Friday, January 18, 2013

New Eagles coach Chip Kelly brings his offensive plan to NFL test

Chip Kelly stood on a makeshift platform in Glendale, Ariz., as midnight approached on Jan. 3.

Six years ago, Kelly was a little-known offensive coordinator for an unheralded football program tucked away in Durham, N.H.

Now here he was, accepting the Fiesta Bowl trophy with a team that serves as a sprinting billboard for Nike and a mind that stimulated interest from NFL executives trying to determine where the game is headed next.

"We want Chip! We want Chip!" the Oregon fans sang. "One more year!"

"They accepted me six years ago when I was at New Hampshire," Kelly said. "Not many people knew about me."

The whole football world does now. And Eagles fans will get to know Kelly well.

After he coached Oregon to a 35-17 victory over Kansas State in the Fiesta Bowl, Kelly met with the Eagles for nine hours on Jan. 5. On Jan. 6, it was announced that Kelly would stay with the Ducks. The Eagles moved on with their coaching search, but the interest never waned. They reached an agreement with Kelly to be their coach on Wednesday.

It concluded a turbulent 16 days of searching and brought the Eagles the most sought-after coach on the market - one who was thought to be leaving Oregon, then thought to be staying, and is now officially leaving.

"He's the prettiest guy in the room," said Josh Wilcox, a former Oregon and NFL player who is now a radio host in Portland.

Kelly tried avoiding the NFL hoopla leading up to the Fiesta Bowl. As an example of the cocoon in which the 49-year-old bachelor lives, Kelly went for a haircut on New Year's Day and wondered why stores were closed. When he finally took a seat at a barbershop on Jan. 2, Kelly saw his name scroll across the bottom of the ESPN screen about his candidacy for NFL jobs.

"I've said I'll always listen," Kelly said.

Indeed, when he heard a reporter from Philadelphia was present after his Fiesta Bowl victory, he asked if there was interest in the game from fans at Pat's and Geno's, two popular Philly steak places.

There was this season, and there will be discussion about Kelly at those places for a long time.

Rapid rise

The story that will become part of Kelly's folklore, as explained in The New York Times Magazine in 2010, goes like this: Former Oregon coach Mike Bellotti wanted to run the spread offense and deployed his offensive coordinator Gary Crowton to learn the system in 2005. Crowton learned about the offensive coordinator at New Hampshire, Kelly, who had mastered the spread. He talked with Kelly.

When Crowton left for Louisiana State, Belotti figured he'd go to the source and lured Kelly to Eugene, Ore. After longtime Ducks defensive coordinator Nick Aliotti met Kelly on a visit, he was convinced that Kelly would become a star.

Kelly served as the Ducks' offensive coordinator in 2007 and '08. After he became head coach in 2009, those around Oregon started to get the sense that Kelly thought differently than most.

"Before he got the head coach job, people around the football program said, 'This is just a football mind,' " Wilcox said. "He's one of those (minds) that just comes around once in a while. He's not just a normal football guy."

Eagles linebacker Casey Matthews played at Oregon and remembers Kelly working late hours in a dark office. Kelly mocked those in football who use the term "grinding," noting it's people with grueling, laborious jobs who are grinding - not those watching film in an air-conditioned office.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/01/16/3186092/new-eagles-coach-chip-kelly-brings.html

London 2012 basketball London 2012 Slalom Canoe Alex Morgan Misty May Treanor Lolo Jones Aly Raisman Marvin Hamlisch

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.