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Thomas Richard Coughlin (born August 31, 1946) is the executive vice president of football operations for the Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League (NFL). He is the head coach for the New York Giants for 12 seasons. He led the Giants to victory in Super Bowl XLII and Super Bowl XLVI, both against the New England Patriots. Coughlin was also the inaugural head coach of Jaguar, serving from 1995 to 2002 and leading the team to two AFC Championship Games. Prior to his nursing career at the NFL, he was head coach of the Boston College Eagles football team from 1991 to 1993, and served in various coaching positions at the NFL as well as training and administration positions in college football.


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Coughlin was born in Waterloo, NY in 1946, and plays soccer and basketball in high school. He once played a high school basketball game against Jim Boeheim, who played for Lyons High School at the time. He idolized Ernie Davis and wanted to play in Syracuse.

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Higher Education

Coughlin attended Syracuse University when he was offered a scholarship by assistant coach Jim Shreve. He played half-back for the Syracuse Orange soccer team. He is a teammate with Larry Csonka and Floyd Little. In 1967, he set records of admissions for one school season. Jim Boeheim is his residence adviser (RA) during Coughlin's senior year in Syracuse. He lived in Syracuse after graduating and earned his master's degree while working as a graduate assistant.

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The training style

Coughlin is guided by Bill Parcells while Coughlin is a wide receiver coach and Parcells is head coach for the New York Giants. Like his mentor, Coughlin is known as a strict disciplinarian and due to his meticulous attention to detail (for example, at the start of the Giants work, he fined the players for two minutes early for team meetings, saying they should arrive at least five minutes early per rule new), giving him the nickname "Colonel Coughlin". Coughlin's record and two Super Bowl titles place him in history as one of the greatest coaches of all time.

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Train a career

Coughlin's first chief practice officer was at Rochester Institute of Technology from 1970 to 1973. He then returned to his alma mater where he was eventually promoted to an offensive coordinator, a position he also held at Boston College where he coached Doug Flutie. He returned to the staff after performing his duties at Rochester Institute of Technology. Coughlin's second job began in 1974, and ended in 1980. He left college level to become a wide-recipient trainer in the NFL for the Philadelphia Eagles, and then the Green Bay Packers and New York Giants.

While in New York, he is Bill Parcells' assistant, and helps the Giants win the Super Bowl XXV. Coughlin and Parcells have made the NFL playoff five times as head coach of the Giants, and two Super Bowl titles each won with the Giants took place in the fourth and eighth seasons with franchises, respectively.

Boston College

After the 1990 season, Coughlin returned to Boston College to take up his second job as head coach. In three seasons at Boston College, he turned the program into a consistent winner. Coughlin's ownership closed with a 41-39 win over No. 1 Notre Dame in 1993, Boston College's first time beating Notre Dame.

Jacksonville Jaguars (1995-2002)

The success of Coughlin at Boston College led to him subsequently employed as the first head coach of the NFL expansion Jacksonville Jaguars. In eight seasons in Jacksonville, he led the most successful expansion team in league history. During the period of Coughlin's leadership, Jaguars made four consecutive playoff appearances and went to the AFC Championship Game twice. The first time, only in the second year of team existence (1996), Jaguar qualifies for the playoffs on the final day of the season and disappoints Buffalo Bills and the much loved Denver Broncos on the road. He was named NFL Coach of the Year by United Press International. Coughlin will again bring the Jaguars to the AFC Championship Game in 1999 after reaching the regular 14-2 league regular season record; 14 victories stand out as the most won by the current wave of expansion teams (Jaguars, Carolina Panthers, Baltimore Ravens and Houston Texans) until the Panthers outrun it in 2015. However, in both appearances in the championship game, Jaguar was defeated: in 1996 by New England Patriots, and in 1999, by the Tennessee Titans. Interestingly enough, both losses in the regular season of Jaguars' 14 -2 1999 are also for the Titans.

Coughlin's Jaguars won 49 regular-season games in its first five years as head coach, a remarkable average for an expansion team with nearly ten wins per year. But Jaguars' record for the next three years was only 19-29, and after a 6-10 finish in 2002, Coughlin was sacked by owner Wayne Weaver. He ended his eight-year career in Jacksonville with a regular 68-60 season record and a 4-4 playoff record.

In 2011 (after selling Jaguar to Shahid Khan), Weaver said when looking back at his tenure as owner, one of his biggest regrets was to fire Coughlin. New York City (2004-2015) h3>

Beginning of the year (2004-2006)

After coming out of football in 2003, Coughlin was hired to replace Jim Fassel as head coach of the New York Giants in January 2004. He inherited the team that finished 4-12 in 2003.

