Pat Kirwan thinks Aaron Glenn will be next Saints HC

LOL. I don't ever believe anything Moscona says. He's just trolling for views. He's welcome to his opinion but it's no more valid than yours, mine, or anyone else on this board.

Regardless, of what Moscona thinks, an argument can be made for any of the jobs being good or bad depending on what a coach is looking for. Some might consider the Bears the top job because of Williams. But, Williams has been struggling recently so maybe a coach doesn't think he's going to be a great player and doesn't want to be stuck with him as the starting QB for 3 years. The Jets have Rodgers who has and will get a coach fired. Who wants to be stuck with him as your starting QB and who wants to have the constant heat of the NY media? And Jacksonville is pretty much so locked into Lawrence as their starting QB. He's the 4th highest paid QB in the NFL and he's basically only as good as Derek Carr, or maybe worse, who is the 18th highest paid QB in the NFL.

The advantage the Saints have is an organization who has shown it is willing to be patient, even too patient at times, a solid starting QB, a good organization with an owner willing to pay to build the team the coach wants, and a solid base roster that really should have won 8 or 10 games this year if not for a bad head coach and injuries. The only real downside to the Saints job is it's a small market (attractive to some) and our cap situation. But the cap can be clean in two years and this organization has shown for years that the cap doesn't stop them from giving a coach the players they want. And that's where being an organization with patience pays off.

So, they are all more or less close to each other depending on what you want. No available job, unless Andy Reid retires, is going to be a great situation. They will all have advantages and disadvantages. Which is better will really depend on the specific coach unless some unusually great job comes open which doesn't seem likely right now.
This isn't about Matts opinion, he presented facts. Current roster, salary cap and ownership are the top three considerations followed by the smaller aspects like market, fan base, job location. The biggest IMO is the salary cap. You can own a Ferrari but if you do not have gasoline its not going anywhere. The salary cap is the gasoline. We're not completely inflexible but we are definitely handcuffed to a degree. What id say to defend your point to this argument is that we've been running our cap this way for years and that we're sort of the masters of living on the edge. We saw that we were indeed on the edge, when we lost Mccoy and the glass house shattered. Anyway, we're going to have to convince Ben Johnson that we can still manage a competitive roster in our current cap situation. He may say, spare me the word salad, im going to the team that has the most gasoline.