NFL: Raiders open season with win over Broncos

Denver defensive coordinator Dennis Allen agreed
Tuesday night to become the head coach of the Raiders, according to
multiple media reports, and has informed the Broncos of his
decision. Fox Sports, ESPN and the NFL Network were all reporting
Allen was the choice of general manager Reggie McKenzie to replace
Hue Jackson, fired after one season with an 8-8 record.

Denver defensive coordinator Dennis Allen agreed
Tuesday night to become the head coach of the Raiders, according to
multiple media reports, and has informed the Broncos of his
decision.

Fox Sports, ESPN and the NFL Network were all
reporting Allen was the choice of general manager Reggie McKenzie
to replace Hue Jackson, fired after one season with an 8-8
record.

Allen met with McKenzie for a second interview
in Mobile, Ala., and expressed hope in an interview with CSN Bay
Area that things would go well.

“I’m looking forward to getting a chance to talk
to Reggie and see how it goes. I want to be a head coach in the
National Football League, and hopefully, I’ll get that
opportunity,” Allen said.

Neither McKenzie nor Raiders officials would
confirm the hiring. Allen has never been a head coach on any level
and 2011 was his first as a coordinator.

When Jackson was fired on McKenzie’s first day
on the job, the new general manager said he wanted to hire his “own
guy.”

It turns out McKenzie’s guy is someone he had no
prior relationship with. Speculation centered on Packers assistant
coaches Winston Moss, Joe Philbin and Dom Capers, all of whom
worked with McKenzie in Green Bay.

The last time the Raiders hired a head coach
with a defensive background was 1969, when Al Davis selected John
Madden to replace John Rauch.

Allen started his coaching career as a graduate
assistant at Texas A&M, where he played as a defensive back. He
was the secondary coach at Tulsa in 2000-01, served as a defensive
assistant with emphasis on the defensive line and quality control
with the Atlanta Falcons from 2002-05 and was hired as the
assistant defensive line coach by the New Orleans Saints in 2006
before being promoted to secondary coach.

He was the secondary coach on the New Orleans
team that won the Super Bowl against the Indianapolis Colts in
2010.

In terms of defensive philosophy, Allen told the
Broncos website heading into the 2011 season: “We’re going to be
built off speed and athleticism. We want to be a very fast,
violent, aggressive type of defense.”

Defensive collapses against Buffalo, Denver and
San Diego in the season finale helped keep the Raiders out of the
playoffs.

In describing Allen’s style, perennial Pro Bowl
cornerback Champ Bailey told the Denver Post, “You know how you get
a teacher that’s real stern but not over the top? That’s how he
is.”

Allen will take aim at the Raiders’
record-setting penalty total with a firm hand.

“Listen, I don’t believe in berating guys. Don’t
believe in talking down to them. We work together. They don’t work
for me or us as coaches,” Allen told the Post. “But at the end of
the day, we’re going to point out problems and we’re going to get
them corrected, because if you don’t get them corrected, they’re
going to fester, and eventually they’re going to get you beat.

“We point out if there is an issue with effort.
If there is an issue with an assignment, we make sure we bring it
to their attention, and make sure we get it corrected.”

With Allen’s expertise coming on the defensive
side, he likely will take the lead in rebuilding the Oakland
defense and will hire an offensive coordinator.

McKenzie said the new coach would have complete
control over his staff, and chances are Allen will look hard at
offensive coordinator Al Saunders, who still has a year left on his
contract, to maintain continuity on that side of the ball.

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