San Diego Chargers President Dean Spanos announced today that former Denver Broncos Offensive Coordinator Mike McCoy will be the 15th head coach in team history.
“We
set out to find the right man to lead the San Diego Chargers on the
field and that man is Mike McCoy,” Spanos said. “The interview process
was an excellent experience. We were very thorough during the process
and made sure we did our due diligence. We interviewed five
extremely-qualified, highly-sought-after coaches. It was a tough
decision, but in the end, all signs pointed to Mike. After spending
time with Mike, I could see why so many teams wanted to talk to him.
“Mike
has all of the qualities we were looking for in a head coach and a
leader. He has a very structured vision about how to build and run a
football team. Mike and Tom think very much alike and share very
similar beliefs. Mike has shown he has one of the most innovative minds
in football. He has a track record of building offenses and maximizing
the abilities of his players. He’s a devout family man and understands
the value of building and maintaining a family environment here. Mike is
energetic, enthusiastic, forward-thinking, and a team builder. Bottom
line, he’s a leader. And he’s charismatic. I know our fans will enjoy
getting to know Mike and watching what he does with the Chargers.
“Change is good. It’s no longer business as usual for the San Diego Chargers. With (new General Manager) Tom Telesco
leading our player personnel department and Mike McCoy leading our team
on the field, I think we have the right men in place to lead the
Chargers back to where we belong … in the playoffs and to the Super
Bowl.”
Telesco echoed Spanos’ sentiments.
“A
week ago, I talked about what we’re looking for in a head coach,”
Telesco said. “We’re looking for a leader of men, a teacher who can
communicate with players from all different ages and backgrounds, and a
coach who can motivate his players to play their best at the most
critical times. Mike McCoy can accomplish those goals. He’s going to
build a team culture and do it with passion on and off the field. It was
very clear he was the one we wanted to lead the San Diego Chargers in a
new era.”
McCoy,
40, comes to the Chargers from Denver, where he helped the Broncos to
their second-highest win total in franchise history as they went 13-3
and entered the playoffs as the No. 1 seed in the AFC. The Broncos won
11 straight games to end the regular season, the second-longest streak
in team history, and became only the seventh Super Bowl-era team to win
their final 11 contests.
“It’s
an honor and privilege to have an opportunity to work for a great
organization like the San Diego Chargers,” said McCoy. “It’s exciting
for me to come to an organization like the Chargers and the beautiful
city of San Diego at the start of a new era and the beginning of a new
culture. Change is good in this business and, to me, this is the
opportunity of a lifetime.”
With McCoy at the helm of the Broncos’ offense, quarterback Peyton Manning
threw a team-record 37 touchdown passes, while posting the second-best
season of his career in yards (4,659) and completion percentage (68.6%).
The Broncos ranked fourth in the NFL in total offense and their passing
game featured a pair of standout receivers in Demaryius Thomas and Eric Decker,
who combined to become the youngest receiving duo in NFL history to
each top 1,000 yards and 10 touchdowns. Thomas led the way with 1,434
yards and 10 scores on 94 catches, while Decker scored 13 times while
hauling in 85 passes for 1,064 yards. Injuries hampered Denver’s running
backs corps during the season but the group was resilient and combined
to rush for 1,832 yards and 12 touchdowns.
McCoy coached under Head Coach John Fox in both Denver and Carolina.
“I’ve
known Mike for many years and believe he is a tremendous coach,” said
Fox. “We’ve spent nearly a decade coaching together, beginning in
Carolina when he was an assistant working with the quarterbacks. He’s
going to make an excellent head coach and is certainly qualified for the
position. Mike understands offenses in this league. Beyond that, he’s
got a great football mind. His preparation and detail—his level of
organization—is very strong. As a play-caller, I had a lot of
confidence in him and watched him have great success with that
responsibility. I’m happy for Mike, his wife Kellie and their family.”
