New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen, left, celebrates with outside linebacker Demario Davis after the team defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in December. On Monday, two people familiar with the decision say the New Orleans Saints have promoted Allen to head coach.
                                 AP photo

New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Dennis Allen, left, celebrates with outside linebacker Demario Davis after the team defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in December. On Monday, two people familiar with the decision say the New Orleans Saints have promoted Allen to head coach.

AP photo

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NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints have promoted defensive coordinator Dennis Allen to head coach, two people familiar with the decision said Monday.

The people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Saints have not announced their chosen replacement for Sean Payton, who resigned nearly two weeks ago after 16 years with the club.

ESPN first reported the Saints’ decision to promote from within after the club also had interviewed outside candidates, including former Miami coach Brian Flores, Detroit defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn and Kansas City offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy.

Allen, 49, is in his second stint with the Saints. He was their secondary coach when they won the Super Bowl in the 2009 season. He left New Orleans in 2011 to become Denver’s defensive coordinator before taking his first and only other head coaching position with Oakland Raiders in 2012.

He was fired by the Raiders four games into the 2014 season and returned to the Saints as a senior defensive assistant in 2015 before eventually taking over as defensive coordinator late that season when Payton fired Rob Ryan.

The Saints have ranked in the top seven in the NFL defensively during the past two seasons, raising Allen’s profile as a candidate across the NFL to get a second chance as a head coach.

Hiring Allen gives the Saints a measure of continuity, not just on defense, but across the staff, a number of whom have years of experience working with Allen.

Top Saints defensive players such as sack leader Cameron Jordan and linebacker Demario Davis also have been vocal supporters of Allen during the past half decade.

“Just a phenomenal coach, leader,” Davis said late last season. “Really understands our defense’s personnel, understanding what guys do well, understands how to put us all in position to have success, really good at understanding the opponents.”

Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson played four seasons under Allen with the Saints before signing with Cincinnati as a free agent last offseason.

“He’s a great coach,” Hendrickson said during the Bengals’ Zoom sessions with reporters as Cincinnati prepares to play the Los Angeles Rams in the Super Bowl on Sunday. “He expects the best out of his players. He’s a great leader. It was one of those things where I came in and pretty early on knew that he was special.

“And to have him as the DC, I knew he was going to be a head coach at some point in his career again.”

Saints general manager Mickey Loomis highlighted Allen’s credentials to replace Payton on more than one occasion during the club’s head coaching search.

“First of all, he’s a great coach and he’s been a part of our building for a long time,” Loomis said, adding that Allen helped foster the “culture” of the club during the Payton era and was “a big part of the success we’ve had over the years.”

Allen has been open about his desire to get a second chance as a head coach. The Raiders were struggling when he was hired to his first top job in Oakland. He went 4-12 in his first two seasons and was fired after an 0-4 start to his third.

Now he takes the reigns of a team that narrowly missed the playoffs following a 9-8 2021 campaign, but which won the NFC South the previous four seasons and established a tradition of winning during the Payton era.

“The resume and what we’ve been able to accomplish here defensively speaks for itself in terms of the type of culture and the type of group that we’ve built here,” Allen said late this past season when asked about potential head coaching opportunities. “I’d love to get that opportunity again; I think I’d be much more prepared for it.

“Anything you do, when you gain experience, you become better at whatever that task is,” Allen added.

But Allen also will inherit some new challenges and headaches. New Orleans’ quarterback position remains unsettled just one year removed from the retirement of franchise all-time passing leader Drew Brees.

Jameis Winston had a promising seven starts before a season-ending knee injury and is due to become a free agent. Taysom Hill went 4-1 as a starter late in the season, making him 7-2 for his career. But that remains a relatively small sample size.

Meanwhile, New Orleans’ top offensive player, running back Alvin Kamara, is facing criminal charges following a night club fight in Las Vegas that was caught on video last weekend. Depending on how his legal matters are resolved, the NFL could suspend him, possibly for multiple games.