Don Shula, winningest NFL coach who
led Dolphins to perfect season, dead at 90
Send a link to a friend
[May 05, 2020]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - Don Shula, a masterly coach
with a square jaw who won more National Football League games than
anyone else and guided the Miami Dolphins to two Super Bowl titles
and the only perfect season in league history, died on Monday at 90.
Shula, whose NFL coaching prowess with the Dolphins and the
Baltimore Colts from 1963 to 1995 made him one of the most famous
sports figures in America, died peacefully at his home, the Dolphins
said in a statement.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Shula will be remembered as one
of the greatest coaches and contributors in the history of American
football.
"He was a remarkable teacher and mentor who for decades inspired
excellence and exemplified integrity," said Goodell. "His iconic
legacy will endure through his family and continue to inspire
generations to come."
The 1972 Miami Dolphins team that Shula guided stands as the only
team in NFL history to post a perfect record - 17-0 - as they
marched to a Super Bowl victory over the Washington Redskins. The
next season, Shula led them to a second straight victory in the
Super Bowl, America's biggest sporting event.
His coaching record in 33 NFL seasons, including regular season and
playoff games, was 347 wins, 173 losses and six ties. No coach won
more NFL games. Only one other coach, Chicago Bears stalwart George
Halas, exceeded 300 wins, with 324. Shula took six teams to the
Super Bowl, winning twice.
"I want to count my blessings. I've been able to do something for a
lifetime that I have enjoyed doing," Shula, with sunglasses,
combed-back white hair and his trademark jutting jaw, said in 1997
as he was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton,
Ohio. "I've had good health and I've met a lot of great people along
the way."
In 2013, he wore the cream-colored jacket given to members of the
Hall of Fame to the White House when President Barack Obama invited
Shula and the rest of the 1972 Dolphins for a special tribute. Obama
lauded Shula, who at age 83 sat in a motorized scooter, as a
legendary coach.
Shula was such an enduring figure in professional football that one
of his former players, fearsome defensive lineman Bubba Smith, once
joked: "If a nuclear bomb dropped, the only things I'm certain would
survive are AstroTurf and Don Shula."
Fellow Hall of Fame coach John Madden in 1997 told the Miami Herald:
"Nobody else has done it in so many ways, in so many different eras,
with so many different kinds of players."
Donald Francis Shula was born on Jan. 4, 1930, in Grand River, Ohio,
the son of Hungarian parents. He played college football at John
Carroll University in Ohio before spending seven seasons as a
defensive back with the Cleveland Browns, Baltimore Colts and
Washington Redskins of the NFL. He retired after the 1957 season
before working as a college football assistant coach at the
University of Virginia.
He came back to the NFL in 1960 when the Detroit Lions made him
their defensive coordinator. In 1963, the Baltimore Colts hired
Shula as head coach. At age 33, Shula was the youngest head coach
ever in the NFL at the time.
'A PUNCH IN THE MOUTH'
Shula once called his coaching style "as subtle as a punch in the
mouth," and his players knew he was firmly in charge. But he also
knew human psychology enough to understand that different players
needed to be motivated according to their own individual
personalities - with a tongue-lashing for some, a calm explanation
for some and humor for others.
[to top of second column] |
Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula is carried off the field by players
Keith Sims (L) and Larry Webster (C) after Miami defeated
Philadelphia 19-14 in Philadelphia November 14, 1993. This win made
Shula the most successful coach in the league, giving him his 325th
career victory. REUTERS/Gary Hershorn/File Photo
Shula did experience some noteworthy failures. On Jan. 12, 1969, his
Colts were heavily favored to beat the New York Jets in Super Bowl
III in Miami. But Joe Namath, the brash Jets quarterback, guaranteed
his team would win.
At the time, the Super Bowl pitted the champion of the venerable NFL
against the champion of the upstart American Football League. The
two leagues had already revealed plans to merge (they did so in
1970) but NFL teams had thrashed the AFL's champions in the first
two Super Bowls.
In one of the biggest upsets in the annals of American sports, the
underdog Jets shocked Shula's Colts, 16-7. Shula coached the Colts
one more season before going to the Dolphins, a former AFL team
struggling to make it in the merged league.
He coached the Dolphins from 1970 until 1995, taking them to the
Super Bowl five times. The first time they reached the Super Bowl -
following the 1971 season - they were flattened by unflappable coach
Tom Landry's Dallas Cowboys, 24-3.
The 1972 Dolphins were a team on a mission. Shula guided them to
victories in all 14 regular season games and their first two playoff
games to earn a spot in Super Bowl VII.
The team was led by quarterback Bob Griese, back from a broken leg,
with additional offensive firepower from running backs Larry Csonka
and Mercury Morris and wide receiver Paul Warfield. Miami's sturdy
"No-Name Defense" featured the likes of linebacker Nick Buoniconti
and safety Jake Scott.
Miami beat Washington, 14-7, in the Super Bowl on Jan. 15, 1973, in
Los Angeles to finish the season 17-0. Shula's players carried him
off the field on their shoulders as he punched his right fist
skyward in triumph.
He led the Dolphins to a third consecutive Super Bowl berth the next
season - and a second straight victory - as they walloped
quarterback Fran Tarkenton's Minnesota Vikings, 24-7.
Shula never again won a Super Bowl. He took the Dolphins to the
title game after the 1982 season, losing to the Redskins, and after
the 1984 season, falling to the San Francisco 49ers.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Shula coached quarterback Dan Marino,
one of the most prolific passers in NFL history, but the two were
unable to win a Super Bowl together. Shula said his biggest career
regret was failing to win another Super Bowl.
"Coach Shula - you will truly be missed! You embody the definition
of 'greatness.' You brought that winning attitude with you every day
and made everyone around you better," Marino wrote on Twitter.
"Thank you for always believing in me. You made me a better player
and person. My thoughts & prayers are with the entire Shula family.
Love you Coach!"
Shula was married twice and had five children.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington and Peter Szekely in New
York; Additional reporting by Frank Pingue; Editing by Bill Trott,
Chizu Nomiyama and Jonathan Oatis)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |