Innovative football coach Coryell dies at 85

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(AP)?Don Coryell, the innovative coach whose Air Coryell offense produced some of the most dynamic passing attacks in NFL history, has died. He was 85.

The San Diego Chargers confirmed Coryell died Thursday at Sharp Grossmont Hospital in suburban La Mesa. The team did not release the cause of death, but Coryell had been in poor health for some time.

?We?ve lost a man who has contributed to the game of pro football in a very lasting way with his innovations and with his style,? Hall of Famer Dan Fouts, the quarterback who made Air Coryell fly, said from Oregon. ?They say that imitation is the highest form of flattery - look around, it?s there.?


Coryell was one of the founding fathers of the modern passing game. He coached at San Diego State from 1961-72 and went 104-19-2. He left the Aztecs for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1973. With Jim Hart at quarterback, the Cardinals won division titles in 1974 and ?75 behind Coryell.

Fouts said he became friends with Coryell after the two were finished with football.

?It?s not just me,? Fouts said. ?All his players, Aztecs, Cardinals, Chargers, to a man, would tell you that he was their friend.?

Coryell returned to San Diego when he was hired by the Chargers on Sept. 25, 1978, the same day a Pacific Southwest Airlines jet crashed into a North Park neighborhood after colliding with a small plane, killing all 137 people on the two planes and seven people on the ground.

?It?s crazy that when you look back at the history of this city, he got hired on the same day as that PSA crash,? said Hank Bauer, who was a running back and special teams star with the Chargers then. ?That really was one of the darkest days in this city?s history and it became one of the brightest days in the history of sports.

?He walked in and met our team for the time and he was just this little bundle of energy, flying around the meeting. He said, ?You know what? We?re going to have fun, and we?re going to cry and laugh and battle our (behinds) off, but we?re going to have fun.? We had fun for a lot of years.?

From 1978-86, Air Coryell - led by Fouts - set records and led the NFL in passing almost every season. Coryell guided the Chargers to the AFC championship game after the 1980 and ?81 seasons, but he never reached the Super Bowl.

The lack of a Super Bowl on his resume may have hurt Coryell last winter in voting for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He was a finalist for the first time, but was not selected for induction.

?He revolutionized the game of football, not only in San Diego, but throughout the entire NFL,? Chargers president Dean Spanos said in a statement. ?Don Coryell was a legend not only with the Chargers but throughout San Diego. Though unfortunately he did not live long enough to see it, hopefully one day his bust will find its proper place in Pro Football?s Hall of Fame. He will be missed.?

The big stars of the Air Coryell years - Fouts, tight end Kellen Winslow(notes) and wide receiver Charlie Joiner - all ended up in the Hall of Fame. Winslow was used more as a pass catcher than a blocker, and sometimes would be split out wide, as would running backs.

?Don once said, ?If we?re asking Kellen to block a defensive end and not catch passes, I?m not a very good coach,? ? Bauer said.

One of the lasting images of the Coryell years was an exhausted Winslow being helped off the field by two teammates after the Chargers? epic 41-38 overtime victory in the playoffs over the Miami Dolphins on Jan. 2, 1982. Despite cramping up in the heat and humidity, Winslow caught 13 passes for 166 yards and one touchdown, and also blocked a potential game-winning field goal.

Bauer said Coryell changed the way opponents had to play defense, ?And you see it today. ?When we started splitting Kellen out, for instance, teams didn?t know what to do. He was a wide receiver in a tight end?s body. So a lot of teams started playing zone against us and we started picking them apart. Some teams tried to put a safety or linebacker out there and play man-to-man, and we licked our chops and went with Kellen.

?Because of Air Coryell, nickel and dime defenses became an every-game proposition,? Bauer said. ?He changed the way the game is played today.?

Fouts said Air Coryell meant many things.

?I don?t know that it?s so much one thing that you could point to,? Fouts said. ?It was an attitude of fearlessness and aggressiveness and of fun. He was not afraid to try new things. He was not afraid to attack the entire length and breadth of a football field. He wanted his players to enjoy it.?

In 14 NFL season, Coryell had a record of 111-83-1.

