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Today In Patriots History March 30: Happy Birthday to Charlie Weiss

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Today in Patriots History
Charlie Weis



Happy 69th birthday to Charlie Weis
Born March 30, 1956 in Trenton, New Jersey
Patriot coach, 1992-1996; offensive coordinator, 2000-2004
Pats résumé: OC for three super bowl championship teams


Charles Joseph Weis was a Patriot position coach for four years and offensive coordinator for five seasons. He owns four Superbowl rings and compiled 36 years of football coaching experience.




After 11 years of high school and college coaching, Weis joined Bill Parcells’ New York Giant coaching staff in 1990 at the age of 34. Being hired by Tuna was a game changer, with Weis going from a high school football coach in New Jersey one year, to working in the NFL the next season. After three years with the Giants he rejoined Parcells in 1993 in New England. As the Pats tight end coach in 1994, Ben Coates was an All Pro with career highs of 96 receptions and 1,174 yards receiving. The next season as RB coach, rookie Curtis Martin rushed for 1,487 yards and 14 touchdowns. Then 1n 1996 as WR coach, rookie Terry Glenn had a career-high 90 receptions, and 1,132 yards receiving.

Weis followed Parcells out of town the next year to work for the Jets. Bill Belichick added him to his newly formed staff in New England in 2000, as offensive coordinator. As the OC Weis had a critical role in Tom Brady’s first NFL season as starting quarterback. That 2001 season of course culminated in the first of six Patriot Superbowl victories. His neophyte quarterback went on to become the best there ever was.




Not a one-hit wonder, Weis earned two more rings in Super Bowls 38 and 39. He left New England to become head coach of Notre Dame in 2005. Later he was the OC for the Kansas City Chiefs in 2010, OC for the Florida Gators in 2011, and head coach for the Kansas Jayhawks from 2012-14. Though he may be bored now that he is no longer working, his family should be set for generations - thanks in no small part part to buyouts from former employers.




Brady speaks to Weis' impact; Patriots quarterback will lose a mentor in Charlie Weis at the end of the season -- Patriots.com
"We'll see how it affects us," Brady said. "He's definitely the one coach who has been there since day one, aside from Coach Belichick, [but] I definitely spend more time with Charlie. He sets the tone for every meeting, every practice, and he has since the day I got here. I probably know that more than anybody else, so we'll see how that affects us when it comes up, but he's still around, so that's good."​


Weis, a 1978 Notre Dame graduate and owner of four Super Bowl-champion rings as products of a stellar 15-season career as a National Football League assistant coach, wasted no time putting his signature stamp on his alma mater’s program in his first two years as Irish head coach in 2005 and 2006. Weis and his Irish followed up a 9-3 record in ’05 and BCS appearance in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl with a 10-3 overall mark in ’06 and a second consecutive BCS invitation, this time to the Allstate Sugar Bowl. Those 19 combined wins (including eight straight in the middle of the ’06 regular season) qualified as most in a two-year period by the Irish since they collected 21 in 1992-93.​




In the small hours of that Monday morning in Jacksonville 12 years ago, Tom Brady shared a beer with the man who helped him achieve the unthinkable. The quarterback that nobody wanted once upon a time just won back-to-back Super Bowls, including three of the last four, but he wondered about the future.​

It was 4 o’clock in the morning. Sunrise was still three hours away. The euphoria of the Patriots’ 24-21 triumph over the Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX was fresh, but Brady knew he was about to lose an invaluable piece to his success.​

“What do I do now?” Brady said.​

“You don’t need me anymore, big boy,” Charlie Weis answered. “You’ve outgrown me.”​

Weis was off to Notre Dame, closing the most formidable chapter of Brady’s career. Before Brady morphed into a legend, he learned from Weis, a mentor, friend and offensive coordinator who helped shape this transcendent force.​

Weis and Brady went 57-14 in five seasons together, including 9-0 in the playoffs. For all the people who helped Brady’s development, perhaps nobody played a more pivotal role than Weis, who has witnessed his star pupil become a giant over the past decade.


His old boss with the Giants, Bill Parcells, famously said that you are what your record says you are. Weis was 41-49 as head coach at Notre Dame and Kansas. But the numbers that generate fresh news stories and blog posts every year are the ones with dollar signs. Both schools fired Weis in the middle of multiyear contracts they still had to pay off; together, the dead money they owed Weis came to more than $24 million. Sitting at home, Weis made $2.5 million from Kansas and $2.1 million from Notre Dame last year, which made him in effect the eighth-highest-paid coach in college football. He points out, correctly, that active coaches get extra money from shoe deals and TV shows and such. But last year, in salary alone, he made more not coaching Kansas than the current coach at Kansas, and more not coaching Notre Dame than the current coach at Notre Dame.​


Weis was fired by Notre Dame in 2009 and received $6.6 million in severance pay on top of his annual $2.05 million salary through 2015. At the time of his 2014 firing at Kansas, the school owed him just over $5.6 million, though that deal is set to expire in December 2016.​


While Weis has been in the media for the past 7.5 years, his football expertise lies in his extensive coaching career. The former Notre Dame and Kansas head coach spent a good portion of his career as an NFL assistant (Giants, Patriots, Jets, and Chiefs).​

Perhaps Weis’ most notable moment as a media member, at least as far as Awful Announcing is concerned, is when he revealed that he couldn’t “stomach” listening to Tony Romo during NFL on CBS broadcasts.​




His son, who was once hired as a low level offensive analyst by Nick Saban at Alabama, is OC and QB coach at Ole Miss:


And if you misspell the last name, you may end up here:




 
Happy birthday Charlie ! He was a great OC ! His son, Charlie Jr, is a BRILLIANT young OC at Ole Miss. Hopefully we can poach him one day after McDaniels retires.
 
