X

Report: NFL Coaches, Execs 'Sad' Belichick Joined UNC; 'Laughed' at Contract Buyout

Joseph Zucker@@JosephZuckerX.com LogoFeatured Columnist IVDecember 15, 2024

CHAPEL HILL, NC - DECEMBER 14: New University of North Carolina football head coach Bill Belichick is introduced during halftime of a men's basketball game between La Salle and North Carolina at Dean E.Smith Center on December 14, 2024 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. (Photo by Andy Mead/ISI Photos/Getty Images)
Andy Mead/ISI Photos/Getty Images

Some coaches and executives around the NFL were "sad" to see Bill Belichick officially leave the league behind to coach North Carolina, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Schefter reported Sunday on SportsCenter that there's also a sense the NFL door isn't closed on Belichick for good, citing his buyout with the Tar Heels as one example.

The NFL insider said teams were "laughing at the number, laughing at the money." Trying to hire Belichick before June 1, 2025 would cost $10 million, but that figure falls to just $1 million on June 1 and beyond.

During his introductory press conference, Belichick said of his new job that he "didn't come here to leave."

CBS Sports College Football 🏈 @CBSSportsCFB

"I didn't come here to leave"<br><br>-Bill Belichick when asked if he would go back to the NFL if he has success at UNC <a href="https://t.co/x2TqT4HtMT">pic.twitter.com/x2TqT4HtMT</a>

ESPN's Seth Wickersham also detailed how the 72-year-old steadily became disenchanted with the NFL and saw college football as a more attractive spot to continue his coaching career.

Despite what Belichick said and how he wants to sell this decision, the language of his buyout seems to tell a different story. Surely somebody who never envisioned a return to the NFL wouldn't have bothered to leave himself with a straightforward exit plan before he ever coached a game in his new gig.

Schefter's report pointed to how NFL teams don't see Belichick's buyout as an obstacle if an owner or general manager is interested enough.

All of the conversations about Belichick's true goals could all be moot given how little interest he received during the last NFL hiring cycle. Wickersham wrote the Atlanta Falcons were the only franchise to make a serious pursuit, and they still hired Raheem Morris anyway.

ESPN's Rich Cimini reported Saturday the six-time Super Bowl champion "personally reached out to inquire" about the New York Jets' vacancy. Accepting UNC's offer shows how advanced those conversations got.