New England's Jerod Mayo and Jacksonville's Doug Pederson are two NFL coaches who are out of a job, though a handful of other teams decided to stay with the status quo on a surprisingly quiet Monday following the regular season.
The day after the season's final game is usually a tough 24 hours for coaches as underachieving teams move quickly to make changes.
Mayo fired after one season
Mayo was fired on Sunday after the team's win over the Buffalo Bills, ending his tenure after just one season and a 4-13 record. The move means the Patriots will embark on another rebuild as the team tries to build an identity following the Bill Belichick-Tom Brady era.
On Monday, Patriots owner Robert Kraft took a big chunk of the blame for Mayo's quick tenure.
''This whole situation is on me. I feel terrible for Jerod. Because I put him in an untenable situation,'' Kraft said. ''I know he has all the tools as a head coach to be successful in this league. He just needed more time before taking the job.''
Pederson let go but GM stays
Pederson is out as Jacksonville's head coach after the franchise's ''best team assembled'' won just four games, though owner Shad Khan did opt to retain general manager Trent Baalke. The Jaguars have lost 18 of their past 23 games dating back to last season.