When Coughlin took over, the Giants tried to combine trade for the first election in the draft. That year, San Diego Chargers held the pick, and the expected choice was Mississippi quarterback Eli Manning, who had made his wish clear that he wanted to play for the Giants. On the day of the draft, the Giants drew up Scott Rivers of the State of America with a fourth pick and traded it with Chargers for Manning. Coughlin's incumbent quarterback, Kerry Collins, was upset by the move and demanded his release, leaving the team without veterans who can hold the fort until Manning is ready. To fill that role, the Giants signed Kurt Warner, a former MVP Super Bowl who had been cut by St. Louis Rams after he lost his initial job to Marc Bulger.

Behind Warner, Coughlin led the Giants to five wins in their first seven games. However, with the team having lost the next two, Coughlin decided that Warner, who had fought, could no longer do the work and began the start of the praiseworthy Manning in the tenth game. Coach received criticism from some who felt that the move was a 2004 season surrender, since their 5-4 record meant the Giants were still in a playoff battle. Manning was struggling and the Giants' winning streak reached eight matches before Manning beat the Dallas Cowboys in the final game of the season.

Another great impact Coughlin will have on the Giants is the star who ran back the Tiki Barber problems. In the 2000-2004 season, Barber lost the ball 19 times. By simply teaching the barber to use a different grip on the ball, Coughlin reduced Barber to fumble just one in the 2005 season. The barber also saw a significant increase in his production, assigning the highest career in rush and total numbers each year under Coughlin.

Coughlin's early move to Manning, though, would pay dividends in 2005, as Manning and the Giants went 11-5 in Coughlin's second season and won NFC East for the first time since 2000. It was also the first postseason appearance of the Giants since making it as a wild card on in 2002. However, a very poor performance by Manning, and defense lost three early linebackers, seeing the Giants get 23-0 at the hands of the Carolina Panthers at Giants Stadium. After the game, Tiki Barber summoned Coughlin and his offensive coordinator, partly because the Panthers player said that "We know what they will do before they do it." Coughlin and Barber have not reconciled their differences, with Coughlin even refusing an interview by Tiki, then a side reporter for NBC, to be held before the Panthers-Giants in 2008.

Heading into the 2006 season, hopes for the Giants are high. In more than two years as head coach of the Giants, Coughlin transformed the Giants from a team of underachievers and last became a Super Bowl contender.

The Giants struggled early during the 2006 campaign, going 1-2 in their first three games. After a terrible loss to the Seattle Seahawks, the tight star, Jeremy Shockey stated that the Giants had "lost and lost." The Giants rebounded by winning their next five games to 6-2. However, the Giants suffered a stunning second-half collapse, losing 6 of their next 7 games to fall to 7-8 to the final game of the season. After losing the end of November to the Jacksonville Jaguars, Coughlin and his coaching staff were once again criticized by Tiki Barber. Barber also announced he will retire after this season, which gives another distraction to the Giants who are gliding. Things went bad the following week when the Giants scored 21 points in the fourth quarter and lost to Tennessee Titans 24-21. After the game Coughlin said to the media, "I'll be sick about this forever." Many injuries, excessive penalties, and a large number of turnovers were most responsible for the downward spiral of the 2006 Giants. The media chased Coughlin with questions about Barber's announcement, and whether the differences between Coughlin and Barber led to this point, and fans and team ownership started uneasy about the performance of the coach; during the 30-7 loss to the New Orleans Saints at the end of the year the loud chant of "Coughlin Fire" erupted at Giants Stadium. The Giants rebounded with victory in the final game of the season at the Washington Redskins, thus securing a playoff spot and possibly saving Coughlin's work in the process. However, Coughlin and the Giants lost to the Philadelphia Eagles, 23-20, in the first round of the playoffs. On January 10, 2007, it was announced that Coughlin would receive a one-year extension on his current contract through the 2008 season, but because the Giants team's policy is to have no coach in his final year of contract, it is only guaranteed that Coughlin will remain as head coach of Giants in the year 2007.

On February 7, 2007, Tiki Barber officially followed his threat to retire from the Giants. He cited many complaints about Eli Manning's leadership skills and Coughlin's practice style as a decision to retire on what appeared to be the pinnacle of his career.

