Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Football Lovers Bible Explores the Greatest Coaches of the NFL

Whether you are a football coach, journalist, or fan, Pillars of the NFL: Coaches WhoHave Won Three or More Championships is a football lovers bible that offers biographies that examine the football lives of the greatest coaches in NFL history. 


These are the game's 10 greatest legends who outsmarted the field, time and time again. It is not a book of strategies and drills, it's a book about the greatest coaches and their players. It a priceless book for those closest to the game.


Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships is published by Sporting Chance Press and written by Chicago Bears Senior Director Patrick McCaskey.  The Pillars themselves are the greatest coaches in NFL history--determined strictly by the number of championships.  Ten coaches have won three or more championships: George Halas, Guy Chamberlin, Curly Lambeau, Paul Brown, Weeb Ewbank, Vince Lombardi, Chuck Noll, Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, and Bill Belichick.


1. George Halas was a great man and great coach, but every once in a while he recharged his batteries and stepped back and watched others coach. He was a master at so many things, but he never felt like he knew everything and was always learning. He would bring college coaches into his camp and would pay attention to their ideas. He was very competitive and made it through some very tough times by tightening his belt. 


2. Curly Lambeau was a fine judge of character and he was able to recruit players to his club. His training and demands were tough. He saw  the passing game as something to be developed even before the rules were created that would allow for much of it in the league. He kept in touch with his former coach at Notre Dame, Knute Rockne, and they shared ideas and discussed players. 


3. Guy Chamberlin was a Nebraska farmer, but he knew the way the game was played. He played both defense and offense.  He saw football as great escape for a few years from the farm and the dry spells that happened. He loved the game and he would have expected his players to show the same passion. 


4. Paul Brown father was a railroad man with a watch--he learned to use his time wisely. Brown scripted his practices and made the most of the time he spent on the field. His players were skilled and he had classroom sessions and playbooks. He wanted smart players who were focused on learning and bringing discipline to the game. The color of a man's skin was irrelevant.


5. Weeb Ewbank was a small man who loved working with men. He never let his ego get in the way of creating a winning environment. Whether teaching players, handling salary relations, or negotiating a player's return, he kept his wits and his sense of humor. He succeeded in different played with different teams and he was at his best building a team. 


6. Vince Lombardi has been hailed as a disciplinarian. His methods were considered old fashioned and not workable for the modern player until he made them work for championship after championship. He learned high school and college coaching before the pro game. He was middle aged before he led the Packers. He grilled his players on plays until they became perfect at executing them.  He came very close to pushing them too hard and having a revolt, but he learned to back off at just the right time.  Once his methods were successful on the football field his team was practically invincible. 


7. Chuck Noll brought in critical players who would act as change-makers on his Steelers. These players would not accept poor play from their teammates. He started with Mean Joe Greene and was often working with black schools recruiting players that most teams would  have over looked. He created a mindset with his team that only exceptional hard-nosed play would be present. They all worked to win championships and to make their teammates Hall of Fame players. 


8. Bill Walsh was primed to be a head coach, but didn't get his chance until long after he thought it was due. And Walsh perhaps more than any other of the greatest coaches, had times where he suffered from a personal humiliation because of failure. Other times where he could walk out on a field and the opposing coach would worry so much about what Walsh's moves were going to be, he could not execute his own. Walsh seemed like he was a couple steps away from the abyss and a short leap to glory. He was hard to please and spend endless hour in preparation.  While he looked like a Physics teacher or a golf pro, he was a pugilist at heart--a former boxer with a passion for social justice. 


9. Joe Gibbs learned from every coach he worked with in football. He had a tough life as a child and then achieved a level of financial success that was almost unheard in both coaching and owning Joe Gibbs Racing. Gibbs was also a coach who played his hand as it came. He had certain ambitions when he started his NFL career, but he decided to create game plans to match his personnel not his own wishes.  He relied on a core group of coaches who he retained and he was considered especially brilliant at making half time adjustments. Like facing Bill Walsh, opposing coaches knew they had to be at their best to win against Gibbs. 


10. Today's football fans know Bill Belichick's mantra: "just do your job." And that goes for everyone connected to the team. Players are better prepared, they are trained in multiple positions, teammates and coaches are constantly reviewing their performance, everyone is expected to "man-up" and accept criticism. Players on the practice field get coached on their play under a myriad of game situations. The Patriots are a proud organization and each year the rest of the NFL can never take them for granted. Rarely are they not at the best at season end. Rarely does Bill Belichick get out-coached. 


