Andy Reid

Andy Reid

NFL PlayerCoach
Name=Andy Reid


Caption=
Color=#003b48
fontcolor=#c4c8cb
DateOfBirth=birth date and age|1958|3|19
Birthplace=Los Angeles, California
DateOfDeath=
College=Brigham Young
Position=Head Coach
Career Highlights=yes
Stats=yes
Awards=2002 AP Coach of the Year
2002 Sporting News Coach of Year
2002 Pro Football Weekly Coach of Year
2002 Maxwell Football Club NFL Coach of Year
2000 Sporting News Coach of Year
2000 Maxwell Football Club NFL Coach of Year
Honors=
Records=
Record=88-56-0 (Regular Season)
8-6 (Postseason)
96-62-0 (Overall)
SuperBowls=
Championships=2004 NFC Championship
DatabaseFootballCoach=REIDAND01
PFRCoach=ReidAn0
coach=yes
coachingteams=Brigham Young University
(graduate assistant)
San Francisco State University
(offensive line coach)
Northern Arizona University
(offensive line coach)
University of Texas at El Paso
(offensive line coach)
University of Missouri
(offensive line coach)
Green Bay Packers
(offensive assistant)
Green Bay Packers
(offensive line coach)
Green Bay Packers
(quarterbacks coach and assistant head coach)
Philadelphia Eagles
(head coach)
coachingyears=1982

1983-1985

1986

1987-1988

1989-1991

1992-1994

1995-1996

1997-1998


1999-present |HOF=

Andrew Walter "Andy" Reid (born March 19, 1958) is the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL. He led the Eagles to four NFC championship game appearances, from 2001-2004 and to Super Bowl XXXIX in 2004.

Early years

Born in Los Angeles, California, Reid attended John Marshall High School and worked as a vendor at Dodger Stadium as a teenager. He also played youth sports in Los Angeles, and among his coaches were Pete Arbogast, who is the radio announcer for the USC football team. Reid played offensive guard and tackle at Brigham Young University.

Early coaching career

After graduating from BYU in 1981, he spent one year employed as a graduate assistant on the school's football coaching staff. He spent the next nine years as an offensive line coach with four different colleges before being hired as an assistant coach by the Green Bay Packers in 1992, the same year quarterback Brett Favre became a member of that team (Reid was named the Packers' quarterbacks coach in 1997, the season after the Packers won the Super Bowl (XXXI)).

Philadelphia Eagles coach

The quality of Reid's work with the Packers attracted considerable notice throughout the league, leading to his being hired as the head coach of the Eagles on January 11, 1999. At the time, many in the local media in Philadelphia criticized the hiring, citing the availability of other candidates who had past records of success as head coaches. The Eagles, under former coach Ray Rhodes, finished in a three-way tie for the NFL's worst record at 3-13 the season before he took over. They improved two games in 1999 to finish at 5-11 (including the team's first road victory in 19 games, a 20-16 win over the Bears at Chicago on October 17, which was the first time the Philadelphia franchise had won an away game over the Bears since 1933). In 2000, the Eagles reached the playoffs after posting an 11-5 regular-season record.

Time in Philadelphia

Beginning in 2001, Reid's Eagles won the National Football Conference's Eastern Division four consecutive times, the longest such streak in franchise history, and advanced to the conference championship game in , , and , losing this game on the first three occasions. The 2003 team became the first in NFL history ever to qualify for postseason play after opening the season with two losses, both at home, in a non-strike year, and was also the first NFL team ever to reach the conference title round of the playoffs after having been shut out at home on opening day. The 2004 team was the second NFC East squad to defeat all of its division rivals (New York Giants, Dallas Cowboys, and Washington Redskins) twice during the same regular season (Dallas Cowboys did it in 1998). The Eagles made it to Super Bowl XXXIX but fell to the New England Patriots 24-21 in the final minutes.

