New Coaches Take Over NFL Contenders
By DAVE GOLDBERG
The Associated Press
When Terrell Owens was asked this spring about the Dallas Cowboys' coaching change --Bill Parcells out, Wade Phillips in -- he was his usual outspoken self.
"I don't think you have to be a disciplinarian to get your point across," Owens said in a pointed dig at his old coach. "I think having a new head coach is good for everybody."
Yes, T. O. is ingratiating himself with the new guy. So are the rest of the Cowboys and almost 500 players on the rosters of six other teams that open camp in the next 10 days with new head coaches. The only difference is, at some point, there will be a brouhaha involving Owens and a coach, either the laid-back Phillips or one of his assistants.
Every season, new coaches mean changes for every player on the teams they take over. There are seven this year, three of whom take over contenders: Phillips, Mike Tomlin for the retired Bill Cowher in Pittsburgh and Norv Turner in San Diego. The other four are more problematical, with Ken Whisenhunt in Arizona, Lane Kiffin in Oakland, Bobby Petrino in Atlanta and Cam Cameron in Miami.
Turner will be taking over a team that has basically the same offense he used in 2001, when he was offensive coordinator in San Diego. Petrino, known as a passing guru, has a bigger task -- he's spent the offseason adjusting his offense to Michael Vick's running ability, but may have to readjust if Vick's indictment for sponsoring a dogfighting operation leads to a suspension.
But in any case, all have to make adjustments, on and off the field.
"New coaches always make dramatic changes, even if it's just in routine, workout regimen and other day-to-day things," Indianapolis president Bill Polian said. "There's always a feeling-out process with both the coach and his staff. It doesn't mean they can't win. It just means a lot of things change."
As camps open, Polian's Colts and New England, who played a memorable AFC title game last January, are considered the league's best teams, along with the Chargers in a conference that is clearly superior to the NFC.
But the coaching change could drastically affect the Chargers, whose 14-2 record was the best regular-season mark in the league last season.
Marty Schottenheimer was let go after a playoff loss to the Patriots because he and General Manager A. J. Smith were always at odds. And while Schottenheimer traditionally has had problems in the postseason, Turner has had trouble getting there. He is just 58-82-1 in stints as head coach of the Redskins and Raiders, although he really had no chance in Oakland, where he coached in 2004-05.
Turner isn't likely to tinker with San Diego's offense, which he basically installed in LaDainian Tomlinson's rookie season. But other things will change, because both of last year's coordinators are among the new head coaches: Phillips in Dallas and Cameron in Miami, replacing Nick Saban, who departed for the University of Alabama.
Phillips and the Cowboys might have a shot at a title in the NFC, which has no dominant team.
Chicago, which dominated the conference last season before losing to the Colts, 29-17, in the Super Bowl, remains a lukewarm favorite. But there are plenty of questions with the Bears, starting with quarterback Rex Grossman, who was able to survive an inconsistent regular season, but demonstrated against Indy that he's not a Super Bowl-caliber quarterback yet.
Can the Cowboys contend? They will have to battle in the NFC East with Philadelphia and maybe the Giants, although New York seems headed for a season-in-waiting -- waiting for Coach Tom Coughlin to be fired.
The new coaches also include the two youngest in the league, the 32-year-old Kiffin and Tomlin, 35.
Cowher stepped down after 15 seasons and now moves to the head of the line for any vacancies that open after this season, if he wants to get back into the business. Whisenhunt goes from the Steelers, where he was offensive coordinator, to the historically challenged Cardinals.
Tomlin, just the Steelers' third coach since 1969, has signaled he will run a tough camp for a team that was a disappointing 8-8 a year after winning the Super Bowl.
"NFL training camps are not supposed to be pleasant," he said.
Kiffin, co-offensive coordinator at powerhouse USC, began with workouts so tough and physical that the Raiders were forced to forgo their last week of practices for violating a union rule against contact drills.
He also faces what every Oakland coach deals with, the constant scrutiny of owner Al Davis, who at any point could decide that JaMarcus Russell, the first overall pick in the draft, is ready to start at quarterback. Even if Kiffin doesn't think so, Davis always gets his way.
Cameron brought in 37-year-old Trent Green, whom he once coached in Washington, to fill a quarterback position that's been without a top performer since Dan Marino retired after the 1999 season.
"When you're coming in as a new staff and you're putting in a new offense and you know there's somebody out there who has a background in this offense, and somebody you've worked with before, there's an understanding or a comfort level," acknowledged Green, whose acquisition led to the eventual release of Daunte Culpepper.
Cameron will run the offense. But Dom Capers, a former head coach in Carolina and Houston, is in total charge of the defense after he signed a new three-year, seven-figure contract even before Cameron was hired. Since Marino retired, that unit has carried the team.
Petrino's mission in Atlanta is to juice up the offense, his specialty, especially the passing game on a team with a running quarterback. Last season, Vick became the first QB to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season, but Atlanta was last in the NFL with 148.2 yards passing per game and Vick was 20th in passer rating.
The Vick indictment leaves the Falcons in limbo. While the case is unlikely to be resolved in the courts until after the season, Vick could be suspended by Commissioner Roger Goodell under the NFL's new personal conduct policy.
