFC championship, you had both.”

What about the Falcons? Well, there were a whole lot of people who loved the idea of Ryan going there (and they did unquestionably have a good quarterback in Matt Ryan). One was former Jets’ linebacker Bart Scott, who told Yahoo’s Kristian Dyer Atlanta seemed like a great fit for Ryan thanks to their quarterback:

“I think it depends where he goes. If he goes where there is a quarterback, he has a very great chance of winning. He showed what he can do with a decent quarterback and a below-average quarterback in terms of performance,” Scott told Shutdown Corner. “You send him to a place where there is a leader in terms of a quarterback, who commands respect not just from other teams but from the skill position players in that building, it’s dangerous. It’s dangerous.

“It is dangerous to give that man a lead. Last time I played in that system when we had a lead, we put up 60 sacks and teams were afraid to play us. Downright afraid of us.”

Plenty of media types on Twitter also thought Ryan and his vaunted defensive skills would be a good fit in Atlanta:

Somewhere else that drew buzz for Ryan was the other side of the Bay Area, with many suggesting him for the Oakland job:

And what about the Chicago Bears? The New York Post threw that one out there even before either Ryan or Bears’ coach Marc Trestman was fired:

It got some later support as well:

Of course, none of those takes are necessarily wrong. Maybe Ryan would have found more success in those other spots; we don’t know. It’s worth noting that his defensive mastery may have been a bit overplayed, though, especially considering how the league started adapting to his blitz-heavy systems; Ryan’s Jets’ defenses were great in 2009 (first in points allowed) and 2010 (fifth), but then quickly went downhill, ranking 19th, 20th, 20th and 24th in points allowed over his final four seasons. Keep in mind that people figured he’d do well with the Bills, too, and that’s one take that was proven wrong:

Given that Buffalo’s defense also regressed under him, the idea of Ryan’s defense solving everything seems a bit much. Maybe people will have a little more restraint about how great a fit he is this next time around…

About Andrew Bucholtz

Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.