The Greatest Show on Turf started with Don Coryell

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  • #38679
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    The Greatest Show on Turf started with Don Coryell

    Eric Williams

    http://espn.go.com/blog/san-diego-chargers/post/_/id/15010/genesis-of-the-greatest-show-on-turf-started-with-don-coryell

    As the innovator behind the “The Greatest Show on Turf” and the head coach responsible for leading the St. Louis Rams to a win in Super Bowl XXXIV, NFL offensive guru Mike Martz had a front-row seat to the origins of that offense nearly 50 years ago.

    During 12 seasons at San Diego State, former San Diego Chargers head coach Don Coryell put together an impressive 104-19-2 record, winning two Division II championships.

    The Aztecs had winning streaks of 31 and 21 games, completing undefeated campaigns in 1966 and 1969 during Coryell’s tenure. Coryell helped lead the Aztecs from a Division II to Division I program in 1969.

    “How many times does a college team at halftime go to the opponent and say, ‘Hey, listen, we’re going to have a running clock in the second half,’ ” Martz said, ” ‘or this is going to get really ugly.’

    “He put so much pressure on people in the passing game, and they’d never seen it before. He started that whole thing where you threw third-down passes on first down. He just attacked you relentlessly, and there was no-holds-barred.

    “He had that Midas touch. Wherever he went, they just became explosive, like nothing anybody had ever seen. And it did eventually get the conservatism out of people. And they started to change. They started to embrace the passing game.”

    For the second time since 2010, Coryell is among 15 finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. On Saturday, the 46-person selection committee will convene in San Francisco, site of Super Bowl 50, to debate this year’s group.

    A San Diego native, Martz was a slow-footed tight end at Mesa Junior College when Coryell’s offenses were lighting up the scoreboard at San Diego State.

    Martz loved Coryell as a coach and badly wanted to play for him. But Martz didn’t fit Coryell’s system. A half dozen of Martz’s other teammates were recruited to play for the Aztecs while Martz went on to play at Fresno State instead.

    Still, Coryell remembered him. Years later as an assistant coach at Arizona State, Martz was in his hometown on a recruiting trip and stopped by San Diego State to visit with a fellow coach.

    Of course, Coryell was on the practice field working out a player, and he spotted Martz about 80 yards away.

    “I thought, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m in trouble now,'” Martz said. “I’m not supposed to be here and he’s going to run me out of here. And he came walking over and said, ‘Hell, Mike Martz. It’s so good to see you, how you doing?’

    “I was flabbergasted. How could he know my name? How did he know who I was? But that was Don. He never forgot anybody.

    “I wanted to play for him so bad. Everybody that grew up here wanted to play for Don Coryell. That’s what you wanted. I went to Fresno State, which was fine. It was a great career for me and I loved it there, but you grew up wanting to be a part of it. Because you knew they were different from what anybody had ever seen.”

    Coryell, who died in July 2010, finished his coaching tenure with the Chargers after a 14-year career in the NFL.

    Martz paid homage to his mentor every season during his time with the Rams by bringing Coryell to St. Louis as an invited guest for a Rams preseason home game. Coryell went out for the pregame coin toss and interacted with players throughout the week, plus attended an event hosted by former St. Louis Cardinals players.

    Of course, Coryell had a lot of success on his own while serving as head coach of the St. Louis Cardinals, winning division championships in 1974 and ’75. Coryell’s Cardinals finished 42-27-1 over five seasons.

    “Everybody who played for us at the Rams understood that we do this stuff because of what this guy did,” Martz said. “He created this whole system and philosophy, and we’re just continuing the legacy. So when they finally got to meet him, some of the guys like Isaac [Bruce] were in awe of the guy — and rightly so.”

    While Coryell had success as a head coach and is known for his innovation on offense, Martz said what goes overlooked sometimes was the relationships he developed with players, and his ability to motivate and coach.

    “Talk to anybody that ever played for him,” Martz said. “I don’t care whether it was at San Diego State in 1968 or with the Chargers in his later years — you just listen to anybody that was a coach or player on his team, and they talk about that coach with love and respect.

    “He was just so understated and had absolutely zero ego.”

    =============
    Don Coryell

    Coach
    1973-77 St. Louis Cardinals, 1978-86 San Diego Chargers

    • Overall record of 114-89-1
    • Won back-to-back division titles with Cardinals in 1974-75
    • 3 10-win seasons with Cardinals (most by coach in team history)
    • 1974 NFL Coach of the Year
    • Chargers’ passing offense led NFL in passing six straight seasons, 1978-83
    • 1979 AFC Coach of the Year
    • Dan Fouts was the 1st QB to record 3 straight 4,000-yard passing seasons, doing so under Coryell from 1979-81

    #38680
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Cor-yell is a Hall of Famer in my book.

    It aint always about wins and losses. Sometimes
    its about innovation and…fun. He created
    THE funnest damn offenses in the modern era.
    Oughta be a ‘fun room’ in the Hall if nothing else.

    I, myself, would also put a “corporate lackey” room
    and a “weasely owner” room in the Hall of Fame.
    Georgia, Shaw, Zygmunt, Kronky, Demoff, Art Modell, Bidwell…

    w
    v

    #38709
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Cor-yell is a Hall of Famer in my book.

    I’ve told my Coryell stories a million times. I was in St. Louis in the Coryell years. Then was in San Diego in the Air Coryell years. I even went to Chargers training camps a couple of times. I was a Rams fan when in SD, so mostly that led to me wishing the Rams could have an offense like that. And then in 99, they did.

    San Diego was also my first experience with “don’t be THAT guy” kinds of fans. I remember listening to phone-in sports radio while driving, and guys were phoning in complaining about Fouts after a loss. Like, why couldn’t the Chargers just go out and get a qb who could run the ball some. This was in 79, when they went 12-4. Some fans were mad after a loss because at one point in the game, Fouts had a chance to run in the redzone and didn’t. (Or he tried and it didn’t work…I actually forget which it was.) So it was “dump this guy, find a real qb” day on San Diego sports radio.

    I even remember what one caller said. “You know, it can’t be that hard just to get a guy in there who can run. You know, just get a guy in there. How hard could that be.”

    So in 1979, some irate fans were complaining after a loss that Fouts was useless and Don Coryell didn’t know what he was doing.

    ..
    ..

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