Former NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer moved to hospice care

Marty Schottenheimer, who coached four NFL teams, has been moved to hospice care as he fights Alzheimer’s disease

Former longtime NFL head coach Marty Schottenheimer has been fighting Alzheimer’s disease. His family revealed Wednesday the 77-year-old has been moved to hospice care.

Schottenheimer was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014.

Schottenheimer coached the Browns, Chiefs, Washington, and Chargers. His overall mark was 205-139-1, including the playoffs.  He was named the NFL’s Coach of the Year in 2004 with the Chargers/ He also led San Diego to a 14-2 mark in 2006.

Schottenheimer played four seasons with the Buffalo Bills and two for the Boston Patriots in the AFL from 1965-70.

Former Browns coach Marty Schottenheimer placed in hospice care

Schottenheimer has been battling Alzheimer’s disease

Former Cleveland Browns head coach Marty Schottenheimer has been placed in hospice care as he battles Alzheimer’s disease. Schottenheimer’s family revealed the coach’s condition via a press release through ESPN’s Chris Mortensen.

Schottenheimer was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s back in 2014 and has remained out of the public eye since.

“As a family, we are surrounding him with love and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer said in the release. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other … one play at a time.”

Schottenheimer coached in Cleveland from 1980 through 1988. His first five seasons were as defensive coordinator, which included taking over as the interim coach midway through the 1984 season. Schottenheimer stayed as the head coach for four full seasons afterward and the team thrived under his passionate instruction. His Browns went 44-27 and never finished with a losing record, twice advancing to the AFC Championship game.

He then moved onto the Kansas City Chiefs and later was the head coach in Washington and San Diego with the Chargers. He last coached the Virginia Destroyers of the now-defunct UFL in 2011.

Schottenheimer remained popular with fans long after he left Cleveland. He’s one of the sincerely nicest people I’ve ever encountered in covering pro football. Our prayers are with the Schottenheimer family for comfort.

Former Chiefs HC Marty Schottenheimer in stable condition after being placed in hospice care

Schottenheimer has been placed in a hospice care facility near his hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina after a 7-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Former Kansas City Chiefs HC Marty Schottenheimer was recently placed in a hospice care facility according to a press release passed on by ESPN’s Chris Mortensen.

The 77-year-old Schottenheimer was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease back in 2014. He’s struggled with memory loss over the years and has battled the disease for the past 7 years. While Schottenheimer remains in stable condition, it appears that complications related to the disease have made hospice care the best option for him and his family.

“As a family, we are surrounding him with love and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer said in the release. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other … one play at a time.”

Schottenheimer was the head coach of the Chiefs for the majority of the ’90s decade, bringing his unique brand of winning football known as “Martyball” to teams from 1989 to 1998. He had a lot of success in Kansas City with 101 career wins to just 58 losses, but his teams were unable to make it deep into the playoffs and to the Super Bowl. He was beloved by the fanbase, however, and praised for his many successes. He was selected by the franchise for the Chiefs Hall of Fame back in 2010.

Schottenheimer was also a head coach with the Cleveland Browns and then-San Diego Chargers, totaling in 20 years of NFL head-coaching experience during his illustrious career.

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Throwback Thursday: Giants lose heartbreaker to Browns in 1985

In the latest Giants Wire Throwback Thursday, we go back to 1985 when the New York Giants lost a heartbreaker to the Cleveland Browns.

The New York Giants and the Cleveland Browns were once fierce NFL rivals. Going back to the 1950s, players such as Jim Brown, Sam Huff, Frank Gifford and Lou Groza were fixtures at two iconic venues, Yankee Stadium and Municipal Stadium.

As part of a merger, Paul Brown took his powerful Browns team from the All-America Football Conference to the NFL in 1950 along with the San Francisco 49ers and Baltimore Colts and made an immediate impact on their new league, winning the NFL championship in their first season and then playing in the championship game in six of the next seven years, winning two more titles.

After a five-year playoff drought, the Browns returned to the playoffs in 1964, winning their last NFL championship to date. The Browns remained relevant throughout the 1960s under new owner Art Modell, making the playoffs in each of the next eight seasons, but never got back to the championship game.

When the NFL and AFL merged in 1970, the Browns were one of the three NFL teams (along with Baltimore and Pittsburgh) to join the AFC in order to even out the conferences at 13 teams apiece. That’s when the Giants and Browns, who had played 41 times over the 20 years since Cleveland joined the NFL, became estranged. And both franchises went into the tank for the better part of the next decade and half.

But in the mid-1980s, both clubs were ascending. In 1985, the Browns were in their first full season under head coach Marty Schottenheimer and the Giants were beginning their run as an NFC heavyweight under Bill Parcells. Both teams entered the game vying for first place in their respective divisions.

In Week 13, the 8-4 Giants hosted the 6-6 Browns at Giants Stadium. The calendar had turned to December that day, and it was a typical North Jersey afternoon with temperatures in the mid-30s and winds whipping in all directions.

