Marcus Freeman

Marcus Freeman Agrees To Notre Dame Extension

Marcus Freeman‘s name has been mentioned in advance of the 2025 NFL coaching cycle, but he has a new deal in place to keep him at the college level. Freeman has agreed to an extension with Notre Dame, ESPN’s Heather Dinich reports.

Freeman’s deal is believed to be a four-year extension, meaning he will remain under contract for six seasons, per Dinich. He has been in place as head coach of the Fighting Irish since the end of the 2021 season when he took over from Brian Kelly. Freeman has enjoyed a successful run since then, albeit one which included losses in his first three games at the helm (an unprecedented feat in the program’s history).

Overall, Notre Dame has gone 30-9 under Freeman, including an 11-1 mark in 2024. That performance earned the team a spot in the College Football Playoff; the Fighting Irish will play Indiana in the first game under the new 12-team CFP format on Friday. In advance of that contest, Freeman’s future with the program has been assured.

The 38-year-old was listed as one of the coaches from the college ranks worth keeping an eye on with respect to NFL interest as early as this offseason. In particular, the Bears’ vacancy was considered one Freeman might have found himself on the radar for. Instead, Chicago will look elsewhere for Matt Eberflus replacement candidates.

As Jim Harbaugh‘s Michigan tenure showed, the future of college coaches linked to NFL opportunities can change in short order and remain in limbo on an extended basis. It will be interesting to see if Freeman continues to draw interest at the pro level over the coming years as expectations will remain high for Notre Dame moving forward. As things stand now, however, he is set to remain in his current position for years to come.

Bears To Prioritize Leadership Ability In Next HC; GM Ryan Poles Expected To Be Retained

The Bears will be in the market for a new head coach this offseason, and per Jonathan Jones of CBS Sports, the club believes its vacancy is the most attractive one that will be available. With a promising rookie-contract quarterback in Caleb Williams and a bevy of other offensive talent, over $80MM in projected salary cap space, and a new stadium project in the offing, Chicago is hopeful it will be able to land the candidate of its choice.

According to Jones, the Bears hope to hire a “leader of men” type of head coach. In other words, the candidate’s status as an offensive or defensive savant will not be as much of a priority as that person’s mental toughness and leadership abilities. The successes of Mike Tomlin in Pittsburgh and Dan Campbell in Detroit have underscored the importance of those qualities, and recent HC hirees Raheem Morris, Dan Quinn, Jerod Mayo, and Jim Harbaugh also fit the “leader of men” mold (although those coaches, like almost all coaches, also offer an offensive or defensive background).

Scott Bair of the Marquee Sports Network agrees that leadership skills, along with in-game management prowess, are traits the Bears will be seeking in their next HC. However, Bair does believe that a brilliant offensive mind, or someone that can bring such a mind on board, will also be a prerequisite, which jibes with earlier reports on the matter. He names Mike Vrabel, Ben Johnson, Kliff Kingsbury, Aaron Glenn, and Joe Brady as external HC candidates, while Jones adds Brian Flores and Bill Belichick as possible targets. As reported previously, interim head coach Thomas Brown will also have a chance at the permanent gig.

Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network (video link) acknowledges that the Bears’ opening will be coveted, and he also believes that Kingsbury will be under consideration. Of course, the team interviewed the former Cardinals’ HC this past offseason for its offensive coordinator post, although it was reported that the summit was really more of an intel-gathering session on Williams, whom Kingsbury coached at USC and whom the Bears were preparing to select with the No. 1 overall pick of this year’s draft. Naturally, the Kingsbury-Williams connection will drive a great deal of Kingsbury-Chicago speculation during the upcoming cycle.

Johnson, meanwhile, will again be one of the hottest candidates on the market, and he is expected to remain very selective about his next destination. On that note, ESPN’s Adam Schefter previously said that Johnson could opt to steer clear of the Bears due to perceived organizational dysfunction, although Schefter may have changed his stance. During his appearance on Sunday NFL Countdown today, Schefter said that Johnson might indeed have some interest in the Chicago job (video link).

