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Lovie Smith’s open candidacy for the Texans’ head coaching job has gained momentum in recent days, a source said.

#HoustonTexans #Lovie #Smithdiscuss #headcoachingposition

Stephen A. Smith reacts to the latest NFL coaching news and explains why we’ll only see real change when ownership diversifies. (2:01)

Stephen A. on McCown’s coaching candidacy: An insult to Black coaches everywhere (2:01)

The Houston Texans announced Monday that they had “completed additional discussions” with their associate head coach and defensive coordinator Lovie Smith about their head-coaching job.

The Texans have included Smith in their discussions all along, but his candidacy has gained steam in recent days, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Josh McCown will not be the Texans’ next head coach, and if Smith is hired, the team’s offensive coordinator is expected to be current quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator Pep Hamilton, not McCown, a source told ESPN’s Sarah Barshop.

Smith was previously an NFL head coach with the Chicago Bears (2004-12) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2014-15). He joined David Culley’s Texans staff in March last year after being fired following a five-year stint as head coach at the University of Illinois.

Smith has an 89-87 record as an NFL head coach and was the 2005 Associated Press Coach of the Year.

Smith, who is Black, would join the Miami Dolphins’ Mike McDaniel, New York Jets’ Robert Saleh, Pittsburgh Steelers’ Mike Tomlin and Washington Commanders’ Ron Rivera as the league’s only minority head coaches.

McCown was under consideration despite never coaching above the high school level. He first retired in 2019 after 17 years as an NFL quarterback and took a job as a high school quarterbacks coach in Charlotte, North Carolina, where his sons played. He continued to coach after coming out of retirement later in 2019. The Texans also interviewed McCown last year for the position eventually filled by Culley.

The Texans fired Culley on Jan. 13 after just one year at the helm. Houston went 4-13 in Culley’s single season.

The Texans also interviewed Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, Los Angeles Chargers offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, former Dolphins head coach Brian Flores, and former Steelers wide receiver and current Florida Atlantic receivers coach Hines Ward.

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