BEREA, Ohio -- Cleveland's offseason has already begun with a disheartening loss. Bill Cowher is not interested in coaching the rebuilding Browns.
Following a 4-12 season that began with Cleveland pegged as one of the NFL's rising teams, the Browns fired coach Romeo Crennel on Monday. The ouster came one day after general manager Phil Savage was dismissed by owner Randy Lerner.
Lerner has begun interviewing for both openings and met with Cowher on Saturday night in New York. The former Pittsburgh Steelers coach and current CBS analyst told him he has no intention of returning to coaching in 2009. He asked Lerner to remove him from his list of coaching candidates.
"The explanation that he gave," Lerner said, "was that he was very focused on his kids and his life in North Carolina, and the way he's living in a noncoaching or, if you will, a civilian existence and that he wasn't finished with that."
Crennel went 24-40 in four seasons with the Browns, who entered 2008 with huge expectations but collapsed amid injuries and uneven play on offense and defense. They didn't score an offensive touchdown while losing their last six games and posted their fifth season of at least 10 losses in six years.
Although Crennel's dismissal had been expected for some time, Lerner waited until after the season out of respect for the 61-year-old coach and former defensive coordinator. Crennel had never been a head coach at any level before taking over the Browns in 2005.
"Romeo was a gentleman through and through," said Lerner, who met with the coach Monday morning. "He was gracious to a fault."
Crennel told Lerner he may be willing to stay with the team in another coaching capacity.
Crennel was regarded as the top coordinator available when the Browns hired him shortly after they brought in Savage. Crennel accepted Lerner's offer in the hours after winning his third Super Bowl as New England's defensive coordinator. Crennel won two previous Super Bowl rings as an assistant coach with the New York Giants.
Cowher wouldn't be the first coach to change his mind. But Lerner said he left the meeting feeling as if the door was closed.
"He wasn't coy. He spoke very clearly," Lerner said. "He was very prepared to describe his position. It wasn't a dance."
Lerner said he never talked finances with Cowher.
"It wasn't that kind of meeting," Lerner said. "This was an informal visit to get out on the table that he was not prepared to be considered a candidate. Had I heard otherwise, I would have skipped that meeting."
Lerner would prefer to hire an executive first and he has been granted permission to speak with New England's Scott Pioli for the GM opening. He did not say when the interview will take place. Lerner said there was another executive candidate in the league that he wants to speak with but would not divulge his name.
Lerner said Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels was on his coaching list and he will likely contact Eric Mangini, fired Monday by the New York Jets. Mangini began his pro career as an intern with Cleveland in the 1990s.
Lerner also expressed an interest in speaking with Bill Parcells, if he leaves the Miami Dolphins. Floyd Reese, Charley Casserly and Tom Donahoe are other possibilities for the executive job.
Crennel's vast experience, defensive knowledge and even-keeled demeanor were vital at the time for the Browns, who were coming off a 4-12 season under Butch Davis. Cleveland went 6-10 in Crennel's first year and just 4-12 in 2006, when they lost six of their last seven games.
But after a 10-6 season in 2007, Crennel was given the contract extension through the 2011 season. With an explosive offense and six Pro Bowlers, the Browns were rewarded with five prime-time TV appearances but their schedule proved too much.
They were also ravaged by injuries. Quarterbacks Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn were lost for the season, forcing Crennel to start recently signed Bruce Gradkowski in the season finale at Pittsburgh. The Browns were beaten 31-0, dropping Crennel to 0-8 in his career against the Steelers -- the only full-time Browns coach not to beat Cleveland's rival.
Crennel was genuinely respected by the Browns. The players referred to him as RAC, his initials, and were disappointed they didn't play better for him. Quinn admired the way Crennel handled talk of his departure.
"It says a lot about someone going through adversity who continues to coach and do their job," he said. "To me and the rest of the guys that said a lot about coach Crennel and who he is."