During his tenure, Reid, 50, compiled the best win total (96), winning percentage (.608) and playoff victory total (8) in team history. He has captured five division titles and four trips to the NFC Championship game. Since he was hired in 1999, no other franchise has earned more divisional playoff round appearances (6) and only Bill Belichick's New England Patriots have advanced to more conference championship game appearances (5) than Philadelphia (with 4). Since 1999, Reid has also sent 19 players to 44 Pro-Bowl appearances, the highest total for any team in the NFL during that period. None of these players had ever appeared in a Pro-Bowl before Reid was hired. Among coaches with 100 games under their belt, Reid’s .608 winning percentage is 11th in NFL history and third among active coaches behind Indianapolis’ Tony Dungy (.637) and Bill Belichick's (.627). Reid’s nine-year tenure at the Eagles helm has put him in an elite category as well. Since 1990, only six of the 73 first-time head coaches remained with their original team for eight-or-more years: Reid (since 1999), Tennessee’s Jeff Fisher (since 1994), Brian Billick (1999-2007 with Baltimore), Bill Cowher (1992-2006 with Pittsburgh), Dennis Green (1992-2001 with Minnesota) and Tom Coughlin (1995-02 with Jacksonville).

An off year, the next year redeemed

The 2005 season was a difficult one for Reid, as he was unprepared to deal with wide receiver Terrell Owens's flamboyant persona, which led Reid to permanently deactivate him midway through the season. A couple of weeks later, quarterback Donovan McNabb suffered a season ending injury, leaving the Eagles without the services of both of their star players. The Eagles lost eight of their last ten games and finished 6-10.

The Eagles enjoyed a rollercoaster campaign under Reid in 2006. The season appeared to be lost by October with another season-ending injury to McNabb, turning a 4-1 start into a mid-season breakdown which left the team 5-5. After an embarrassing 45-21 defeat at the hands of the Indianapolis Colts, the Eagles were on the verge of elimination from the playoffs. Reid coached backup quarterback Jeff Garcia and the 5-6 Eagles to rousing victories over NFC rivals: the Carolina Panthers, the Washington Redskins, the New York Giants, and the Dallas Cowboys. The Eagles, at 10-6, won the NFC East division title, as well as an NFC Wild Card game against the New York Giants, before falling to the New Orleans Saints in the NFC Divisional Round.

Other responsibilities with the Eagles

In addition to being the team's head coach, Reid has also served as executive vice president of football operations. He is currently one of only two head coaches in the league with the power of general manager, the other being the Patriots' Bill Belichick.

His major acquisitions include the drafting of McNabb in 1999 and the acquisition of Owens through a complex trade in 2004. After the Eagles' 6-10 season in 2005, Tom Heckert was given more say in player personnel but Reid retains the final say.

As of October 7, 2008 a petition has been launched to fire Andy Reid, relieving him of all his respponsibilities with the Philadelphia Eagles. The petition can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/fire-andy-reid.html. Andy Reid is not known to have commented publicly, or spoken to the organization privately about this petition which is directed solely at him.

Two sons imprisoned

On November 1, 2007, both Britt and Garrett Reid were sentenced to 23 months in prison. Garrett may be eligible to go through a Drug Court diversion program. The Montgomery County judge who sentenced the two described the Reid home as "more or less a drug emporium." [ [http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory?id=3807416 ABC News: Judge Critical of Eagles' Reid's Home ] ]

In the January 2008 issue of Philadelphia Magazine, Reid and his wife Tammy gave their first public interview regarding their sons' long standing drug abuse problems. [http://www.phillymag.com/articles/reid_family_preview] ] In lieu of payment for the exclusive interview, the magazine donated an unstated amount to a charity chosen by the Reids. [Les Bowen, "Eagles - Coach: We Talked to Mag to Say Thanks for Support, Reach Out to Team", Phila. Daily News, Dec. 22, 2007, at 51.] The article reiterated that Reid feels that the situation should not impact and has not interfered with his duties coaching the Eagles. When asked about his future with the Eagles he stated that his elder son's drug abuse was not a new situation and that " [a] s long as Jeffrey Lurie will have me, and as long as I can do my job to the best of my ability, I would love to be an Eagle." Despite the apparent openness of Reid and his wife in the interview, both he and the magazine came under criticism when it was revealed that he was allowed to read the article and suggest changes prior to publication. [ [http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/2007/12/28/editor-defends-philadelphia-magazine-calls-andy-reid-interview/ Editor Defends Philadelphia Magazine, Calls Andy Reid Interview 'A Collaboration' - FanHouse - AOL Sports Blog ] ]

References


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