Super Bowl runs and successful (2007-2009)

In the 2007 season, the Giants started off poorly with a 0-2 record. However, the team rebounded and won 6 straight games. The team collected a 7-1 road record for the season, and they made it to the playoffs for the third year in a row. Coughlin and Giants earned their first playoff victory in seven years when his team beat the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on January 6, 2008, 24-14. The Giants immediately followed up their win against Tampa Bay by beating the Dallas Cowboys in the Playoff Division, winning 21-17, preventing Dallas from beating them for the third time this season. The upset victory over the Cowboys was followed up by a 23-20 overtime win against the Green Bay Packers in the NFC Championship Game. This victory set Coughlin's first appearance in the Super Bowl as head coach.

The Super Bowl XLII took place in Glendale, Arizona on February 3, 2008. The game complained of Coughlin's New York Giants (13-6) against the unbeaten New England Patriots (18-0) trained by Bill Belichick. The Patriot is favored by 12 points. The Giants underdog beat Patriots 17-14 in one of the biggest disruptions in NFL history. The annoyance will give Coughlin his first Super Bowl ring as head trainer.

Before the start of the Giants mini-camp in May 2008, Coughlin and Giants were invited by President Bush to the White House to honor their victory at Super Bowl XLII. The Super Bowl win gets Coughlin a four-year deal worth about $ 21 million to coach the Giants throughout 2011. The deal makes him one of the highest paid NFL coaches. Fresh from their Super Bowl season, the team started the game with red heat 11-1 to 12 games, but after the shooting incident of Plaxico Burress, the team went 1-3 into the stretch and despite being # 1 seeded they were knocked out in the round of playoff divisions by the Philadelphia Eagles. The Giants finished 8-8 in 2009, despite a solid offensive game, however, their defense fought throughout the season, and they missed the playoffs. In 2010, they started 1-2, and then started five consecutive wins to finish 6-2 in the bye. The Giants headed into the 15th week against the Eagles with a 9-4 record. In the final seconds, the Giants are faced with a fourth down and Coughlin tells his punter, Matt Dodge, to kick the ball off the line to end the match effectively. However, he punted right for DeSean Jackson who took a distance and won the game Eagles in Miracle in New Meadowlands. The loss jeopardizes the Giants playoff bid and once again Coughlin's future is uncertain. However, on July 24, 2011, he signed a one-year contract extension to remain with the Giants until the end of the 2012 season. Secondary Bowl run (2011)

Unfortunately for Coughlin, the Giants failed to make the playoffs in the 2012 season, despite starting the season 6-2 and ending once again on 9-7. This is due in large part to two tilted losses to the NFC Atlanta Falcons seed number and Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens in week 15 and 16 respectively.

Worse, the Giants started the 2013-0-6 season for the first time since 1976. John Mara, the co-owner of Giants, stated that Coughlin's time with the Giants could be limited. Despite a difficult start, the team remained resilient and rebounded with victory against the Vikings and Eagles, hitting the week's residence in 2-6. The victory against the Raiders and Packers coupled with the NFC East that floundered left the Giants just one and a half games behind the leading division Eagles who will enter the 12th week. The revival unexpectedly stalled with a 24-21 defeat against the Cowboys division rivals. The Giants finally completed the 2013 season with a 7-9 record, Coughlin just a 0,500 record subcontract since the first season, and quarterback rookie season Eli Manning, in 2004.

On February 21, 2014, Coughlin told reporters at NFL Combine 2014 that he approved a one-year extension to his contract. This move allows him to remain the head coach of the Giants throughout the 2015 season. On March 11, 2015, the Giants extended his contract through the 2016 season.

2015 season

The Giants stumble in the 2015 season; until the 15th week, their record is 6-8, with many losses occurring in the last minute of the game; The Giants lost 6 of their 8 defeats with less than one goal with the last points scored against them in the last 2 minutes. Coughlin's criticism was built throughout the season and peaked at the 15th week, after losing 38-35 to the Carolina Panthers where Coughlin left the recipient of Odell star Beckham Jr. in the game despite the behavior in the last field resulting in personal killing. punishment.

On January 4, 2016, Coughlin resigned from his position as head coach for the Giants. In a statement released by the Giants that day, Coughlin wrote, "I met John Mara and Steve Tisch this afternoon, and I told them that it was in the best interests of the organization that I descended as head coach." I strongly believe the timing is right for me and my family, and as I say, the Giants organization. "The Giants finish the 2015 season on 6-10, the third consecutive season and the fourth season in a row without a playoff appearance. It was later revealed that Coughlin was really forced to retreat by the Giants organization.

