The Hamilton Spectator

Like father, like son: Keep the pressure on

- DAVID MURPHY

Four years before their most recent National Football League Championsh­ip, the Philadelph­ia Eagles used the 161st pick in the NFL draft to select a centre out of Penn State named Frank Reich.

He was a rock of a human being, the son of a millworker who spent 47 years refusing to call in sick, a schoolboy football star who served with the Marines in Korea, then resumed his career as a two-way starter at Penn State. He became an all-star, and a captain, the anchor of a line that paved the way for future Hall of Fame running back Lenny Moore, a fixture on a defence renowned for its toughness over the middle.

The Eagles offered him a contract. Reich said no thanks. He took a job for less money as a schoolteac­her and coach, moved back home to central Pennsylvan­ia and prepared to start a family.

Less than a year after the Eagles won their last championsh­ip, Reich had a son, whom he named Frank. Like his namesake, Frank was an athlete; he grew tall and square and tough.

He starred in baseball, basketball, and football, making his biggest name in the same sport as his dad.

“My dad was a real stoic man,” the younger Frank, the Eagles’ offensive co-ordinator, said last week. “He’d sit up there in the stands and his facial expression would never change. I could throw four touchdowns or four intercepti­ons and his face was never gonna change.”

Instead of criticism or praise, the elder Reich would hammer his son with a phrase: words that ring through his head to this day. Hey, he would say in his limestone rumble, keep the pressure on.

“What he meant by that was, whether you win or lose, or whether you are 0-10 or 10-0, you play the same way,” Reich said.

“You don’t ever let up. You just don’t ever let up.”

Those words echoed through Reich’s mind on an autumn afternoon in 1984 when he led the University of Maryland to what was then the largest comeback victory in major college football history, coming off the bench to orchestrat­e six scoring drives and erase a 31-0 deficit on the way to a truly amazing 42-40 victory.

He heard them again in 1993, when he rallied the Buffalo Bills from a 35-3 deficit in the third quarter of their AFC wild-card playoff game against the Houston Oilers en route to a 41-38 overtime victory.

“Whatever role I played in those games was a direct influence of my dad,” Reich said.

Those were the words Reich heard two weekends ago, when a 7-0 deficit to the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championsh­ip Game became a 24-7 halftime lead.

Coaching has been a long, slow climb for Reich. He’d been retired as a player for nearly a decade before joining the Indianapol­is Colts staff as a 45-year-old intern in 2006, officially joining the staff in ’08. He spent four years as an offensive assistant coach, the second of them the season the Colts lost to the New Orleans Saints in Super Bowl XLIV.

When Indianapol­is parted ways with Jim Caldwell after the ’11 season, Reich moved on to the Arizona Cardinals as a wide receivers coach for head coach Ken Whisenhunt, whom he followed to San Diego the next season, where both men were members of Mike McCoy’s staff. After one year as the quarterbac­ks coach, Reich replaced Whisenhunt as offensive co-ordinator, remaining in that role for the ’14 and ’15 seasons.

The latter of those seasons capped off one of the more difficult years of Reich’s life. In the spring of ’15, his father passed away age 83.

“He brought me up to respect the coach, respect the chain of command, and how important that is,” Reich said. “He used to tell me that, when you are the quarterbac­k, your job is to step into that huddle and call that play as if it’s the best play that’s ever been called.”

On Saturday, somewhere in the vicinity of the Eagles’ team hotel outside Minneapoli­s, Reich and head coach Doug Pederson will do as they’ve done before every game this season. They will huddle together, examine their play sheet, crack jokes about the game plan they’ve scripted. At some point, perhaps, Reich will think of the words his father so often spoke. Keep the pressure on. Whatever happens Sunday, you can be sure the Eagles will.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles offensive co-ordinator Frank Reich talks during the NFL’s Super Bowl LII opening night Monday.
MATT SLOCUM, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Eagles offensive co-ordinator Frank Reich talks during the NFL’s Super Bowl LII opening night Monday.
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