There have been seven NFL coaching changes this offseason, some good, some bad, some so inexplicable they won’t be believed in two years when the team is making another coaching change. (A spot usually reserved for the Redskins.) Here are FTW’s rankings of the seven changes for the 2016 season.

7. Philadelphia Eagles: Doug Pederson (offensive coordinator, Kansas City Chiefs)

From the failed annals of “don’t fire for the sake of firing,” we have the Philadelphia Eagles who, unhappy with all the power they bestowed upon Chip Kelly, were forced to fire a promising coach because, like a parent who gives a nine-year-old the keys to the car, then gets mad when the nine-year-old crashes, they couldn’t take back that power and just let Kelly what he does best. So what did Jeffrey Lurie have in mind when he sought out to find Kelly’s replacement? Well, he had to, uh, be a football coach. And knowing the game was a definite plus. And, I guess just wanting to come to Philadelphia to sign a contract was pretty much the main prerequisite. That’s how you end up with the blergh hire of Doug Pederson, who was coaching in high school just eight years ago (the Eagles love those quick-risers, don’t they) and served as offensive coordinator under Andy Reid for the past three seasons in Kansas City. And had never been interviewed by an NFL team. And was as nondescript as Kelly was high profile. Pederson might be perfectly fine, though I look at him and, I don’t know why, just see a younger Norv Turner. INSPIRING! Oh, Pederson, who didn’t call plays for Kansas City, was reportedly calling plays during the Chiefs’ Reid-esque drive against the Patriots — the one that seemed to defy all conventions of space and time and felt like it lasted as long as The Revenant.

6. Tennessee Titans: Mike Mularky (interim coach, Tennessee Titans)

When you bring in a guy to coach a 1-7 team and he ends up going 2-6, there’s really no way you can’t hire him to be the full-time coach.

5. Miami Dolphins: Adam Gase (offensive coordinator, Chicago Bears)

Unless Bill Belichick suddenly resigns after a Super Bowl win and the Pats replace him with one of those kids from Modern Family, Gase will be the youngest coach in the league. The youth movement is great but being Peyton’s sounding board for two seasons and turning Jay Cutler from a 5-11 quarterback into a 6-10 quarterback isn’t exactly the resume of a future Don Shula.

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Dirk Koetter (offensive coordinator, Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

If you didn’t know much about the Jacksonville Jaguars, Atlanta Falcons or Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the places Dirk Koetter has served as offensive coordinator over the last few years, you’d probably assume that a dude named Dirk, who was so coveted by the Bucs that they pushed out Lovie Smith for him after just two years, would be a hotshot young coordinator like Gase or someone else ranked high on this list. Well, surprise! Koetter is nine months younger than Lovie Smith (he’ll be 57 when the season starts) which makes him about the same age as Marvin Lewis and Mike Smith and the 10th oldest coach in the NFL. Now, as Aalyiah taught us, age ain’t nothin’ but a number. And though Bucs management isn’t exactly the model for which NFL teams should strive, the fact that they really wanted Koetter gives this some bonus points. Unlike in Philly, this wasn’t a change for the sake of change.

3. Cleveland Browns: Hue Jackson (offensive coordinator, Cincinnati Bengals)

The Bengals had to go through Mike Shula, Bruce Coslet and Dick LeBeau before striking silver with Marvin Lewis, a good coach who has seven wild-card appearances and seven wild-card losses. The Cardinals had to go through Gene Stallings, Joe Bugel, Buddy Ryan, Vince Tobin, Dave McGinnis and Dennis Green before Ken Whisenhunt had two years of glory, fell from grace, and then the Cardinals walked into the coach with the third-highest winning percentage in the last four years (behind Bill Belichick and just behind Pete Carroll). Is this the Browns answer? Hue Jackson is the second-best hire on this list, but I don’t know if it matters. The Cleveland Browns could’t even make Bill Belichick into a .500 coach. Since then its been Chris Palmer, Butch Davis, Romeo Crennel, Eric Mangini, Pat Shumur, Rob Chudzinski and Mike Pettine. The organization is such a mess that Jackson is set up for failure. I don’t know if the return of Belichick could break this team from its losing ways.

2. New York Giants: Ben McAdoo (offensive coordinator, New York Giants)

Seven years before he got his crack at one of the 32 head-coaching jobs in the NFL, the 35-year-old was a defensive backs coach in college. Then he took the same job in the NFL, followed by a single season as a defensive coordinator before getting hired out of obscurity. That was Mike Tomlin, who has had great success (with one Super Bowl ring) in his nine years with Pittsburgh. McAdoo’s path is similar: Now 38, he was a graduate assistant at Pittsburgh (the college) just 13 years ago. Then he had some quality control jobs until 2005 before serving as a tight ends coach for six years, then two seasons as a quarterbacks coach and two seasons as an offensive coordinator before getting his call. So, while Tomlin’s rise was more meteoric, he and McAdoo rode a similar path (minus the defense vs. offense thing). That, of course, means nothing — they’re two different men. But give me a young up-and-comer over a retread or a guy who’s been passed over for more jobs than your hippie uncle any day. (Also, bonus for the facial hair and ill-fitting suit. Great coaches no longer are guys who look good in suits.)

1. San Francisco 49ers: Chip Kelly (head coach, Philadelphia Eagles)

Others may end up being better coaches, but Chip Kelly is the best coach on this list right now. To use the Bill Parcells analogy for perhaps the three billionth time, Kelly’s dishes in Philly were fine, it was the ingredients that stunk up the joint. I don’t know how well he’ll get along with the Niners front office — his ego seems similar to Jim Harbaugh’s and look how long that marriage lasted. I’m not as quick to say that Colin Kaepernick’s career will be brilliantly revived just from Kelly’s mere gaze. But I believe that if Chip Kelly is left to coaching a team, he’s going to be a top-tier NFL coach and San Francisco is as good a place to do that as any.