Pillars of the NFL is a coaching tool, a football researchers handbook, and an NFL fan's guide to the history of the game. 

Frank McCourt's Interest in Saints

Saint Francis
I have been researching the lives of saints for a project I am working on. I remember reading about writer Frank McCourt's interest in saints that he found in reading Butler's Lives of Saints at the library in Limerick. While most everything else was a disaster in his life, it seems like his interest in the saints was one of the positives, although McCourt cast it in kind of  cynical way as was his custom. Anyway, when I was reading and listening to the audio version of McCourt's Angela's Ashes (on the way to and from work listening and at night reading), I was struck by his fascination and also remembered my own interest. I too was fascinated by the lives of saints as a child, but hardly remembered it at the time when I was reading McCourt. 

My recent look into several of the saints' lives surprised me because so often our greatest saints were living through miserable times to be a Christian. So many of those we look at were the best of the best, living during horrible God-less kind of times; times when seriously troubling heresies were becoming popular; times when those who were in charge were lax and complacent; and perhaps the worst, times when it seemed like few really cared to be Christian. And by heresies, I mean times when Christians were saying that Christ was not God, but just a good guy, or the devil created the world and everything related to the physical world was evil--series stuff. 

I suppose we live in a time where many challenges exist, but I have to say that I don't think that is unusual--troubled times have happened over and over again. But the good news today is that when the going gets tough, the tough get going. The toughest of times lead to people who become our greatest saints and the tough times lead to periods of great growth. So if you are out there checking the statistics on church attendance, losing sleep over how many kids have no interest in faith, or looking at the media who seems to relish in bad news about the Church--well keep praying--all that will change. It won't be easy. But we are about to experience an era where things will improve. The best of the best will come forward and today's saints will give us all a hand

St. Kevin of the Nettles

St. Kevin 9th or 10th Century
For the Irish, their stories of saints and religious figures are often accepted on faith. The Irish don't seem to care about the exact details; the true nature of the person or the deed is somehow more important. In some ways it is the poetry of the situation holds sway.

Glendalough in the Wicklow Mountains is famous for its monastic school and its founder, St. Kevin (of the Nettles). Born near Rathdrum at the end of the fifth century, Kevin means fair-begotten and it is said he was the first man named Kevin. St. Kevin was tutored at first by St. Petroc of Cornwall on the Scriptures. Then he studied under his uncle, St. Eugenius, who had studied in the famous British monastery of Rosnat. [Rosnat is mentioned in many places as special place of learning, but scholars cannot agree on its early location. Lost in the mist of history.]

The Nettles


According to Irish tradition, Young Kevin was a handsome youth and one day was followed by a young maiden into the woods.  When he realized, he was in danger of committing a sin, he threw himself into a bed of nettles--and earned his nickname--Kevin of the Nettles.  Some sources suggest he turned the nettles on the girl as well. 

Not Allowed to Live as a Hermit


Kevin then retired into the wilds of the Glendalough valley, where he lived in a cave by himself until holy men and others gathered around him. He was asked to build a monastery. And like other such men, his humility and self-denial attracted disciples and a school of learning.  This monastery founded several others, and around it grew a town. St. Kevin served as abbot for several years, but once the monastery was well-established, he withdrew once again to live as a hermit. Four years later, he returned to Glendalough at a monk’s request and served as abbot until his death at age 120. 

St. Kevin was a great protector of animals. Many of the St. Kevin’s miracles also involve nature and animals. His feast day is June 3rd. He died in 618 and received his canonization in 1903. 

Seamus Heaney  wrote a poem based on a traditional story about St. Kevin. A black bird landed on St. Kevin’s hand—the bird laid its eggs in his hand and St. Kevin held the bird until the eggs hatched and the young birds were ready to leave. 


Despite attacks by Vikings over the years, Glendalough survived until the Normans destroyed the monastery in 1214 A.D. A visitor’s center has an audio visual introduction and a model of the monastic site on display. Other building of interest are present. Glendalough is one of the top attraction on Ireland’s Ancient East.  

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Larry Norris is the publisher of Patrick McCaskey's Pilgrimage and Norris's own book, The Brown and White