GREEN BAY, Wis. — Rich Bisaccia has stepped down as the Green Bay Packers special teams coordinator after four seasons.
Bisaccia said Tuesday in a statement released by the team that he had made the decision ''after taking some time to reflect over the last few weeks.''
The Packers' season ended Jan. 10 with a 31-27 loss to the Chicago Bears in the wild-card round of the NFC playoffs.
Bisaccia, 65, joined Packers coach Matt LaFleur's staff after going 7-6 as Las Vegas' interim head coach in 2021 and helping the Raiders reach the playoffs that season. Bisaccia added the title of assistant head coach in March 2023.
Bisaccia was the Packers third special teams coordinator in as many years when he got to Green Bay.
The Packers were hoping Bisaccia could fix Green Bay's history of special teams issues, a trend that began well before LaFleur's tenure started in 2019.
He had mixed results in that regard.
Keisean Nixon followed Bisaccia to Green Bay from Las Vegas and earned All-Pro honors as a kick returner in 2022 and 2023. This season, Daniel Whelen became the first Packer to lead the NFL in gross punting average since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger.