- Marty Mornhinweg
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Marty Mornhinweg Philadelphia Eagles Offensive coordinator Quarterback Personal information Date of birth: March 29, 1962 Place of birth: Edmond, Oklahoma Career information College: Montana Undrafted in 1985 Debuted in 1987 for the Denver Dynamite Last played in 1987 for the Denver Dynamite Career history As a player:
As a coach:
- The University of Montana (1985)
(Receivers coach) - University of Texas at El Paso (1986–1987)
(Graduate assistant) - Northern Arizona University (1988)
(Running backs coach) - Southeast Missouri State University (1989–1990)
(Offensive coordinator/Quarterbacks coach) - University of Missouri (1991–1993)
(Tight ends/Offensive line coach) - Northern Arizona University (1994)
(Offensive coordinator) - Green Bay Packers (1995)
(Offensive assistant/Quality control coach) - Green Bay Packers (1996)
(Quarterbacks coach) - San Francisco 49ers (1997-2000)
(Offensive coordinator/Quarterbacks coach) - Detroit Lions (2001–2002)
(Head coach) - Philadelphia Eagles (2003)
(Senior assistant) - Philadelphia Eagles (2004–2005)
(Assistant head coach) - Philadelphia Eagles (2006–present)
(Offensive coordinator/Assistant head coach)
Career highlights and awards - Super Bowl XXXI champion
- ArenaBowl I champion
Marty Mornhinweg (born March 29, 1962) is the offensive coordinator with the Philadelphia Eagles, having joined the Eagles in 2003 as the assistant head coach. He was named offensive coordinator on January 6, 2006, after the Eagles previous offensive coordinator Brad Childress was hired as the head coach of the Minnesota Vikings. He was the head coach of the Detroit Lions from 2001–2002.
Contents
Playing career
Early years
Mornhingweg led the Oak Grove Eagles high school varsity team to a CCS championship game in 1978 when they blew out St Francis, 52-7, for the CCS Title.[1]
College
Mornhingweg played for four years as a starter, at quarterback, the University of Montana, where he set 15 passing records.
Professional
Denver Dynamite
Mornhinweg became the starting quarterback for the Denver Dynamite in the Arena Football League in 1987. He completed 3 of 4 passes for 30 yards and was sacked twice. Soon after Mornhinweg blew out his knee. His team, however, went on to win the inaugural ArenaBowl I with a 45-16 victory over the Pittsburgh Gladiators - a team that featured former University of Arizona Head Coach Mike Stoops.
Coaching career
College
In 1985, Mornhingweg was the coach for receivers at the University of Montana. Then, between 1988 and 1994, he was a coach at Northern Arizona (running backs), SE Missouri State (offense), Missouri (tight ends and the offensive line), and again at Northern Arizona (offense).
Professional
In 1995 and 1996, Mornhinweg was a coach with the Green Bay Packers, first as an offensive assistant, then as the quarterbacks coach. From 1997 to 2000 he was with the San Francisco 49ers, as offensive coordinator under Steve Mariucci.
During the 2001–2002 seasons, Mornhinweg was the head coach of the Detroit Lions, where he compiled a 5-27 record.
The most notable moment in Mornhinweg's history as a head coach came during a 2002 game against the Chicago Bears. The game went into overtime, and the Lions won the toss. However, Mornhinweg felt that having the wind in his favor was more important than getting the ball, despite having as his kicker Jason Hanson, who hit a then-NCAA record 62-yard field goal in his college days at Washington State University. He elected to kick rather than receive. As it turned out, the Lions never got the ball; on the Bears opening drive, Chicago scored a field goal to win the game. The decision prompted fed-up Lions fans to refer to the coach as "Marty Moron-weg". Mornhinweg's decision was that season's runner-up for the Terry Award to Dwayne Rudd's premature helmet toss celebration that cost his Cleveland Browns a victory.
Mornhinweg masterminded the Eagles offense in the final six games of the 2006 season, and into the NFC Playoffs. Coach Andy Reid gave Mornhinweg the play calling responsibilities after the Eagles' disastrous loss to the Indianapolis Colts, 45-21. The Eagles won all six games, employing a more balanced run/pass attack. The wins included an unprecedented three consecutive December divisional road games, all with a back-up quarterback, Jeff Garcia. It was the only time Reid yielded play calling responsibilities, a role Mornhinweg continued through the 2007 season.
