01-14-2022, 03:04 PM
One mans opinion anyways...
The Pittsburgh Steelers made the most impressive coaching hire in the NFL over the past 20 years.Not merely because the coach they hired, Mike Tomlin, won a Super Bowl in his second season and has a record of 154-85-2, but because the Steelers avoided so many of the cliched processes and obvious pitfalls that lead to bad hires around the league.
In 2006, the Vikings went 6-10 in Brad Childress' first year as their head coach, and Tomlin, 34, in his first year as an NFL defensive coordinator. The Vikings ranked 14th in total defense.
The Steelers were thought to be leaning toward promoting Russ Grimm from assistant to head coach, or promoting offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt. Grimm had coached the Steelers' offensive line for six seasons and was a popular figure in Pittsburgh. Whisenhunt would become the head coach of the Arizona Cardinals.
Because Tomlin was brought in late in the hiring process for an interview, and because he was inexperienced and the only Black candidate, it was thought that the Steelers were talking to him to conform to the Rooney Rule.
The Rooney Rule was named after former Steelers owner Dan Rooney, and it requires NFL teams to interview minority candidates for key management positions.
The Steelers could have justified hiring Grimm or Whisenhunt, and either choice would have been popular in Pittsburgh. Tomlin so impressed them during the interview process that they hired him instead.
Grimm would never become an NFL head coach. Whisenhunt's Cardinals would lose to Tomlin's Steelers in XLIII. Whisenhunt's final NFL coaching record: 48-71.
The Steelers made what at the time felt like a surprising and unconventional hire — and they were proven right. Their patient, insightful approach should be a model for the Vikings as they replace fired head coach Mike Zimmer.
https://www.startribune.com/7-deadly-sin...600135541/
The Pittsburgh Steelers made the most impressive coaching hire in the NFL over the past 20 years.Not merely because the coach they hired, Mike Tomlin, won a Super Bowl in his second season and has a record of 154-85-2, but because the Steelers avoided so many of the cliched processes and obvious pitfalls that lead to bad hires around the league.
In 2006, the Vikings went 6-10 in Brad Childress' first year as their head coach, and Tomlin, 34, in his first year as an NFL defensive coordinator. The Vikings ranked 14th in total defense.
The Steelers were thought to be leaning toward promoting Russ Grimm from assistant to head coach, or promoting offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt. Grimm had coached the Steelers' offensive line for six seasons and was a popular figure in Pittsburgh. Whisenhunt would become the head coach of the Arizona Cardinals.
Because Tomlin was brought in late in the hiring process for an interview, and because he was inexperienced and the only Black candidate, it was thought that the Steelers were talking to him to conform to the Rooney Rule.
The Rooney Rule was named after former Steelers owner Dan Rooney, and it requires NFL teams to interview minority candidates for key management positions.
The Steelers could have justified hiring Grimm or Whisenhunt, and either choice would have been popular in Pittsburgh. Tomlin so impressed them during the interview process that they hired him instead.
Grimm would never become an NFL head coach. Whisenhunt's Cardinals would lose to Tomlin's Steelers in XLIII. Whisenhunt's final NFL coaching record: 48-71.
The Steelers made what at the time felt like a surprising and unconventional hire — and they were proven right. Their patient, insightful approach should be a model for the Vikings as they replace fired head coach Mike Zimmer.
https://www.startribune.com/7-deadly-sin...600135541/