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Ex-QB David Blough named Washington Commanders offensive coordinator
Summary
David Blough was named offensive coordinator of the Washington Commanders, taking over after Kliff Kingsbury's departure following a 5-12 season.
Content
David Blough has been named the Washington Commanders' offensive coordinator, the team announced on Saturday. The 30-year-old former quarterback was promoted after two seasons as the club's assistant quarterbacks coach and a late-season stint as interim quarterbacks coach following Tavita Pritchard's departure for Stanford. Blough retired from playing in 2023 after NFL stops with the Browns, Lions, Vikings and Cardinals and four seasons in Detroit as a backup. The appointment comes amid a wider staff shakeup after the Commanders finished 5-12 this season.
Key details:
- David Blough was promoted to offensive coordinator after serving as Washington's assistant quarterbacks coach for the past two seasons.
- He served as interim quarterbacks coach late in the season after Tavita Pritchard left for Stanford.
- Blough retired from playing in 2023 and had NFL stints with Cleveland, Detroit, Minnesota and Arizona, appearing in nine games (seven starts) with 1,435 passing yards, six touchdowns and nine interceptions.
- The Detroit Lions had shown interest in Blough; he spent four seasons in Detroit as a backup under Ben Johnson, Kevin O'Connell and Kliff Kingsbury.
- The move follows the Commanders' 5-12 finish, with the offense ranked 22nd in scoring and yardage in 2025.
- Kliff Kingsbury and defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. left the team this week; Kingsbury's exit was reported as mutual, and Whitt had been stripped of play-calling duties in Week 11.
Summary:
Blough's promotion is part of a broader coaching overhaul following Washington's 5-12 season and the departures of Kliff Kingsbury and Joe Whitt Jr. Head coach Dan Quinn will remain in charge of the defense heading into 2026. Undetermined at this time.
