SAN JOSE, Calif. — When it comes to being an offensive coordinator in the NFL, few coaches have fared better than New England's Josh McDaniels.
As a head coach, it's been a completely different story.
The six-time Super Bowl champion is back in the title game after taking a one-year break from coaching following his second firing as a head coach with no thoughts now on whether he will ever get a third chance.
''Every day's one day at a time for me now,'' McDaniels said this week. "I think I'm where I'm supposed to be. I'm incredibly happy to be here and doing what I'm doing. I love my job. I love the role that I have. I love the group that I'm with. So whatever that plan is down the road, we'll figure that out. But I couldn't be more happy with where I'm at.''
Being at the Super Bowl as a Patriots assistant is familiar territory for McDaniels as he prepares second-year quarterback Drake Maye and the offense for Sunday's matchup against the Seattle Seahawks' stellar defense. McDaniels' work with Maye helped him become a finalist for the NFL AP Assistant Coach of the Year that will be announced on Thursday night at NFL Honors.
Ever since starting in the NFL as a low-level assistant with Bill Belichick's Patriots in the 2001 season, McDaniels has been a frequent participant in the Super Bowl with this year's game being his 10th of his career.
New England won it all his first season, went back-to-back in the 2003-04 seasons with McDaniels as a defensive assistant and quarterbacks coach and he then forged a career as one of the top coordinators in the NFL starting in 2006.
He coordinated a record-setting offense in 2007 led by Tom Brady and Randy Moss and was the coordinator for three more Super Bowl winners in the 2010s.