Joe Barry is out as Packers defensive coordinator after 3 seasons

Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Joe Barry is seen before an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings Sunday, Dec. 31, 2023, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
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Joe Barry is out as the Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator after a turbulent third season on the job that ended with a loss in the NFC divisional round of the playoffs.

“We want to thank Joe for his commitment and contributions to our success the past three seasons,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said Wednesday in a statement announcing the move. “These decisions are extremely difficult and Joe is one of the best men I’ve had the opportunity to work with in this league.”

Green Bay ranked 10th in points allowed per game (20.6), 17th in yards allowed per game (335.1) and 23rd in yards allowed per play (5.4) during the regular season with a defense featuring eight former first-round draft picks.

That included a brutal three-game stretch late in the season when the Packers allowed 29.3 points per game while going 1-2 against the New York Giants, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Carolina Panthers.

LaFleur was asked directly about the possibility of changing coordinators during the season in his news conference following a 34-20 loss to Tampa Bay in which Baker Mayfield posted a perfect passer rating of 158.3. Mayfield and New York’s Tommy DeVito both earned NFC player of the week awards for their performances against the Packers.

One day later, LaFleur said he was keeping Barry but would take an expanded role in the defense. In their next game, the Packers blew a two-touchdown, fourth-quarter lead in a 33-30 victory at Carolina, which didn’t score another point in its final two games of the season.

The defense performed much better the rest of the season.

The Packers allowed just one touchdown over their final two regular-season games, and that came when the Minnesota Vikings recovered a muffed punt at the Green Bay 7-yard line. The Packers then held the Dallas Cowboys scoreless until the final play of the first half in a 48-32 wild-card victory.

But the Packers did allow 25 second-half points to the Cowboys and couldn’t protect a fourth-quarter lead in a 24-21 divisional-round loss at San Francisco, when the 49ers drove 69 yards and scored the winning touchdown with 1:07 remaining.