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Shell comes home to Oakland   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #809 of 1016 |
Re: Shell comes home to Oakland

--- In GoRaiders@yahoogroups.com,
<wonderfulkat> wrote:
>
> Shell comes home to Oakland By David Elfin
> Published April 21, 2006
>
> ---------------------------------
> Art Shell played offensive tackle for the Oakland Raiders for 14
years before finishing his Hall of Fame career in 1982, the year the
franchise moved to Los Angeles. Upon retirement, Shell became the
offensive line coach before moving up to the top job in 1989.
> Shell and his beloved franchise parted ways just before the
Raiders returned to their true home in Oakland in 1995. So while the
59-year-old Shell is getting a second chance to coach his team, this
will be his first time coaching back where he helped make the
Raiders a perennial contender and a two-time Super Bowl champion.
> "The Raiders ... that's home to me, that's where I grew up,"
said Shell, who'll try to right the Raiders, a franchise-worst 13-35
the past three seasons after winning the AFC in 2002. "When you help
build the foundation of winning that they had, to see them go into a
tailspin like they have the last couple of years, that's bothersome.
Now I'm in the position to try to rectify that.
> "There's a certain attitude that you have to have about
winning," Shell continued. "I believe I can get players to
understand what I mean when I say, 'Commitment to Excellence.' When
I played, that meant something to me."
> If hiring Shell out of the league office -- where he had
worked since being canned as Atlanta's offensive line coach in 2001 -
- was unusual, then Shell's choice of Tom Walsh as his offensive
coordinator was downright bizarre. Walsh had been out of the NFL
since serving as an assistant for Shell in 1994 and had been out of
football since 1999. Walsh was running a bed and breakfast and
serving as mayor of Swan Valley, Idaho (pop. 213).
> "Tom has a great football mind," Shell said in defending
Walsh, whom he has kept away from the Bay Area media that has
lampooned the hire. "He's a smart guy. He knows how I want to do
things. He knows the system that I like to run. He's going to do
well."
> Holmgren unsure of future -- Heading into the 2003 season,
Mike Holmgren's future in Seattle was shaky. He had been stripped of
his general manager's duties and was just 31-34 in four years in
Seattle.
> Three playoff berths, two NFC West titles, one NFC
championship and 34 victories later and Holmgren's future is in his
hands.
> Holmgren, who turns 58 in June, is entering the final season
of the eight-year contract that lured him from Green Bay, where he
had spent 1992 to 1998 returning the Packers to their long-lost
glory. Only 15 coaches have more victories than Holmgren's 149 and
only seven have more Super Bowl appearances than Holmgren's three.
> "I just need to think about what I want to do," said
Holmgren, who lost his father to a heart attack at a relatively
young age and had a heart scare of his own a couple of years ago. "I
don't want it to be too complicated. The organization is going good
now. But I don't want to commit to anything if I can't give 150
percent."
> Smith not shown the love -- Lovie Smith was named coach of
the year for guiding Chicago to an 11-5 record and the NFC North
crown in his second season, before a loss to Carolina in the
playoffs. But that wasn't enough to make Bears president Ted
Phillips alter Smith's status as the NFL's lowest-paid coach at
$1.35 million, not after doing so for predecessor Dick Jauron
following Chicago's 2001 division title. Jauron went 11-21 the next
two years and was fired with a year left on his extended, enhanced
contract.
> "I feel good, but I want to feel better," Phillips said,
explaining he wants Smith to produce a second strong season.
> Maybe Smith didn't complain because he knows the Bears have
the easiest schedule -- their opponents' had a .445 winning
percentage in 2005 and Chicago has nine games against rookie coaches
and only four against playoff teams.
> "Some organizations want to see more," Smith said. "Our
program is coming along fine. I have a contract."
> Yes, but for significantly less money than his three rookie
rivals in the NFC North -- Detroit's Rod Marinelli, Green Bay's Mike
McCarthy and Minnesota's Brad Childress -- and less than such
assistants as Smith's former Tampa Bay boss, Monte Kiffin.
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Blab-away for as little as 1˘/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using
Yahoo! Messenger with Voice.
>









Tue Apr 25, 2006 6:03 am

robertgroel
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Forward
Message #809 of 1016 |
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... his head on after all these years,we will be in the playoff these year,welcome back coach art shell ... years before finishing his Hall of Fame career in...
Robert Groel
robertgroel
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Apr 23, 2006
7:51 am

... years before finishing his Hall of Fame career in 1982, the year the franchise moved to Los Angeles. Upon retirement, Shell became the offensive line coach...
Robert Groel
robertgroel
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Apr 25, 2006
8:58 pm

well, now i know why this dude was avoided like tha plague by soooo many teams when he came out of colledge...we just happened to be tha ones who gave him a...
ray johnson
rotikdawg
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Jul 30, 2006
12:18 pm
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