The Citizen (KZN)

Iconic NFL coach Belichick bows out as most successful in history

- AFP

Los Angeles – Whatever the future holds for Bill Belichick (right) after his abrupt departure from the New England Patriots, the 71-year-old’s status as the most successful coach in the history of the NFL is not in doubt.

Over the course of a coaching career spanning an incredible 49 years – 24 of them in New England – Belichick has set records and benchmarks that may never be beaten in a sport where the average tenure of a head coach is just 3.2 years.

A ferocious workaholic with a gruff, impenetrab­le exterior, Belichick’s relentless pursuit of silverware has seen him amass eight Super Bowl wins – two as an assistant with the New York Giants in 1986 and 1990 and six with New England – and 333 total victories, second only to the late Don Shula with 347 wins.

In terms of longevity, no other coach comes close to matching Belichick, who first appeared on the sidelines as an assistant coach with the then-Baltimore Colts in 1975 for the princely sum of $25 a week.

Belichick’s achievemen­ts in New England alone – six Super Bowl wins and three more appearance­s in the championsh­ip game – speak for themselves.

That they were compiled in an era of salary caps and more intense competitio­n, where NFL rules effectivel­y seek to make it hard for one team to dominate, are a minor miracle.

“Is he going to go down as the greatest?” said former New York Giants quarterbac­k Phil Simms. “I don’t know how you can even argue it.”

Belichick’s coaching philosophy has been based on a simple guiding philosophy – offences should seek to exploit an opponent’s defensive flaws; defences should aim to nullify an opposing offence’s principal weapon.

It was a principle learned from Belichick’s father, Steve, an assistant coach at the US Naval Academy who wrote an acclaimed 1950s book on scouting methods, and built a vast library dedicated to the game that remains housed at the elite college in Maryland.

That kind of encycloped­ic knowledge informed Belichick’s approach to team-building, allowing him to construct championsh­ip-calibre teams season after season, often by picking up free agents or lower draft picks that had been overlooked by the rest of the league.

While a no-nonsense disciplina­rian, Belichick also earned a reputation as a master at man-management, tailoring his style to bring the best out of his players.

“The thing about Bill is that he not only knows what kind of players fit his system, he can get in people’s heads,” Patriots scout Lionel Vital said.

“He’s the best in the business at working with personalit­ies.

Bill can work with anybody. He’ll reach you.”

Belichick was, for the most part, able to regenerate the Patriots while remaining consistent­ly competitiv­e, unafraid to jettison players deemed surplus to requiremen­ts.

That clear-eyed, unsentimen­tal approach provided Tom Brady with the chance to become the greatest quarterbac­k in NFL history during his two-decade tandem alongside Belichick in New England.

Ignored until the sixth round of the 2000 Draft, Brady joined the Patriots as a lightly regarded prospect offering few hints of the career that would follow.

But impressed by Brady’s fierce work ethic and dedication to self-improvemen­t, Belichick had no hesitation in throwing the young quarterbac­k into the fray in 2001.

When first-choice quarterbac­k Drew Bledsoe was injured, Brady took over and led the Patriots to an 11-3 record as starter before taking the team to an improbable Super Bowl victory.

Brady would later say that Belichick’s consistenc­y of approach is what set him apart.

“Whether that’s April or whether that’s early February, his attitude is the same,” Brady said in 2017. “I’m yelled at just like everybody else.” –

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