Shane Bowen is reuniting with Mike Vrabel in New England.
The former Giants defensive coordinator is going to the Patriots as a defensive analyst.
Bowen, 39, will look to revive his career with the reigning AFC Champions. He worked for Vrabel with the Tennessee Titans. They remain good friends. Now he reunites with him in Foxborough, Mass.
Like many coaches in the last decade, Bowen’s reputation took a nosedive when he took a job with the Giants.
Many players liked him personally and said he was smart on the white board. It didn’t translate to the games, though.
He did a poor job with the defense, especially in 2025, when the Giants surrendered countless leads. And he also was a victim of the Giants’ dysfunction above him.
Former head coach Brian Daboll’s divisiveness, poor leadership and scapegoating of his staff led former defensive coordinator Wink Martindale to resign after the 2023 season following two years — and one playoff appearance — with the team.
Daboll scrambled to find a replacement. Several candidates turned the Giants down, took other jobs or leveraged their interest into promotions at their current team. One of those coaches was current Giants defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson, who left the Baltimore Ravens to take the Tennessee Titans defensive coordinator job instead.
Eventually the Giants filled the vacancy when Bowen, their fourth choice, agreed to take the job.
Bowen nearly went one and done with the Giants. GM Joe Schoen and Daboll looked into firing him after the 2024 NFL season — and frankly, Bowen might have preferred that given where the team was headed — but they couldn’t lure either of their preferred replacements to New York to take Bowen’s job.
Schoen’s preferred candidate to replace Bowen was 2024 Cincinnati Bengals defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo. Daboll wanted 2024 Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus. Anarumo accepted the Indianapolis Colts’ defensive coordinator position instead, and Eberflus took over the Dallas Cowboys’ defense.
Bowen returned for the 2025 season, but he only lasted 12 games — two more than Daboll. Schoen fired Bowen on Nov. 24 with the Giants at 2-10 after an overtime loss in Detroit.
Bowen initially took heat for defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence being on the sideline for Jahmyr Gibbs’ 69-yard game-winning Lions touchdown. But interim head coach Mike Kafka then revealed someone had told him to limit Lawrence’s snaps due to an injury that had Lawrence “in tears on the sideline,” in Kafka’s words.
Wide receiver Malik Nabers, watching on television and infuriated by the loss, tweeted that “sometimes I think they b makin us lose on purpose!”
The reality is the Giants’ perennial dysfunction landed Bowen in a role that was above his paygrade, and neither the Giants nor Bowen benefitted from their association.
He is better off working with a familiar face in Vrabel, behind the scenes. And the Giants intend to be better off on defense with Wilson, especially because of the confidence they have in the head coach, John Harbaugh, who hired and will oversee him.