Return to Jacksonville Jaguars

After resigning as head coach of the Giants, Coughlin took an executive position with Jacksonville Jaguars where he currently serves as executive vice president of football operations. In January 2018, Jaguar reached the AFC Championship for the first time since he became head coach of Jaguars in 1999. On 23 February 2018, Jaguar extended the Coughlin contract until 2021.

Tom Coughlin face - Imgur
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Personal life

Coughlin is the eldest of seven children. He and his wife Judy have two daughters, Keli and Katie, and two sons, Brian and Tim. He has eleven grandchildren. Coughlin is a practicing Roman Catholic. While with the Giants, Coughlin has been a resident of Park Ridge, New Jersey.

While on a USO-NFL coach tour to Iraq in 2009, Coughlin and co-managers Jeff Fisher, Jon Gruden, Bill Cowher and John Harbaugh lived in one of Saddam Hussein's former palaces.

In 2012, Coughlin was awarded the third highest award in the Department of Civilian Army Awards, the Extraordinary Civil Service Award, for substantial contributions to the US Army community while serving as New York Giants Coach.

In July 2016, Coughlin was hired as senior advisor to the NFL football operations department, and on November 14, 2016, during a part-time match between the Giants and Cincinnati Bengals at the MetLife Stadium, Coughlin was sworn into the Giants' "Ring of Honor".

In January 2017, it was revealed that Coughlin had been hired back by Jacksonville Jaguars to become the team's executive vice president for football operations. In July 2017, Coughlin was awarded the Arents Award which is the honor of the highest alumni of Syracuse University.

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Foundation

Coughlin created the Jay Fund , officially the Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation in 1996 while training in Jacksonville, Florida. The foundation is named Jay McGillis, a Boston College player who has been diagnosed and died of leukemia during Coughlin's leadership as head coach. This nonprofit organization is devoted to helping "children with leukemia and other cancers and their families by providing emotional and financial support to help reduce stress-related care and improve their quality of life", according to the mission statement of the foundation. By early 2017, funds have been channeled over $ 8 million while helping more than 4,000 families of children with cancer.

Father, grandpa Tom Coughlin opens up on family: 'Every day' is ...
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Head coaching record

Higher Education

NFL


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Train a tree

Pelatih kepala NFL yang dilayani Coughlin:

  • Marion Campbell: Philadelphia Eagles (1984-1985)
  • Forrest Gregg: Green Bay Packers (1986-1987)
  • Bill Parcells: New York Giants (1988-1990)

Asisten pelatih di bawah Coughlin yang menjadi pelatih kepala NFL:

  • Dom Capers: Houston Texans (2002-2005)
  • Kevin Gilbride: San Diego Chargers (1997-1998)
  • Dick Jauron: Chicago Bears (1999-2003), Buffalo Bills (2006-2009)
  • Lane Kiffin: Oakland Raiders (2007-2008)
  • Ben McAdoo: New York Giants (2016-2017)
  • Bobby Petrino: Atlanta Falcons (2007)
  • Steve Spagnuolo: St. Louis Rams (2009-2011) New York Giants (2017)
  • Tony Sparano: Miami Dolphins (2008-2011), Oakland Raiders (2014)

Assistant coach under Coughlin who is head coach of NCAA:

  • John Bonamego: Central Michigan Chippewas (2015-present)
  • Gary Crowton: Louisiana Tech Bulldogs (1996-1998), Brigham Young Cougars (2001-2004)
  • Randy Edsall: Connecticut Huskies (1999-2010, 2017-present), Maryland Terrapins (2011-2015)
  • Paul Haynes: Kent State Golden Flashes (2013-present)
  • Lane Kiffin: Tennessee Volunteers (2009), USC Trojans (2010-2013), Florida Atlantic Owls (2017-present)
  • Bobby Petrino: Louisville Cardinals (2003-2006; 2014-present), Arkansas Razorbacks (2008-2011), Western Kentucky Hilltoppers (2013)
  • Matt Rhule: Temple Owls football (2013-2016), Baylor Bears (2017-present)

Tom Coughlin on Odell Beckham Jr.: 'I Will Defend the Young Man ...
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See also

  • The history of the New York Giants (1994-present)
  • List of National Football League head coaches with 50 wins

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References


Tom Coughlin: Jaguars hire former Giants head coach | SI.com
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External links

Media related to Tom Coughlin on Wikimedia Commons

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