
The first time most people noticed something was off about Brian Daboll, it wasn’t the playcalling. The jawline was the culprit. He was noticeably smaller, the polo shirt no longer strained at the chest, and the walk along the sidelines seemed somehow lighter when training camp began in late July 2024, with the humidity of New Jersey already bearing down on the Quest Diagnostics fields. He finally acknowledged that it was fifty pounds. Of all things, Pilates. He had wandered into a Wyckoff studio after seeing it over dinner.
To his credit, Daboll was open about how it happened. It was the kind of change that makes reporters rush to find an angle. He presented it through a wager, just like a Buffalo guy would. First, a weight-loss challenge with the staff, followed by a separate bet with a friend from home who rides a motorcycle and is one of the thirty or forty people he still maintains contact with from his time at Saint Francis High School. The previous year, he had lost a similar wager. He had no intention of losing twice.
| Brian Daboll — Quick Profile | |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Brian Michael Daboll |
| Date of Birth | April 14, 1975 |
| Birthplace | Welland, Ontario, Canada |
| Raised In | West Seneca, New York |
| College | University of Rochester (Economics) |
| Current Role | Offensive Coordinator, Tennessee Titans |
| Previous Role | Head Coach, New York Giants (2022–2025) |
| Career Highlight | AP NFL Coach of the Year, 2022 |
| Super Bowl Rings | 5 (as assistant with New England Patriots) |
| Reported 2024 Weight Loss | Approximately 50 pounds |
| Method | Pilates, staff weight-loss challenge, personal bet |
| Past Weight Loss | 112 pounds during the Cleveland Browns’ tenure (2010) |
Observing him discuss it at the time gives the impression that he thought it was a little funny. He almost casually mentioned that he had once lost 112 pounds in a single Cleveland season, a figure so ridiculous that it was nearly ignored. Fifty pounds was a side project by that personal standard. Five in the morning is Pilates time. For weeks, it hurt. Then all of a sudden, outcomes.
He warned everyone, which is the part that hung in the air at the time and seems heavier now. When asked if he would continue once the grind began, Daboll shrugged and said that his weight usually increased again during the season. He wasn’t making fun of himself. He was acting realistically. Head coaches in the NFL don’t eat well. The facility is where they sleep. They rely on the type of late-night meals that are ordered in large quantities and reheated by Tuesday morning. In every way, the work consumes you.
The lighter Daboll on the sidelines was already changing again by the time the 2024 season collapsed into a 3–14 record, a franchise-worst. The broadcast booth shots make it difficult to ignore these details, such as the jacket’s altered fit and the wider frame’s return. No one outside the building can tell with certainty whether it was ten pounds or thirty. The roller coaster he described was obviously already climbing.
Then came 2025. a 2–8 beginning. Nobody at the facility could pretend that the firing on November 10 was unexpected. He moved to Tennessee in January to work as Robert Saleh’s offensive coordinator, relieving him of the pressure of being the head coach. Coordinator life has a more subdued rhythm; long hours are still required, but there are no ownership meetings, press conferences following each defeat, or the literal and nonliteral burden of being a franchise’s face.
It remains to be seen if that change manifests physically. We’ll probably hear from friends in Buffalo. Daboll’s body has always served as an unofficial gauge of his professional status; it gets lighter when he has room to breathe and larger when the work is taking up all of his time. Yes, it is an unscientific reading. But over the course of 25 years on NFL sidelines, it has proven remarkably accurate. In Nashville, the numbers might change once more. Usually, they do.

