Browns OT legend Joe Thomas calls out Colts for ‘egregious’ Jeff Saturday hire

CLEVELAND, OH - NOVEMBER 04: Former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman Joe Thomas looks on during the game against the Kansas City Chiefs against the Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium on November 4, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)
CLEVELAND, OH - NOVEMBER 04: Former Cleveland Browns offensive lineman Joe Thomas looks on during the game against the Kansas City Chiefs against the Cleveland Browns at FirstEnergy Stadium on November 4, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) /
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Legendary Cleveland Browns OT Joe Thomas criticized the Indianapolis Colts for hiring Jeff Saturday as NFL players remain divided on issue.

Over a decade after a successful “Suck For Luck” campaign in Indianapolis, the Colts are making another drastic decision that could shape the outcome of their season.

This week, the Colts fired Frank Reich and hired former Colts offensive lineman Jeff Saturday as their interim head coach. Saturday had been an NFL analyst with ESPN since 2013,  but he accepted the head coaching position with no professional coaching experience.

Immediately after the hiring, NFL commentators expressed confusion and outrage to seeing Saturday seemingly walk into one of the most exclusive jobs in sports. Saturday’s lack of professional coaching experience came under scrutiny, as did the related conversation about how minority coaches in the NFL have been passed over for reportedly being underqualified.

What NFL players and coaches have to say in this moment is weighted, as they are the people who can best assess whether or not a hire like this makes sense for the Colts. For legendary Cleveland Browns offensive tackle Joe Thomas, who has a very similar NFL resume to Saturday, the Saturday hire seems like “a joke.”

“It was the most egregious thing I can ever remember happening in the NFL,” Thomas said on the “Good Morning Football” set in Munich, Germany. Thomas criticized Colts owner Jim Irsay for seemingly hiring his “drinking buddy” and described Saturday as “not blameless for accepting the job.”

In the three-minute segment, Thomas explains how the move came across as insulting to everyone who knows the sacrifice and dedication demanded of NFL coaches.

“When you’re a coach in the NFL, you do not have a life outside of football,” Thomas said. Thomas then described the lifestyle of short-term Browns coach Rob Chudzinski, who apparently saw his children only once or twice a week.

For the most part, NFL journalists sided with Thomas, citing private concerns around the NFL about Saturday’s qualifications.

But the divide is much greater among former NFL players, some of whom endorse Joe Thomas’ perspective and some of whom admonish it.

NFL players become divided over Joe Thomas statement about Colts’ Jeff Saturday hire

When Thomas was speaking on GMFB, there was another NFL player on the set: GMFB host and former Browns teammate Jason McCourty.

“You’re saying what everybody’s thinking,” Jason McCourty told Thomas.

Other former NFL players who have since transitioned to media roles such as Ryan Clark and Robert Griffin III spoke out against the hire.

Griffin then chose to find a silver lining in the situation, hoping that Saturday’s hiring opens the door for more NFL players who want to transition to coaches.

“You can criticize the hire, it’s timing and the passing over if so many other coaches and still wish Jeff well,” Griffin clarified.

But many other former NFL players threw their support behind the decision for that same reason. If Saturday does well, it could create new pathways for NFL players to step into coaching roles. Also, they noted that personal relationships are a factor in the NFL, a fact that could allow Saturday to become an effective leader in the locker room.

While the Saturday hire could certainly pave the way for other NFL players who want to become coaches, it’s not as if Saturday is the first former NFL player to become a head coach. Tennessee Titans head coach Mike Vrabel, a Super Bowl-winning linebacker with the New England Patriots, is one, if not the, most successful branch on the Bill Belichick coaching tree. Tying it back to Josh McDaniels critiques, it’s true that being a “leader of men” counts for something in the NFL. It’s just that no other former player — not Vrabel, not Jerod Mayo, not Reggie Wayne — ever walked off of the field and into a head coaching position quite like Saturday.

light. More. Colts hiring Jeff Saturday over more qualified Black NFL coaches is a bad look for Indianapolis