The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Eagles assistant teaching safety first

Ex-safety Hauck was known for collisions on field

- By Jack McCaffery jmccaffery @21st-centurymed­ia.com @JackMcCaff­ery on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA » The very basis for education-by-experience is to place individual­s accomplish­ed in a particular task in position to pass along every learned skill and memory.

Then, there is Tim Hauck, the coach of the Eagles’ safeties, a former NFL player of fine achievemen­t, a pro-turned-coach with a long resume in the field.

His message to the Eagles’ safeties: Don’t do it my way.

“The game has changed,” Hauck was saying Saturday at the Nova Care Complex, during a quiet day off for the Eagles. “And it’s for the better.”

A safety and special-teams force for nine NFL franchises, including the Eagles from 1999 through 2001, Hauck was gifted with speed and instincts. But because he could do something else — create onfield violence would be as good a descriptio­n as any — he was known, is known, and forever will be known as one of the sport’s great hitters.

So it was noteworthy, if something less than breaking news, that new discoverie­s about brain injuries to football players had to change the way the sport is coached. How, exactly? “You can’t,” Hauck said, “go

run through a guy’s face.” So that’s one way. And that’s why Hauck wonders that he might not have been able to play under current NFL rules, which prohibit hits to the head and other such acts, moves defensive backs once used to gain an edge on receivers.

“Now you better be getting great breaks on the ball and actually making great plays on the ball,” Hauck said, “rather than dislodging it very much, or using an intimidati­on where the receiver doesn’t want to catch the dang thing.

“It’s a different game than it was in ‘90s and the early 2000’s. Any more, even a legal hit you see getting flagged, because it is too violent. Now, that’s

wrong. They shouldn’t flag a hit that they don’t actually see the hit to the head. But you still see the flag coming out.”

Hauck, 50, was a noted contact hitter. But he has become a valued member of Doug Pederson’s coaching staff, still with the familiar, easy, conversati­onal style he had as a player. So there are no outward signs of any post-career stress … not that he doesn’t consider the possibilit­y.

“I guess you are always a little concerned,” Hauck said. “You hear about the CTE (Chronic Traumatic Encephalop­athy, a form of brain damage often revealed in football players.) If I see an article, I’ll follow it. I don’t think there’s a whole lot you can do about it. I’m very fortunate now that I still feel very good, both mentally and physically. But I know a lot of guys have problems both ways. So it’s one of those

things that you knock on wood and say your prayers that you come out fine.”

With that caution, Hauck supports the newer NFL regulation­s.

“I think it had to change,” he said. “Guys are getting bigger and faster. It was becoming an issue. The game has changed. It is obviously different now. But I think real changes had to be made, just for that matter. There were too many longterm issues, whether they were concussion­s or shoulders or knees or necks or whatever.”

For that, Hauck believes there will not be a player like him again, or at least any time soon.

“I played in a leather helmet,” he kidded. “But the players have to adapt to the rules.”

Hauck said he was diagnosed with roughly seven concussion­s, but that if current guideline were followed, he would have been

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Tim Hauck

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