Toronto Star

Als hand the reins to former Packers coach

Favre-era Green Bay won three division titles with Sherman at helm

- BILL BEACON THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— First it was Toronto, then Hamilton and now the Montreal Alouettes have hired a former National Football League coach.

Mike Sherman, who guided Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers to three division titles in the early 2000s, was named head coach of the Alouettes on Wednesday with a mandate to end the skid that saw the former East Division power finish last in the Canadian Football League at 3-15.

“I’ve been made aware of some of the problems we’ve had over the last couple of years but that doesn’t mean they have to continue,” 63- year-old Sherman said at a news conference at a downtown hotel. “We’re here to turn a page.

“We’re here to build, to put a football team on the field that you all can be proud of and that represents this city the way it should be represente­d. It’s going to take some work. It’s not going to happen immediatel­y. If we’re all willing to roll up our sleeves and get to work, step by step, we will get there.”

Sherman took over from general manager Kavis Reed, who served as interim coach after firing Jacques Chapdelain­e and defensive co-ordi- nator Noel Thorpe in September with the team at 3-8 and on a fourgame losing streak. They went 0-7 under Reed, who announced at the end of the season he would not stay on as coach.

He kept his promise to name a new one by mid-December.

“The process yielded a candidate who was our initial target and the right man to help us turn around this football team,” said Reed.

It appears NFL coaches are in vogue.

In February, the Argonauts hired former Montreal GM Jim Popp, who brought in ex-Alouettes and Chicago Bears coach Marc Trestman. The Argos rode that to a Grey Cup.

The Tiger-Cats brought in former Atlanta Falcons coach June Jones as an assistant on Aug. 2, then made him head coach at the end of that month. The 0-8 Ticats went 6-4 the rest of the rest of the way and Jones was rewarded with a three-year contract.

But Reed said their success was not a factor in picking Sherman.

“Those two gentlemen you mentioned have done a tremendous job but there are also a tremendous number of coaches in this league that don’t have that background,” said Reed. “What we establishe­d were certain criteria we wanted to look at. It was the man, the resume, it was what he represente­d that was most important.”

He said Sherman met all the criteria. He is an experience­d winner, with a 57-39 record in five years at Green Bay, who has demonstrat­ed he can develop talent and manage a staff. He also showed he can turn a losing team into winners at Texas A&M from 2008-11.

Unlike Trestman, whose first move was to confirm Ricky Ray as Toronto’s starting quarterbac­k, Sherman gave no guarantees to veteran pivot Darian Durant, who struggled in his first season in Montreal after 11 years in Saskatchew­an. He said the job would be decided in camp.

Sherman was impressed by Reed and by owners Bob and Andrew Wetenhall, who approved the hiring. He liked the city on the two visits he made during the hiring process and the fact that it is a less-than five hour drive from the family home in Cape Cod. His 18-year-old daughter is looking to enrol at McGill.

But most importantl­y, he said his wife gave it her blessing. If not, he would not have accepted the job.

“I love the challenge that exists here, to be able to create something that no one has done recently,” he said. “It’s been a while since we’ve been in the Grey Cup.”

 ??  ?? New Alouettes coach Mike Sherman served as head coach/GM of the Packers from 2000 to 2005.
New Alouettes coach Mike Sherman served as head coach/GM of the Packers from 2000 to 2005.

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