Coryell is the first coach to win 100 games in college and pro football and is a member of the college Hall of Fame.

?Here?s the secret to Don - outside of the Xs and Os, his players and his family were the most important things in the world,? Bauer said. ?It had nothing to do with money or fame. It was all about family, team and winning and the game, and respect.?
 

gardenweasel

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for me,that charger team that had john jefferson(and then wes chandler),charlie joyner and kellen winslow catching and fouts throwing was the most amazing throwing offense i`ve ever seen.......

any time the chargers were on t.v.,everybody i knew that was a football fan made time to sit down and watch them.....

great great offensive genius coryell was...and fouts naver got enough credit..probably the qb i most admired(this side of johnny u)....that team never had much of a defense...
 

AR182

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Its a crime he isn't in the hall of fame.

RIP
:sadwave:

Here is a writeup by Peter King of Sports Illustrated that perhaps explains why Coryell is not in the Hall....

With the death of Don Coryell, the 44 Pro Football Hall of Fame voters will be on the spot in the coming months to give one more long look at his candidacy. Coryell was one of the 15 modern-era finalists for Hall induction last February, but he didn't make the first cut when the voters (including me) voted to reduce the list from 15 to 10. I felt that day, and still feel, that Coryell's candidacy was scuttled by his coaching record with St. Louis and San Diego, which follows:


W-L-T Pct.

Regular season (14 seasons) 111-83-1 .572

Post-season 3-6 .333

Overall 114-89-1 .561

Conference title games 0-2 .000

Super Bowl 0-0 .000


That's not the record of a Hall of Fame coach -- if all you're looking at is wins and losses and playoff r?sum?. Marty Schottenheimer (205 wins), Dan Reeves (201) and Chuck Knox (193) all have at least 79 more victories than Coryell, and they can't get a sniff. But there are mitigating football-architecture factors with Coryell. SI's Jim Trotter did a very good job of enumerating them during his presentation of Coryell's case.

When I spoke with Dan Fouts the week of the vote, the one thing that stood out in the stories he told about playing for Coryell is what a thinker he was. When the Raiders began playing bump-coverage with corners at the line of scrimmage one year, Coryell said fine -- we'll just make the tight end a weapon too. They can't bump everyone. He moved the tight end everywhere on the field. When the tight end got covered, he started advancing the concept of a hot receiver for the first time. He'd tell his quarterback, Fouts, that when his wides and tight ends were covered and the pressure bore in on him, look for the back veering away from his block at the lack second. "Don had an answer for whatever the defense threw at us,'' Fouts said. "And pretty soon, you started seeing other teams feature the tight end a lot more, and you'd see other teams use backs at hot receivers instead of the quarterback just throwing the ball away. Don hated giving in to the defense and we rarely did."

You'd think maybe Coryell's playbook was encyclopedic. It wasn't. " 'Simple' was a big word with Don,'' Fouts said. "He liked to simplify and clarify.'' If his first-half plays were killing the opposition, he'd say, "Flip it in the second half.'' In other words, run the same plays in the second half -- just run to the other side of the field, in opposite formations. How hard was that to learn? Not very.

Once, Coryell and Fouts were trying to figure out the smartest primary target for a pass play called 844 Ricky, with Charlie Joiner running a post, Kellen Winslow a shallow cross, John Jefferson a deep cross and Lionel James a short route in the flat out of the backfield. They debated the quality of the defenders likely to cover each man. Finally, Coryell said, "Screw all that. Make it simple. Just take the snap and throw it to JJ.''

Part of the job we have as selectors is to see through the numbers and look for the people who really made a difference in the game. It's easy to induct Bill Walsh and Paul Brown, men who innovated and won titles. Coryell is one of the men in the deep cracks. He won some, but not enough. And he innovated quite a lot. He's a candidate we should consider strongly, again, this year.

"I realize Don didn't win a Super Bowl,'' Fouts told me that night. "Super Bowls are important, obviously. But I ask you this: Is it more important in football history to win one Super Bowl, or to influence the way the game is played for decades to come as much as any man?''
 
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