Bills to Hire Rex Ryan as Coach

ByABC News
January 11, 2015, 8:08 AM

— -- The Buffalo Bills are putting the finishing touches on a five-year deal that will make Rex Ryan their next head coach, sources told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.

The hiring of Ryan, who will earn a salary of $5.5 million per year, would complete an extensive coaching search for the Bills, who have interviewed 12 candidates since Doug Marrone opted out of his contract on Dec. 31.

The Bills conducted a second interview with Ryan on Saturday night, sources told ESPN.

The offensive coordinator Ryan is most likely to bring with him to Buffalo is the  San Francisco 49ers' Greg Roman, a source told ESPN. The Bills have said they would like to keep Jim Schwartz as defensive coordinator and pair him with the best head coach possible. Ryan and Schwartz would have to talk before this becomes a certainty, however.

Ryan spent the last six seasons with the Jets, going 46-50 and helping New York reach the AFC Championship Game in each of his first two years.

But Ryan and general manager John Idzik were fired on Dec. 29 after the Jets went 4-12 and missed the playoffs for the fourth straight season.

The 52-year-old Ryan also has interviewed for the Atlanta Falcons' coaching vacancy. The defensive-minded Ryan will inherit a Bills defense that ranked fourth in the NFL and had a league-leading 54 sacks this past season.

But he also will inherit a quarterback situation that appears just as unsettled as it was with the Jets, where Geno Smith's inconsistent play hurt the team's offense. EJ Manuel, who like Smith was drafted in 2013, appears in line to start for Buffalo.

After struggling over the first four games, Manuel was benched in favor of veteran  Kyle Orton, who retired after the season.

Ryan will become the first coach to change teams within the same division since Bill Parcells joined the Jets in 1997, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Parcells coached the New England Patriots the previous season.

The Bills went 9-7 this past season -- finishing with a winning record for the first time since 2004 -- but haven't made the postseason in 15 years, the longest active drought in the NFL.