Nick Sirianni and Michael Clay discussing Eagles strategy with play diagrams on whiteboard behind them

Eagles STC Clay Interviews for Bucs Job

At a Glance

  • Special teams coordinator Michael Clay interviewed virtually with Tampa Bay on Thursday.
  • The 34-year-old has led Philadelphia’s special teams since 2021 under head coach Nick Sirianni.
  • Philadelphia’s 2024 units finished mid-pack: 14th in punt returns, 30th in kick returns, 16th in punt coverage and 4th in kick coverage.
  • Why it matters: A departure would force the Eagles to replace a coach Sirianni has repeatedly praised, potentially reshaping a phase that logged mixed results this season.

The Eagles’ coaching carousel gained speed Thursday when special teams coordinator Michael Clay conducted a virtual interview for the same role with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, according to an announcement from the Bucs.

The Interview and Its Timing

Tampa Bay revealed Clay’s interview one week after firing their previous special teams coordinator, Thomas McGaughey, who had held the post under head coach Todd Bowles for the past two seasons. The Buccaneers’ search for McGaughey’s successor now includes the Eagles’ incumbent, whose contract remains in place but whose future has become uncertain.

Michael Clay stands on Eagles field with football and Philadelphia logo while red X marks goalpost showing disaster preventio

Clay’s Track Record in Philadelphia

Since arriving with Sirianni in 2021, Clay has overseen a special-teams operation that has avoided disasters but rarely dominated games. Highlights include:

  • Punter Braden Mann delivering career-best numbers in 2024
  • Kicker Jake Elliott experiencing a down year marked by costly misses
  • Return games ranking 14th (punt) and 30th (kickoff) league-wide
  • Coverage units placing 16th on punts and 4th on kickoffs

The overall production mirrors the broader team narrative: solid enough to keep the Eagles competitive, yet inconsistent enough to prompt outside interest in change.

Coaching Journey from Oregon to the NFL

Clay’s path to Philadelphia began at Oregon, where he played linebacker for Chip Kelly and absorbed the up-tempo philosophy that defined Kelly’s early Eagles tenure. Undrafted in 2013, Clay spent training camp with the Miami Dolphins before Kelly brought him back to the sport as a coach.

Coaching Timeline

Year Role Team
2014 Defensive quality control Eagles (Chip Kelly)
2015 Assistant special teams Eagles (Dave Fipp)
2016-2020 Special teams/strength roles 49ers
2021-present Special teams coordinator Eagles

The cross-country move to San Francisco gave Clay diversified experience under multiple staffs, a résumé line that now appeals to Tampa Bay.

Sirianni’s Endorsement vs. Outside Interest

Head coach Nick Sirianni has consistently praised Clay publicly, citing attention to detail and rapport with players. That endorsement makes the Buccaneers’ outreach noteworthy; teams rarely request interviews for assistants they do not view as legitimate candidates, and virtual interviews have become standard first steps toward formal offers.

What Comes Next for the Eagles

Should Clay depart, Philadelphia would need to:

  • Identify an internal or external replacement before April’s off-season program
  • Decide whether to promote assistant Tyler Brown, a kicking specialist whose father Randy Brown served on Andy Reid’s staff in 2004-2005
  • Balance continuity against the desire to upgrade a phase that produced few explosive plays in 2024

The Eagles have not commented on whether they would block Clay from leaving, a silence that league insiders often interpret as willingness to let the process play out.

Buccaneers Fit and McGaughey Exit

Tampa Bay’s vacancy opened after Thomas McGaughey-a 1996 Eagles practice-squad alumnus-was dismissed following two seasons. The Bucs’ special teams finished in the bottom third of most major categories, prompting Bowles to seek fresh leadership. Clay’s familiarity with NFC schemes and his prior work with varied roster constructions could offer the Buccaneers a stabilizing voice.

Key Takeaways

  • Michael Clay‘s virtual interview signals genuine interest from Tampa Bay and places his Philadelphia future in limbo.
  • Special-teams rankings reveal a unit neither elite nor poor, leaving room for either retention or change.
  • Sirianni’s history of loyalty to assistants clashes with the NFL’s annual coaching shuffle, making Clay’s situation one to monitor through the coming weeks.

Author

  • I’m Olivia Bennett Harris, a health and science journalist committed to reporting accurate, compassionate, and evidence-based stories that help readers make informed decisions about their well-being.

    Olivia Bennett Harris reports on housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Philadelphia, uncovering who benefits—and who is displaced—by city policies. A Temple journalism grad, she combines data analysis with on-the-ground reporting to track Philadelphia’s evolving communities.

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