The Giants opened the scoring with a 3-yard touchdown run by Joe Morris. Cleveland answered with a 42-yard touchdown run by Kevin Mack. Giants quarterback Phil Simms was picked off by Hanford Dixon, leading to another Cleveland score, a 2-yard dive by Earnest Byner. Al Gross returned an interception 37 yards for a touchdown, giving the Browns a 21-7 lead in the second quarter.

The Giants then scored 14 unanswered points — on a 58-yard touchdown run by Morris and a 29-yard touchdown strike from Simms to Bobby Johnson — to narrow the score to 21-20 at halftime.

The Giants opened the second half by scoring 13 points on two Eric Schubert field goals and Morris’ third touchdown of the game. Those drives were set up by an interception by safety Terry Kinard and a fumble recovery by linebacker Byron Hunt.

The Giants had a 33-21 fourth-quarter lead, and with their defense, the game seemed over. But Cleveland wasn’t done. They rallied behind their powerful running game and rookie quarterback Bernie Kosar, who was dealing with a shoulder injury.

The Browns scored two touchdowns late in the fourth quarter to pull ahead, 35-33 (Kosar was replaced by veteran Gary Danielson in the third quarter but then was reinserted in the fourth when Danielson was injured).

The Giants had one last drive in them and ended up attempting a 34-yard field goal to win the game in the final seconds. But Schubert’s line-drive attempt went wide to the left, sealing the Browns’ victory.

The Giants went on to finish the season 10-6. They defeated the 49ers, 17-3, in the wild-card game before getting embarrassed by the Bears in Chicago, 21-0, in the divisional round the next week.

Cleveland won the AFC Central with an 8-8 record. They lost in the divisional round, 24-21, to Miami.

In 1986, the Giants steamrolled through the NFC and into the Super Bowl. The Browns went 12-4 and had the top seed in the AFC. They beat the Jets in overtime in the divisional round and then were victimized by John Elway and the Denver Broncos in the AFC Championship Game by “The Drive” — or they would have faced the Giants in Super Bowl XXI.

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Cowboys’ McCarthy won’t join ranks of one-and-done coaches

The NFL is no stranger to quick hooks among the coaching ranks, but Stephen Jones confirms that Mike McCarthy will return in 2021,

The 2020 season has gone badly enough that the question had to be asked on Monday: will first-year head coach Mike McCarthy survive the proverbial bloodbath to return next year? The answer from Stephen Jones was an unequivocal yes, but that got the wheels turning. Just how bad do things have to go for a coach to last a year or less?

Not as bad as some might think. There is a rich history of trigger-happy owners showing their new charges the door in a hurry. Peruse the handy list below to take a look at some of the quickest hooks the league has ever seen. Note: for those wondering, Bill Belichick’s day-long employment with the New York Jets is not included; he never actually coached a game.

Year Team Coach Record
2019 CLE Freddie Kitchens 6-10
2019 ARI Steve Wilks 3-13
2013 CLE Rob Chudzinski 4-12
2011 OAK Hue Jackson 8-8
2009 SEA Jim Mora 5-11
2007 MIA Cam Cameron 1-15
2007 ATL Bobby Petrino 3-10
2006 OAK Art Shell 2-14
2001 WAS Marty Schottenheimer 8-8
2000 NYJ Al Groh 9-7
1999 GB Ray Rhodes 8-8
1994 NYJ Pete Carroll 6-10
1993 WAS Richie Petitbon 4-12
1984 MIN Les Steckel 3-13
1978 SF Pete McCulley 1-8
1977 LAR George Allen 0-2*
1976 NYJ Lou Holtz 3-10

Poor Al Groh got shown the door after a winning record! A nine-win season would require the Cowboys to run off a seven-game win streak, a statistical improbability that would dash the dreams of all draft fans. Three different men finished a respectable .500 before getting the axe. The majority of the coaches, though, really put in the kind of work that rightfully earned them a ticket to the unemployment line. This much is clear, however: working for the Jets, Browns, or Raiders could be considered an occupational hazard.

Still, just two team owners, if they had any semblance of self-awareness, would look back and rue the day they moved on from their coaches so quickly. Pete Carroll would go on to build a mini-dynasty that’s still going with the Seattle Seahawks, winning one Super Bowl and appearing in another. And Marty Schottenheimer went on to a critically-acclaimed run with the San Diego Chargers, though he always fell short of the promised land.

This won’t be the case for McCarthy and the Joneses. Even though a three- or four-win season in 2020 seems as likely as any other outcome, and as badly as some fans already want to pivot in a new direction, it’s not happening. It’s hard to say that the newest coach in Dallas deserves as much criticism as he’s received, given the circumstances he’s faced.

At a minimum, McCarthy’s job security for next year was likely locked in the moment starting quarterback Dak Prescott was lost for the season. Even though a divorce is inevitable, as it always is in the league whose initials are said to stand for “Not For Long,” it won’t happen in Dallas this off-season.

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