Jones and Peter Schrager of FOX Sports (video link) also see Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman as a dark horse candidate for the Bears’ HC post. Freeman, who was actually drafted by the Bears in the fifth round of the 2009 draft, has led the Fighting Irish to an 11-1 record and a likely spot in the College Football Playoff field in his first year at the helm. Freeman was recently named as one of the college coaches expected to receive NFL HC interest in 2025.

Per Jones, it is unclear who will make the final decision on the club’s next HC. Of course, owner George McCaskey will have considerable input, but team president Kevin Warren will be heavily involved as well. One way or another, though, GM Ryan Poles’ job is safe, and he will be a part of the search. 

There were some recent rumblings that Poles could be handed his walking papers at season’s end, but prior reports indicated that Poles and Warren are aligned in their vision for the team, and both Jones and Rapoport report that the GM – who was originally hired just two days before the recently-dismissed Matt Eberflus – will be retained. Interestingly, Rapoport says that Poles will “assist” Warren in running the search, which would seem to corroborate the league-wide perception that Warren is the one making the calls.

College Coaches Getting NFL Buzz

As we start to see heads roll in NFL head coaching circles, team ownership is starting to do their homework on potential replacements. While most of the candidates are going to be made up of the league’s top coordinators and assistants, a few candidates are popping up in the college ranks. Per Jeremy Fowler of ESPN, Oregon’s Dan Lanning and Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman are popular names to potentially graduate from college to the NFL.

It used to be much more popular to pluck college head coaches from their student athletes and give them an opportunity to coach in the big leagues. While many NFL coaches have college experience, Los Angeles’ Jim Harbaugh (Michigan) is currently the only head coach to not come directly from another position in the NFL. While this may be because Harbaugh has prior experience as an NFL head coach, his first job with San Francisco came immediately following his time at Stanford.

Other recent examples like Urban Meyer (Ohio State) and Matt Rhule (Baylor) have slowed the process a bit. In the last two offseasons, Harbaugh and fellow former Stanford coach David Shaw are the only coaches from college football to interview for head coaching jobs, and Shaw quit coaching the Cardinal in 2022. If we go back a year further, only Hines Ward, who was the wide receivers coach at Florida Atlantic at the time, joins the list. Ward experienced a head coaching gig with the San Antonio Brahmas of the XFL before heading to Arizona State as the wide receivers coach this year.

Lanning is an intriguing name out of Eugene. The 38-year-old is in his third year of the job since taking over for Mario Cristobal, who left for his alma mater, Miami (FL). In his first two seasons, the Ducks went a combined 22-5, ending the 2023 season as the No. 6 team in AP rankings. In 2024, Lanning’s Ducks are currently 11-0 in their first year in the Big Ten conference. They are the College Football Playoff committee’s No. 1 team thanks to a harrowing one-point victory over Ohio State (currently ranked No. 2).

Realistically, Lanning has a massive buyout and is in the middle of a run for a National Championship. He’s not looking at NFL job prospects at the moment and may not be for another year. But, thanks to a relatively thin pool of NFL candidates, executives have kept an eye on Lanning, someone they believe has “got some Dan Campbell to him.”

Freeman, also 38, is another intriguing name. A defensive-minded coach, Freeman held coordinator jobs at Purdue, Cincinnati, and Notre Dame before taking over the head job when Brian Kelly left for LSU. It was rumored that Freeman would follow Kelly to Baton Rouge, but instead, he accepted his first head coaching job. In his first two full seasons, Freeman led the Fighting Irish to a combined 19-7 record. This season under Freeman, Notre Dame is 9-1 and currently No. 6 in the CFP rankings.

Unlike Lanning, Freeman found his way to the NFL as a player following a five-year college career at Ohio State. A fifth-round pick for the Bears in 2009, Freeman floated around with the Bills and Texans before retiring in 2010 due to an enlarged heart condition. Though his heart ended any chances of recognition as an NFL player, he may still have a chance to make his NFL legacy as a head coach.

Again, the migration of college head coaches to the NFL has slowed since the days of Kliff Kingsbury, Meyer, and Rhule, and Lanning and Freeman are more intriguing names to watch than surefire candidates. Still, it’s noteworthy to see these young leaders on meteoric rises get such strong recognition from NFL executives.