The Green Bay Packers’ head-coaching search is well underway, as the team has interviewed Jim Caldwell and Chuck Pagano for the vacancy, according to multiple reports on Wednesday.
Pro Football Talk reported that the Packers interviewed Caldwell, the former head coach of the Detroit Lions and Indianapolis Colts, while the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported the interview of Pagano, who also is a former Colts head coach.
The news marks the first reported head-coaching interviews made by any team this year. Caldwell, who turns 64 in January, spent the 2018 season out of the NFL – serving as a consultant for the XFL – after being fired by the Lions last January. 
He went 36-28 with the Lions in four seasons, taking them to two playoff appearances and three winning records, including 9-7 in 2016 and 2017. Detroit has slipped to 5-10 with one game left this season.
Caldwell also went 26-22 in three years leading the Indianapolis Colts (2009-11), going 14-2 and reaching the Super Bowl in 2009. 
In 2012, he became the Baltimore Ravens’ interim offensive coordinator in December and promptly helped the team to a Super Bowl title, helping fuel Joe Flacco’s historic playoff run.
Pagano, 58, replaced Caldwell in Indianapolis and led the Colts from 2012-17, going 53-43 but struggling after three 11-5 seasons to open his tenure. He spent this season out of coaching, working as an NFL consultant.
Pagano has familiarity with Packers interim head coach Joe Philbin, whom he hired to be his offensive line coach in Indy, and defensive co-ordinator Mike Pettine, as the two were on the same Baltimore Ravens staff in 2008.
The Packers are searching for a replacement for Mike McCarthy, who spent 12-plus years with the team while bringing home the Super Bowl XLV title.
Philbin, who has three-plus years of head-coaching experience with the Miami Dolphins, is expected to be considered by the team as well. 
Quarterback Aaron Rodgers supported Philbin’s candidacy for the job after last week’s win over the New York Jets, saying, “We want to play for Joe and give him the best opportunity possible.”
By interviewing Caldwell, the Packers have satisfied the Rooney Rule, which requires an interview of a minority candidate for head-coach and front-office executive openings.
The rule was amended this year, requiring teams to interview a minority candidate from outside the organisation unless a diverse in-house candidate is on the recommended list from the Career Development Advisory Panel. The change was aimed at preventing teams from interviewing an in-house coach with an unrealistic shot at the job merely to satisfy the rule.

Nelson plans to return to Raiders in 2019
Oakland Raiders wide receiver Jordy Nelson intends to return to the Oakland Raiders in 2019 for his 12th NFL season, if they’ll have him back.
“I plan to (return),” Nelson told reporters Wednesday. “It’s not always the player’s decision. Yeah, that’s the plan. We’ve enjoyed our time out here so far, enjoyed being with the team and starting the rebuilding process and being a part of that.”
Nelson, 33, is on the books for $7.2 million in 2019, but none is guaranteed and the Raiders could release him without any cap consequences. But head coach Jon Gruden sounded like he wants the veteran back to finish his contract.
“He’s a good player, as good as you’ll ever get the chance to coach,” Gruden told reporters of Nelson. 
“He is so instinctive, so smart, so versatile and so team oriented. That’s why he is here. I think he’s got close to 30 catches in the last four games. He’s healthy, he’s learned our offense and he’s learned how to play anywhere on the line. Third down or any down, he is still a really good quality wide receiver.”
Nelson has 29 grabs for 308 yards over the last four games, bringing his season tallies to 54 and 661, respectively. He also has three touchdowns, but none since Week 5.
A second-round pick in 2008, Nelson spent his first 10 seasons with the Green Bay Packers before being released last offseason. He has 604 catches for 8,509 yards and 72 touchdowns in his career, which includes one full season (2015) lost to a torn ACL.