This Flicker was originally published on 7/28/19. It's already dated. For example, only one of the listed NFC East coaches is still with that team.
ESPN.com recently posted an interesting column, written by something called NFL Nation, about the first football job of each of the 32 NFL head coaches. Due to the recent trend of hiring bright, young offensive coaches I was surprised to find that about 2/3 of the coaches got their football starts in the previous century. There are even five (Mike Zimmer, Pete Carroll, Bruce Arians, Bill Belichick, and Vic Fangio) that made football their life's work in the 1970s. And four of those five are defensive coaches.
Perhaps this interests only me. The respective coaching trajectories of the Vikings' first head coach and current head coach couldn't be more different. Norm Van Brocklin went from the league's MVP and leading the Philadelphia Eagles to an NFL title in 1960 to the head coach of the expansion Vikings in 1961. Mike Zimmer coached an absurd 35 years before getting his first head coaching job in 2014.
Zimmer isn't the only coach to wait a ridiculously long time for his first head coaching shot. Pete Carroll and Bill Belichick are two of the most successful head coaches in the league. Carroll waited 21 years for his first head coaching opportunity. Belichick waited 16 years. For reasons that still baffle, the New York Jets fired Carroll after a single season for Rich Kotite. Also, Carroll's five years as a graduate assistant (four with Pacific, one with Arkansas) must be some kind of record.
Anyway, here are the football coaching starts for all 32 NFL head coaches from ESPN.com's article.
Mike Zimmer, Minnesota Vikings
First football job: Assistant at Missouri from 1979 to 1980
Matt Nagy, Chicago Bears
First football job: Coaching intern with the Eagles in 2008
Matt Patricia, Detroit Lions
First football job: Graduate assistant/assistant offensive line coach at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York in 1996
Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers
First football job: Offensive assistant at Saginaw Valley State in Michigan in 2003
Pat Shurmur, New York Giants
First football job: Graduate assistant at Michigan State in 1988
Doug Pederson, Philadelphia Eagles
First football job: Head coach of Calvary Baptist Academy in Shreveport, Louisiana, in 2004
Jay Gruden, Washington Redskins
First football job: Student assistant/graduate assistant at the University of Louisville in 1989
Jason Garrett, Dallas Cowboys
First football job: Quarterbacks coach for the Dolphins in 2005
Sean Payton, New Orleans Saints
First football job: Graduate assistant at San Diego State in 1988 and 1989
Dan Quinn, Atlanta Falcons
First football job: Volunteer assistant defensive line coach at William & Mary in Virginia in 1994
Ron Rivera, Carolina Panthers
First football job: Volunteer for the Bears going into minicamp in 1997
Bruce Arians, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
First football job: Graduate assistant at Virginia Tech in 1975
Pete Carroll, Seattle Seahawks
First football job: Graduate assistant at the University of the Pacific in California from 1974 to 1976
Kyle Shanahan, San Francisco 49ers
First football job: Graduate assistant at UCLA in 2003
Kliff Kingsbury, Arizona Cardinals
First football job: University of Houston under Kevin Sumlin as the offensive quality control coach in 2008 and 2009
Sean McVay, Los Angeles Rams
First job in football: Buccaneers offensive assistant in 2008
Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers
First football job: Wide receivers coach at Virginia Military Institute in 1995
John Harbaugh, Baltimore Ravens
First football job: Started his coaching career in 1984 at the age of 21 as a graduate assistant for his father, Jack, at Western Michigan
Freddie Kitchens, Cleveland Browns
First football job: Offensive assistant at Glenville State College in 1999
Zac Taylor, Cincinnati Bengals
First football job: Texas A&M University, where he served as offensive graduate assistant and tight ends coach from 2008 to 2011 under head coach Mike Sherman.
Bill Belichick, New England Patriots
First football job: Staff assistant position with the Baltimore Colts in 1975. At the age of 23, he was named special assistant to head coach Ted Marchibroda.
Sean McDermott, Buffalo Bills
First football job: Graduate assistant at William & Mary in 1998
Adam Gase, New York Jets
First football job: Undergraduate assistant at Michigan State from 1996 to 1999, under head coach Nick Saban
Brian Flores, Miami Dolphins
First football job: Joined the Patriots as a scouting assistant in 2004; one of his first roles was being "The Turk" or, as he calls it, the "Grim Reaper," telling players to bring their playbook to the head coach on cut-down day
Frank Reich, Indianapolis Colts
First football job: Volunteer coach at Wingate University in North Carolina in 2005
Doug Marrone, Jacksonville Jaguars
First football job: Tight ends coach at Cortland State in New York in 1992
Bill O'Brien, Houston Texans
First football job: Assistant coach of the freshman team at St. John's Prep in Danvers, Massachusetts, in 1988
Mike Vrabel, Tennessee Titans
First football job: Linebackers coach at Ohio State in 2011
Andy Reid, Kansas City Chiefs
First football job: Graduate assistant coach at Brigham Young University in 1982
Jon Gruden, Oakland Raiders
First football job: Graduate assistant at the University of Tennessee in 1986
Anthony Lynn, Los Angeles Chargers
First football job: Offensive assistant and assistant to special teams with the Broncos in 2000
Vic Fangio, Denver Broncos
First football job: Assistant coach (running backs, linebackers) at Dunmore High School in Pennsylvania in 1979
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