Today in Patriots History
David Chapple



Happy 78th birthday to Dave Chapple
Born March 30, 1947 in Arcadia, California
Patriot punter, 1974; uniform #10
Signed as a veteran free agent on November 14, 1974
Pats résumé: five games; 37.2 yard average on 26 punts, with a long of 57 yards



David Thayer Chapple was a productive punter and kicker at the University of California at Santa Barbara. In 1966 he kicked ten field goals, which would have been an NCAA record – except for the fact that Jan Stenerud kicked 13 the same year. Chapple was an All-American and selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the 1969 draft. A slipped disc delayed his football career, and he eventually signed with the Bills in 1971.

The following year Chapple joined the Rams and was named to the Pro Bowl, averaging 44.2 yards per punt. Perhaps even more impressive is that his net average was almost the same, 42.1 yards per punt. In one game at Soldier Field he averaged over 50 yards on his five punts.

Chapple’s punts started losing distance though, perhaps due to the bad back. He went from LA to New England late in the 1974 season. With the Patriots he averaged 35.4 yards on 26 punts, and did not play in the league again. In 40 NFL games he averaged 40.2 yards on his 162 punts.


Going back to his youth, Chapple was always very interested in painting. For nearly half a century he has been an accomplished artist, particularly in oil paintings and sculptures.





Island International Artists -- Dave Chapple




Pro Football Archives -- Dave Chapple












 
Today in Patriots History
Chris Canty



Happy 49th birthday to Chris Canty
Born March 30, 1976 in Long Beach, California; raised in southern New Jersey
Patriot cornerback, 1997-1998; uniform #26, #29
Selected by the Pats in the first round (29th overall) in the 1997 draft, from Kansas State
Pats résumé: two seasons, 32 games (10 starts); one pick; 10.6 yard average on 16 punt returns; 20.9 average on 15 kick returns



In the first year of the Pete Carroll era, the Patriots selected Christopher Shawn Patrick Canty with the 29th pick of the 1997 draft. That choice by Bobby Grier, with Bill Parcells no longer over his shoulder, would go down in infamy as one of the worst draft picks in the history of the franchise. Canty seemed to put more effort into his excessive celebrations over insignificant plays than in becoming a productive player. He had more sacks (three) than interceptions (one) as a corner.

The Pats jettisoned Canty after just two seasons, and he was out of the NFL two years later. He later spent four years playing Arena football.




Pro Football Archives -- Chris Canty

 
Today is also Billy Cundiff's 45th birthday.









And Richard Sherman's 37th birthday.



 
Today in Patriots History
David Chapple



Happy 78th birthday to Dave Chapple
Born March 30, 1947 in Arcadia, California
Patriot punter, 1974; uniform #10
Signed as a veteran free agent on November 14, 1974
Pats résumé: five games; 37.2 yard average on 26 punts, with a long of 57 yards



David Thayer Chapple was a productive punter and kicker at the University of California at Santa Barbara. In 1966 he kicked ten field goals, which would have been an NCAA record – except for the fact that Jan Stenerud kicked 13 the same year. Chapple was an All-American and selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the 1969 draft. A slipped disc delayed his football career, and he eventually signed with the Bills in 1971.

The following year Chapple joined the Rams and was named to the Pro Bowl, averaging 44.2 yards per punt. Perhaps even more impressive is that his net average was almost the same, 42.1 yards per punt. In one game at Soldier Field he averaged over 50 yards on his five punts.

Chapple’s punts started losing distance though, perhaps due to the bad back. He went from LA to New England late in the 1974 season. With the Patriots he averaged 35.4 yards on 26 punts, and did not play in the league again. In 40 NFL games he averaged 40.2 yards on his 162 punts.


Going back to his youth, Chapple was always very interested in painting. For nearly half a century he has been an accomplished artist, particularly in oil paintings and sculptures.





Island International Artists -- Dave Chapple




Pro Football Archives -- Dave Chapple









 
Today in Patriots History
David Chapple



Happy 78th birthday to Dave Chapple
Born March 30, 1947 in Arcadia, California
Patriot punter, 1974; uniform #10
Signed as a veteran free agent on November 14, 1974
Pats résumé: five games; 37.2 yard average on 26 punts, with a long of 57 yards



David Thayer Chapple was a productive punter and kicker at the University of California at Santa Barbara. In 1966 he kicked ten field goals, which would have been an NCAA record – except for the fact that Jan Stenerud kicked 13 the same year. Chapple was an All-American and selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the 1969 draft. A slipped disc delayed his football career, and he eventually signed with the Bills in 1971.

The following year Chapple joined the Rams and was named to the Pro Bowl, averaging 44.2 yards per punt. Perhaps even more impressive is that his net average was almost the same, 42.1 yards per punt. In one game at Soldier Field he averaged over 50 yards on his five punts.

Chapple’s punts started losing distance though, perhaps due to the bad back. He went from LA to New England late in the 1974 season. With the Patriots he averaged 35.4 yards on 26 punts, and did not play in the league again. In 40 NFL games he averaged 40.2 yards on his 162 punts.


Going back to his youth, Chapple was always very interested in painting. For nearly half a century he has been an accomplished artist, particularly in oil paintings and sculptures.





Island International Artists -- Dave Chapple




Pro Football Archives -- Dave Chapple









lol, hilarious... or maybe I will be the only one to think so... came across this just last night

 
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