InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 132
Posts 200868
Boards Moderated 19
Alias Born 12/16/2002

Re: None

Monday, 05/14/2018 7:46:42 PM

Monday, May 14, 2018 7:46:42 PM

Post# of 64442
Chuck Knox, 3-Time N.F.L. Coach of the Year, Is Dead at 86

By Richard Goldstein

May 13, 2018
Chuck Knox, a three-time N.F.L. coach of the year who believed so strongly in the running game that he earned the nickname Ground Chuck, but who persuaded the New York Jets to take the pass-throwing Joe Namath in the draft, died on Saturday. He was 86.

His death was announced by the Seattle Seahawks, who said he had dementia. The team did not say where he died.

A head coach in the N.F.L. for 22 seasons, Knox never had a Super Bowl team, but he rebuilt three lackluster teams — the Los Angeles Rams, the Buffalo Bills and the Seattle Seahawks — into playoff squads, taking them to a total of seven division championships.

When he retired in 1995 with a career coaching record of 186-147-1 in the regular season, he was No. 6 in victories among all N.F.L. coaches, behind Don Shula, George Halas, Tom Landry, Curly Lambeau and Chuck Noll.

Knox was convinced that strong running games produced winners. He groomed several running backs, including Lawrence McCutcheon with the Rams, Joe Cribbs with the Bills and Curt Warner with the Seahawks.

“If Chuck had his wish, it’d be three yards and a cloud of dust and he’d win, 7-6,” Steve Largent, his star receiver with the Seahawks, once said.

Apart from his conservative inclinations on offense, Knox preached discipline and hard work on the football field, the qualities he displayed as a rugged lineman at Juniata College of Huntingdon, Pa., having come out of a steel town where his hard-drinking father worked in the mills and wanted him to do the same.

Image
Knox at a game against the Kansas City Chiefs in 1988.

CreditJonathan Daniel/Getty Images
“People ask how I keep winning with players that aren’t the most talented,” Knox told The Boston Globe in 1992, when he began a second stint with the Rams after coaching teams to 11 playoff appearances. “It’s simple. I wasn’t gifted with anything growing up. I had to earn everything. What I try to teach the players is to have the desire to make the most of what they have.”

While a line coach with the Jets in November 1964, Knox lobbied their owner, David (Sonny) Werblin, and the head coach, Weeb Ewbank, to take quarterback Joe Namath as the American Football League’s No. 1 draft pick, despite his knee problems at the University of Alabama.

“I pushed Weeb very hard to take Joe,” Knox, who had first spotted Namath’s athletic ability when he was a teenager in Beaver Falls, Pa., told Mark Kriegel in his 2004 biography “Namath.”

Knox built an outstanding offensive line with the Jets, led by Winston Hill and Sherman Plunkett at the tackles. “They knew Joe Namath was going to make the difference, and we had to be able to protect him,” he recalled.

But Knox became an assistant coach with the Detroit Lions in 1967, missing out on Namath’s engineering of the Jets’ stunning Super Bowl triumph over the Baltimore Colts in 1969.

Charles Robert Knox was born on April 27, 1932, in Sewickley, Pa., an industrial town near Pittsburgh.

After playing tackle at Juniata and graduating with a degree in history, he coached at Pennsylvania high schools and then became an assistant at Wake Forest and Kentucky before being hired by the Jets in 1963.

After four seasons with the Jets and six as an assistant coach with the Lions, Knox replaced Tommy Prothro as coach of the Rams in 1973, taking over a team that had gone 6-7-1 the previous season.

EDITORS’ PICKS

45 Stories of Sex and Consent on Campus

The Supreme Court’s Ninja Warrior

Children of the Opioid Epidemic
Image

Knox, left, with the Seattle Seahawks’ head coach Mike Holmgren during ceremonies ending the final regular season home game at the Kingdome in 1999.CreditReuters
Knox coached the ’73 Rams to a 12-2 regular-season record and had five consecutive National Football Conference West championship teams in Los Angeles, doing it with five quarterbacks — John Hadl, James Harris, Ron Jaworski, Pat Haden and Namath at the end of his career.

But his Rams were beaten in the N.F.C. championship game three consecutive times — by the Minnesota Vikings after the 1974 season, then by the Dallas Cowboys and then the Vikings again.

Knox became the Bills’ head coach in 1978, when they were coming off two losing seasons. He traded O.J. Simpson, who was beginning to decline, developed a running attack behind Cribbs and took the Bills to the A.F.C. East title in 1980 and a wild-card playoff spot the following season.

He was named head coach of the Seattle Seahawks in 1983, the franchise’s eighth season, and coached them to their first post-season appearance, as a wild-card team, taking them to the A.F.C. championship game, a loss to the Oakland Raiders.

His Seahawks made the playoffs three more times and won the A.F.C. West title in 1988.

Knox returned to the Rams in 1992, but they finished last in the N.F.C. West for three straight seasons and he was fired. He then retired.

Knox’s survivors include his wife, Shirley. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.

Knox was never particularly quotable, but he did have a list of aphorisms, which came to be called Knoxisms, reflecting his approach to life, and he conveyed them to his players.

Dave Krieg, who played quarterback for Knox with the Seahawks, recorded the Knoxisms in a notebook. “Chuck’s overall presence, his intensity, his toughness, play a big factor in helping us win,” Krieg once told Sports Illustrated.

Among the Knoxisms: “Work will win. Wishing won’t.”

One of Knox’s favorites: “What you do speaks so well, there’s no need to hear what you say.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/13/obituaries/chuck-knox.html

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.