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Midseason Coach Power Rankings

Some of the biggest names in coaching have done the worst jobs in 2012. Our Coach Power Rankings are based on how good a job each man has done this season. Bill Belichick might be a better coach than Joe Philbin in the grand scheme of things, but has he done a better job with his squad this year? To the rankings.

32. Romeo Crennel, Kansas City Chiefs:

There's an argument to be made that the Chiefs are the worst team since the 0-16 Detroit Lions in 2008. There's an even trickier argument to be made that these Chiefs are worse.

G. Newman Lowrance/Associated Press

31. Jason Garrett, Dallas Cowboys:

All of Dallas' biggest problems are self-inflicted: Communication errors, game-management problems, penalties, sloppy mistakes, not having enough players on the field. This isn't a disciplined football team.

James D. Smith/Associated Press

30. Joe Vitt/Aaron Kromer, New Orleans Saints

Sean Payton's agent is probably thankful to Payton's staff for making his client look like a genius.

Associated Press

29. Mike Mularkey, Jacksonville Jaguars:

Somehow, the Jaguars' offense remains the worst in the league.

Stephen Morton/Associated Press

28. Andy Reid, Philadelphia Eagles:

It's remarkable that the Eagles are lucky to be 3-5. Firing defensive coordinator Juan Castillo was an admission of failure on one of Reid's biggest choices, and the defense has only grown worse since.

Michael Perez/Associated Press

27. Ron Rivera, Carolina Panthers

The defense has actually been a little better of late, but Rivera too often coaches not to lose.

Chuck Burton/Associated Press

26. Chan Gailey, Buffalo Bills:

Gailey has proven he doesn't know how to hire a defensive staff or improve defensive performance. The plan changes every year.

Paul Connors/Associated Press

25. Norv Turner, San Diego Chargers:

There aren't many teams we'd trust less with a huge lead. That has to come back to the coaching staff eventually.

Nick Lucero/NFL

24. Mike Munchak, Tennessee Titans

Munchak is lucky to have three wins, considering five of Tennessee's six losses came by 21 points or more. He's yet to show he's a difference-maker as a coach.

Tom DiPace/Associated Press

23. Marvin Lewis, Cincinnati Bengals:

No one throws more perplexing challenge flags than Lewis. The Bengals have taken an expected step back this year.

Michael Keating/Associated Press

22. Rex Ryan, New York Jets

Considering the injuries to Darrelle Revis and Santonio Holmes, Rex actually isn't doing that bad a job. The Jets just aren't that talented.

Andrew Mills/US Presswire

21. Pat Shurmur, Cleveland Browns

His in-game decisions drive us crazy. Still, Shurmur has done a decent job with a young quarterback and a very young offense. The Browns are a tough out, despite their 2-7 record.

Mark Duncan/Associated Press

20. Jim Schwartz, Detroit Lions

Schwartz has struggled to take his talented Lions to the next level, but they have quietly righted the ship. Detroit might still be a factor.

Damian Strohmeyer/Associated Press

19. Dennis Allen, Oakland Raiders:

We didn't expect the Raiders to be in so many shootouts. It's a very strange team, but Oakland is playing to its talent level and has cut down on the franchise's signature mental mistakes.

Paul Abell/Associated Press

18. Ken Whisenhunt, Arizona Cardinals

On balance, 4-5 is overachieving for this Cardinals team.

Paul Connors/Associated Press

17. Mike Shanahan, Washington Redskins:

We give him a break because the Shanahans have done a very nice job shepherding Robert Griffin III into the league and that's their first priority.

Nick Wass/Associated Press

16. Mike McCarthy, Green Bay Packers

The offense looked stale at times early in the season and McCarthy has never been the best in-game manager. Still, he's a steady leader and great offensive mind.

Mike Roemer/Associated Press

15. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers:

Tomlin has a way of steering the Steelers through rocky times.

Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press

14. John Fox, Denver Broncos

Denver's defense has steadily improved, but we can't give Fox too much credit when Peyton Manning coaches the offense.

Eric Lars Bakke/Associated Press

13. Leslie Frazier, Minnesota Vikings

The Vikings have overachieved overall, but the team still doesn't know how to solve its passing woes.

Genevieve Ross/Associated Press

12. Jeff Fisher, St. Louis Rams:

Before the game in London, the Rams did a nice job of battling hard every week. Fisher dramatically improved the team's defense.

Matt Dunham/Associated Press

11. Greg Schiano, Tampa Bay Buccaneers:

The Bucs have an identity on offense and fly around the ball on defense. It's looking like a great first draft class for Schiano.

Brian Blanco/Associated Press

10. Bill Belichick, New England Patriots:

The secondary breakdowns won't go away and there have been more situational football problems than normal, but the Patriots remain very tough to prepare for. Josh McDaniels just needs to stop getting so cute.

John Froschauer/Associated Press

9. John Harbaugh, Baltimore Ravens:

The Ravens are 6-2, seemingly just because of ingrained institutional memory. They're able to win many different styles of games.

Patrick Semansky/Associated Pres

8. Pete Carroll, Seattle Seahawks

Seattle's defensive schemes are very creative. That's all Carroll. His gamble to roll with Russell Wilson has paid off with weekly improvements from the rookie quarterback.

Joe Mahoney/Associated Press

7. Gary Kubiak, Houston Texans:

Kubiak deserves a lot of credit for handling the transition from a team that hopes to be good to a team that expects to be good.

David J. Phillip/Associated Pres

6. Tom Coughlin, New York Giants:

If every regular season ended at midseason, Coughlin might be more respected than another former Giants employee: Vince Lombardi.

Tony Gutierrez/Associated Press

5. Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears

This might be Smith's best defense yet in Chicago, which is saying a lot. He gets knocked slightly for the erratic offense.

Joe Howell/Associated Press

4. Jim Harbaugh, San Francisco 49ers:

The 49ers might be the hardest team to prepare for in football. That says a lot about the coaching staff.

Kevin Terrell/Associated Press

3. Joe Philbin, Miami Dolphins

This was expected by many to be the worst team in football. Instead, the Dolphins are probably better than their 4-4 record indicates.

Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press

2. Mike Smith, Atlanta Falcons:

The Falcons do everything you expect of well-coached teams. They win the turnover margin, they avoid penalties, they play great situational football. They are greater than the sum of their parts.

Paul Abell/Associated Press

1. Chuck Pagano/Bruce Arians, Indianpolis Colts

Coaching is about maximizing talent. No team has squeezed more magical moments out of a thinner roster than the Indianapolis Colts. Arians treated Andrew Luck like a veteran from Day 1 and it's paid off.

Associated Press

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