The Associated Press
When Terrell Owens was asked this spring about the Dallas Cowboys' coaching change --Bill Parcells out, Wade Phillips in -- he was his usual outspoken self.
"I don't think you have to be a disciplinarian to get your point across," Owens said in a pointed dig at his old coach. "I think having a new head coach is good for everybody."
Yes, T. O. is ingratiating himself with the new guy. So are the rest of the Cowboys and almost 500 players on the rosters of six other teams that open camp in the next 10 days with new head coaches. The only difference is, at some point, there will be a brouhaha involving Owens and a coach, either the laid-back Phillips or one of his assistants.
Every season, new coaches mean changes for every player on the teams they take over. There are seven this year, three of whom take over contenders: Phillips, Mike Tomlin for the retired Bill Cowher in Pittsburgh and Norv Turner in San Diego. The other four are more problematical, with Ken Whisenhunt in Arizona, Lane Kiffin in Oakland, Bobby Petrino in Atlanta and Cam Cameron in Miami.
Turner will be taking over a team that has basically the same offense he used in 2001, when he was offensive coordinator in San Diego. Petrino, known as a passing guru, has a bigger task -- he's spent the offseason adjusting his offense to Michael Vick's running ability, but may have to readjust if Vick's indictment for sponsoring a dogfighting operation leads to a suspension.
But in any case, all have to make adjustments, on and off the field.
"New coaches always make dramatic changes, even if it's just in routine, workout regimen and other day-to-day things," Indianapolis president Bill Polian said. "There's always a feeling-out process with both the coach and his staff. It doesn't mean they can't win. It just means a lot of things change."
As camps open, Polian's Colts and New England, who played a memorable AFC title game last January, are considered the league's best teams, along with the Chargers in a conference that is clearly superior to the NFC.
But the coaching change could drastically affect the Chargers, whose 14-2 record was the best regular-season mark in the league last season.
Marty Schottenheimer was let go after a playoff loss to the Patriots because he and General Manager A. J. Smith were always at odds. And while Schottenheimer traditionally has had problems in the postseason, Turner has had trouble getting there. He is just 58-82-1 in stints as head coach of the Redskins and Raiders, although he really had no chance in Oakland, where he coached in 2004-05.
Turner isn't likely to tinker with San Diego's offense, which he basically installed in LaDainian Tomlinson's rookie season. But other things will change, because both of last year's coordinators are among the new head coaches: Phillips in Dallas and Cameron in Miami, replacing Nick Saban, who departed for the University of Alabama.
Phillips and the Cowboys might have a shot at a title in the NFC, which has no dominant team.
Chicago, which dominated the conference last season before losing to the Colts, 29-17, in the Super Bowl, remains a lukewarm favorite. But there are plenty of questions with the Bears, starting with quarterback Rex Grossman, who was able to survive an inconsistent regular season, but demonstrated against Indy that he's not a Super Bowl-caliber quarterback yet.
Can the Cowboys contend? They will have to battle in the NFC East with Philadelphia and maybe the Giants, although New York seems headed for a season-in-waiting -- waiting for Coach Tom Coughlin to be fired.
The new coaches also include the two youngest in the league, the 32-year-old Kiffin and Tomlin, 35.
Cowher stepped down after 15 seasons and now moves to the head of the line for any vacancies that open after this season, if he wants to get back into the business. Whisenhunt goes from the Steelers, where he was offensive coordinator, to the historically challenged Cardinals.
Tomlin, just the Steelers' third coach since 1969, has signaled he will run a tough camp for a team that was a disappointing 8-8 a year after winning the Super Bowl.
"NFL training camps are not supposed to be pleasant," he said.
Kiffin, co-offensive coordinator at powerhouse USC, began with workouts so tough and physical that the Raiders were forced to forgo their last week of practices for violating a union rule against contact drills.
He also faces what every Oakland coach deals with, the constant scrutiny of owner Al Davis, who at any point could decide that JaMarcus Russell, the first overall pick in the draft, is ready to start at quarterback. Even if Kiffin doesn't think so, Davis always gets his way.
Cameron brought in 37-year-old Trent Green, whom he once coached in Washington, to fill a quarterback position that's been without a top performer since Dan Marino retired after the 1999 season.
"When you're coming in as a new staff and you're putting in a new offense and you know there's somebody out there who has a background in this offense, and somebody you've worked with before, there's an understanding or a comfort level," acknowledged Green, whose acquisition led to the eventual release of Daunte Culpepper.
Cameron will run the offense. But Dom Capers, a former head coach in Carolina and Houston, is in total charge of the defense after he signed a new three-year, seven-figure contract even before Cameron was hired. Since Marino retired, that unit has carried the team.
Petrino's mission in Atlanta is to juice up the offense, his specialty, especially the passing game on a team with a running quarterback. Last season, Vick became the first QB to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season, but Atlanta was last in the NFL with 148.2 yards passing per game and Vick was 20th in passer rating.
The Vick indictment leaves the Falcons in limbo. While the case is unlikely to be resolved in the courts until after the season, Vick could be suspended by Commissioner Roger Goodell under the NFL's new personal conduct policy.
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