The
2011 season was a storybook one in Denver as McCoy helped the Broncos
reach the AFC Divisional Playoffs after winning their first AFC West
title since 2005. The Broncos upset the heavily-favored Pittsburgh
Steelers in the Wild Card Playoffs at Sports Authority Field with
quarterback Tim Tebow
throwing an 80-yard touchdown pass to Thomas on the first play of
overtime. The success of the ’11 season was particularly satisfying for
McCoy, who had completely revamped Denver’s offense into a read-option
attack that meshed with Tebow’s playing style and the Broncos went on to
lead the NFL with a franchise-record 2,632 yards on the ground.
A couple of other Broncos’ players who starred while playing under McCoy included wide receiver Brandon Lloyd and running back Willis McGahee.
Lloyd led the NFL in receiving yards (1,448) in 2010 and earned his
first Pro Bowl selection, while also becoming just the fourth wide
receiver in team history to receive Associated Press All-Pro honors and
McGahee rushed for 1,199 yards in 2011 to earn his second-career Pro
Bowl selection.
McCoy
came to Denver after the ’08 season, becoming Denver’s offensive
coordinator and quarterbacks coach on Jan. 20, 2009. In his first season
with the Broncos, quarterback Kyle Orton set career highs in every major passing category and two Broncos offensive players, wide receiver Brandon Marshall and left tackle Ryan Clady,
earned Pro Bowl honors. Marshall caught 101 passes that season, tied
for third in the NFL, and set an NFL record with 21 catches in a game
against Indianapolis, while Clady added first-team Associated Press
All-Pro honors to his Pro Bowl selection. Running back Knowshon Moreno
also shined under McCoy, earning All-Rookie honors after leading the
league’s rookies in rushing yards, total yards from scrimmage and total
touchdowns.
McCoy
played quarterback at Long Beach State and the University of Utah
before signing with the Broncos as an undrafted free agent in 1995. He
ended up spending his rookie season on the practice squad in Green Bay
and then had stops with NFL Europe’s Amsterdam Admirals, his hometown
San Francisco 49ers and the Philadelphia Eagles before concluding his
playing career with the Canadian Football League’s Calgary Stampeders in
1999.
McCoy
transitioned into coaching a year later, joining the Carolina Panthers
as an offensive assistant in 2000. Four weeks into his first season with
the Panthers however, he was elevated to quarterbacks coach and helped
Steve Beuerlein to a 3,730-yard season that ranked seventh in the NFL.
McCoy would end up spending nine seasons in Carolina, serving as wide
receivers coach (2001), quarterbacks coach (2002-08) and passing game
coordinator (2007-08). The Panthers totaled three playoff appearances,
two division titles, two NFC Championship Game appearances and a berth
in Super Bowl XXXVIII (2003) during McCoy’s nine years on the staff.
McCoy’s main student in Carolina was quarterback Jake Delhomme,
a Pro Bowl pick in 2005 who passed for more than 3,000 yards four times
under his watch. Delhomme enjoyed his best season for the Panthers in
2004, registering personal bests in passing yards (3,886) and touchdown
passes (29), totals that both ranked second in Panthers’ history. A year
later, the Panthers went 11-5 and advanced to the NFC Championship Game
behind Delhomme, who earned his first Pro Bowl nod after ranking fourth
in the NFL with 24 touchdown passes. McCoy did some of his best
coaching with the Panthers in 2007 when the team went a franchise-best
12-4 in the regular season and earned a first-round bye in the playoffs.
Injuries forced the Panthers to start four different quarterbacks (none
for more than three games in a row) during that ’07 season and Carolina
became the first NFL team in 10 years to win at least one game with
four different starters at quarterback (Delhomme, David Carr, Matt Moore and Vinny Testaverde).
McCoy is the second-youngest head coach in team history. Al Saunders was 39 years old when he became head coach in 1986.
A native of San Francisco, McCoy and his wife, Kellie, have a daughter, Olivia, and a son, Luke.1.) Add an image and scale it to 450 pixels wide. 2.) Add an intro paragraph. 3.) the SPAN CLASS html code is the "continue reading" button that shows up on the home page. 4.) add your post content after the span class. 5.) make sure to paste into Notepad first to strip out any other code...we just want plain text. 6.) schedule your post for 8:00am pacific time. 7. MAKE SURE THAT {/span} is the last thing in the post, otherwise it'll break the layout!! :)
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