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George Halas has the longest tenure of any NFL head coach, with a career spanning 40 years, however, these seasons were not consecutive as they were spread out over 4 separate tenures. Don Shula , who had a 33-year coaching career spanning from 1963 to 1995 , has coached the most overall games with 526 (490 regular season games and 36 ...
The longest tenured head coach on his current team is Mike Tomlin who has been with the Pittsburgh Steelers since 2007. Andy Reid is the only active coach with multiple Super Bowl wins with three. Other active head coaches to have won a Super Bowl are Tomlin, John Harbaugh , Mike McCarthy , Sean Payton , Doug Pederson , and Sean McVay .
Cardinals coach Roy Andrews is tied for the lowest winning percentage among the team's coaches (.000), having lost the only game he coached in the 1931 season. [5] Co-coach Walt Kiesling lost all ten games he coached in 1943, when the team merged with the Steelers during World War II and was known as Card-Pitt. [6]
There have been 22 head coaches for the Giants franchise. Five coaches have won NFL Championships with the team: Earl Potteiger in 1927 , Steve Owen in 1934 and 1938 , Jim Lee Howell in 1956 , Bill Parcells in 1986 and 1990 , and Tom Coughlin in 2007 and 2011 . [ 2 ]
He was named NFL Coach Of The Year for the 2004 NFL season. Schottenheimer led the team to two playoff appearances, his 17th and 18th as a head coach. However, both appearances resulted in disappointing losses to the underdog New York Jets in overtime in 2005 and the New England Patriots in 2007, bringing his playoff record to 5–13 ...
The New York Jets were scheduled to interview former Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel on Friday for their head coaching vacancy, a person with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press.
Several former NFL players have been head coaches for the Eagles, including Jerry Williams, Ed Khayat, and Marion Campbell. Andy Reid [ 5 ] spent 14 seasons in charge before he was fired on December 31, 2012, after a 4–12 season – Reid's worst season in charge – which left the Eagles bottom of the NFC.
The Pittsburgh Steelers franchise has had 16 head coaches throughout its history. Founded as the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1933, [1] the name was changed to the Steelers prior to the 1941 season to celebrate the city's heritage of producing steel. [2] Joe Bach served two separate terms as head coach and Walt Kiesling served three