Personal
Mornhinweg's son, Skyler, is a quarterback at Saint Joseph's Preparatory School and committed to play football at Penn State.[2]
References
- ^ [1] 1978 CCS History
- ^ McIntyre, Joe (July 19, 2011). "Mornhinweg's son decides to go to Penn State". csnphilly.com. http://www.csnphilly.com/07/19/11/Mornhinwegs-son-considering-Penn-State/landing_ncaa.html?blockID=542245&feedID=704. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
External links
Sporting positions Preceded by
Marc TrestmanSan Francisco 49ers Offensive Coordinator
1997–2000Succeeded by
Greg KnappPreceded by
Brad ChildressPhiladelphia Eagles Offensive Coordinator
2006–presentSucceeded by
IncumbentPortsmouth Spartans / Detroit Lions head coaches Hal Griffen (1930) • George Clark (1931–1936) • Dutch Clark (1937–1938) • Gus Henderson (1939) • George Clark (1940) • Bill Edwards (1941–1942) • John Karcis (1942) • Gus Dorais (1943–1947) • Bo McMillin (1948–1950) • Buddy Parker (1951–1956) • George Wilson (1957–1964) • Harry Gilmer (1965–1966) • Joe Schmidt (1967–1972) • Don McCafferty (1973) • Rick Forzano (1974–1976) • Tommy Hudspeth (1976–1977) • Monte Clark (1978–1984) • Darryl Rogers (1985–1988) • Wayne Fontes (1988–1996) • Bobby Ross (1997–2000) • Gary Moeller (2000) • Marty Mornhinweg (2001–2002) • Steve Mariucci (2003–2005) • Dick Jauron # (2005) • Rod Marinelli (2006–2008) • Jim Schwartz (2009– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Current offensive coordinators of the National Football League American Football Conference AFC East Curtis Modkins (Buffalo Bills)
Brian Daboll (Miami Dolphins)
Bill O’Brien (New England Patriots)
Brian Schottenheimer (New York Jets)AFC North Cam Cameron (Baltimore Ravens)
Jay Gruden (Cincinnati Bengals)
Pat Shurmur* (Cleveland Browns)
Bruce Arians (Pittsburgh Steelers)AFC South Rick Dennison (Houston Texans)
Clyde Christensen (Indianapolis Colts)
Dirk Koetter (Jacksonville Jaguars)
Chris Palmer (Tennessee Titans)AFC West Mike McCoy (Denver Broncos)
Bill Muir (Kansas City Chiefs)
Al Saunders (Oakland Raiders)
Clarence Shelmon (San Diego Chargers)National Football Conference NFC East John Garrett & Hudson Houck (Dallas Cowboys)
Kevin Gilbride (New York Giants)
Marty Mornhinweg (Philadelphia Eagles)
Kyle Shanahan (Washington Redskins)NFC North Mike Martz (Chicago Bears)
Scott Linehan (Detroit Lions)
Joe Philbin (Green Bay Packers)
Bill Musgrave (Minnesota Vikings)NFC South Mike Mularkey (Atlanta Falcons)
Rob Chudzinski (Carolina Panthers)
Pete Carmichael, Jr. (New Orleans Saints)
Greg Olson (Tampa Bay Buccaneers)NFC West Mike Miller (Arizona Cardinals)
Josh McDaniels (St. Louis Rams)
Greg Roman (San Francisco 49ers)
Darrell Bevell (Seattle Seahawks)* = Offensive coordinator and head coach Categories:- 1962 births
- Living people
- Sportspeople from San Jose, California
- People from Edmond, Oklahoma
- American football quarterbacks
- Montana Grizzlies football players
- UTEP Miners football coaches
- Denver Dynamite players
- Green Bay Packers coaches
- San Francisco 49ers coaches
- Detroit Lions head coaches
- Philadelphia Eagles coaches
- National Football League offensive coordinators
- National Football League head coaches
- The University of Montana (1985)
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