Nick Caley‘s name resurfaced on the OC radar this offseason, but only with one team. The Rams assistant took two interviews with the Patriots, his employer from 2015-22. This process ended with a job offer.
In place on Bill Belichick‘s staff — primarily as tight ends coach — for nearly a decade, Caley joined the Rams once the Patriots hired Bill O’Brien as OC in 2023. The Pats separated from Belichick but revisited their Caley OC search a year after he did not land the job. The team’s effort included a high-end offer to call plays under Jerod Mayo, SI.com’s Albert Breer said during an appearance on 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Zolak & Bertrand (via NBC Sports Boston).
Although Caley is an aspiring first-time coordinator, Breer notes the Patriots presented him an offer of nearly $3MM per year to take their OC position. That is toward the top of the coordinator spectrum, though coaching salaries do not have to be disclosed in the way player contracts do. Somewhat surprisingly (based on what we now know), Caley passed. The job went to recently dismissed Browns OC Alex Van Pelt, who is a play-calling OC for the first time in 15 years.
A Caley hire would have fit in with how the Patriots built their team and coaching staff this offseason. Despite Belichick’s ouster, the Pats promoted Mayo and elevated DeMarcus Covington to defensive coordinator. Caley would not have been a direct promotion, but considering his past in Foxborough, he certainly made sense as a return candidate given the way this offseason played out in New England. A host of re-signings and extensions followed the club’s coaching decisions, including a three-year, $27MM deal for ex-Caley pupil Hunter Henry.
The Rams have since moved Caley to pass-game coordinator under Sean McVay and OC Mike LaFleur. Caley, 41, is still in charge of the Rams’ tight ends but carries a new title that often matters when OC-needy teams are conducting searches. He is also tied to a team that has sent several assistants to coordinator roles and coordinators to HC positions.
Last year brought more interest in Caley, with the Texans and Jets joining the Patriots in interviewing the promising assistant. Caley was on an expiring contract in 2023 but still had a chance to stay. Post-Belichick interest remained, though it is worth wondering if that door is now closed despite the sides’ lengthy history.
Prior to joining McVay’s staff, Caley’s only NFL work had come in New England. He left the college ranks for a Pats assistant job in 2015, eventually collecting two Super Bowl rings and being given the chance to coach Rob Gronkowski in the final years of the all-time great’s Patriots run. The Pats gave Caley increased responsibility in 2022 as well, and other teams took notice.
As injuries force the Rams into numerous changes early this season, Caley is taking his chances as an assistant under one of the NFL’s top HCs. It stands to reason the northeast Ohio native viewed his current position as one that would help him land other coordinator interviews down the road. It should be expected Caley resurfaces on the coordinator carousel next year, but this certainly qualifies as a notable “what if?” involving he and the Patriots.
I imagine Caley’s extensive coaching of Gronk amounted to little more than handing him a towel after workouts. I’d want to see a lot more than that on the guy’s resume before I considered him for a major promotion.