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NFL Notebook: Dual post of coach, general manager starts to disappear
Sunday, January 05, 2003 By Ed Bouchette, Post-Gazette Sports Writer
The combination of coach/general manager in the NFL isn't extinct, but it's on the endangered list after several moves by team owners following the season.
Some examples:
In the meantime, Dallas owner Jerry Jones hired Bill Parcells to coach his team and gave him control of his coaching staff and 53-man roster. Parcells likely would not have taken the job had someone else been given more power than him in personnel decisions, but he still won't have the kind of control he had with the New York Jets.
It will be intriguing to watch the Parcells era unfold in Dallas. Parcells has a reputation as an astute judge of talent, but he won his two Super Bowls in New York with late general manager George Young picking the talent for him. That's why Parcells quit.
Andy Reid, who has the power in Philadelphia, has gotten credit not only for coaching the Eagles to the top seed in the NFC, but for his talent eye. But it was Tom Modrak who made most of the Eagles' decisions on personnel before Reid pulled a coup and forced him out.
The dual job of coach and general manager is too much anymore in the NFL. It used to be easy before the days of free agency and the salary cap. But now it takes up too much time. Holmgren's job as coach was often compromised by his job as general manager when those duties pulled him away from coaching meetings, etc.
Coughlin is a good coach, but he was a lousy general manager. He overpaid for players such as safety Carnell Lake, who was at the end of his career and put Jacksonville in such salary-cap trouble that the Jaguars still are trying to dig out from it.
Modrak to Jaguars?
Modrak is one of two former Pittsburghers who are in line to take over in Jacksonville.
Iowa Coach Kirk Ferentz, who went to Uppper St. Clair High School, is a candidate to replace Coughlin. Modrak, a Carrick native, could become their new general manager.
It would be a perfect combination for the Jaguars -- one of the NFL's most astute personnel men in the front office and a good coach, and two men who know one another and can get along.
Modrak is the assistant general manager in Buffalo.
Super odds
The odds of the Steelers winning the Super Bowl, according to one online betting service (BetWWTS.com) are 7-2. The odds of the Eagles winning the Super Bowl are 6-5.
And the odds for an all-Pennsylvania Bowl are 17-2.
Hares vs. rabbits
Bill Cowher long has called the NFL season a marathon not a sprint, and there was no better proof than this season.
The NFL rabbits were Denver, Miami, San Diego and New Orleans. On Oct. 12, they were a combined 16-4.
The NFL hares were the Jets, Tennessee, the Steelers and Atlanta. On Oct. 12, they were 4-14.
There's not a rabbit in the playoffs, and all the hares made it.
Run is out
Another myth exposed? It has long been said that the best teams are ones with the best running games. Not so this season.
The top five running offenses in the NFL were Minnesota, Miami, Kansas City, Atlanta and Denver. Only Atlanta made the playoffs.
The NFL's six leading rushers were Ricky Williams of Miami, San Diego's LaDainian Tomlinson, Priest Holmes of Kansas City, Denver's Clinton Portis, Travis Henry of Buffalo and Deuce McAllister of New Orleans. None is in the playoffs.
"You can rush for 200 yards a game," Miami Coach Dave Wannstedt said, "and, if you throw four interceptions, you're going to lose."
Dallas discipline
Parcells will bring some much-needed discipline to Dallas. Before they lost to Washington in the final game of the season, ending a 10-game winning streak against the Redskins to finish 5-11, at least four Cowboys players missed curfew. Three others missed the bus before the game.
During the game, center Tyson Walter and receiver Antonio Bryant were flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct, and there was a shoving match between teammates Flozell Adams and running back Troy Hambrick on the field.
Fumble sympathy
Tiki Barber received a phone call from a former Giants star after he rushed for 203 yards but lost three fumbles against Philadelphia last week in a game New York somehow won to earn a playoff spot.
Hall of Famer Frank Gifford, the only Giants player with more all-purpose yards than Barber in his career, told Barber that he fumbled three times and lost two in the famous overtime loss to the Baltimore Colts in the Dec. 28, 1958 NFL championship game.
"It was because of my two fumbles that it's called 'The Greatest Game Ever Played,'" Gifford said.
Lewis candidacy
Marvin Lewis might not get a head-coaching job this year.
He's a candidate in Cincinnati, but may not want to take the Bengals' job. If not, there aren't any other logical openings for the strongest minority candidate in the NFL.
Detroit is sticking with Marty Mornhinweg, Holmgren's staying in Seattle, Parcells goes to Dallas and Jacksonville hasn't called.
"I can't worry about it, all I can worry about is this job here," said Lewis, Washington's defensive coordinator.
The Redskins improved from 10th to fifth in the NFL on defense under Lewis.
Quick slants
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