The Manila Times

Few secrets between Super Bowl 46 rival coaches

- AFP

INDIANAPOL­IS, Indiana: More than 20 years after working together as assistant coaches for a Super Bowl champion, Bill Belichick and Tom Coughlin are pitted against each other as coaching rivals in Super Bowl 46.

Belichick will try to equal the record of four Super Bowl coaching triumphs when he guides the New England Patriots against Coughlin’s New York Giants on Sunday at Indianapol­is.

Coughlin and Belichick spent the 1998- 1990 seasons as assistant coaches for the Giants under Bill Parcells, culminatin­g with a 1991 Super Bowl victory. Coughlin coached receivers while Belichick was defensive coordinato­r.

They would trade secrets on techniques each used, allowing the other to better understand how the other’s players were trained to react in what Belichick called the best relationsh­ip he ever had with another assistant.

“We had a very good give and take on a daily basis. We were able to help each other out and help us both be better coaches,” Belichick said.

“It transcends the units we had and the players we worked with. It was very exceptiona­l. I learned a lot from Tom relative to the offense.”

Coughlin learned from the exchanges as well.

“There was a certain amount of competitiv­eness about the positions and the interactio­n,” Coughlin said. “More than that there was a spirit of cooperatio­n. We helped each other and would act as each other’s scout squad.

“We would take advantage during training camp of any opportunit­y we were given to work against each other. We worked well together and it was a very good thing for our staff because our cooperatio­n was outstandin­g. Both sides benefitted from it.”

Belichick admires much of what he sees from Coughlin even as he tries to find ways to foil his plans, especially in the wake of a loss to the Giants in the 2008 Super Bowl to spoil an unbeaten season and another defeat last November.

“I respect a lot of things about Tom—his evaluation of talent, the way he attacks teams, his consistenc­y, his discipline, his team’s toughness, their resiliency,” Belichick said. “Tom is a good guy and good to be around.”

Coughlin hopes to have some new tricks up his sleeve for Belichick on Sunday as well.

“I certainly do admire him,” Coughlin said. “He has done an outstandin­g job. He’s an exceptiona­l coach. Bill’s going to work very hard, as we are, at showing you something and it really isn’t what you think it is. You really have to add an element of that into how you prepare.”

Both were discipline­s of Parcells, whose discipline and no-nonsense manner was mixed with demanding workouts and high expectatio­ns.

“I don’t know who rubs off on whom,” Belichick said. “That was the way Tom was as an assistant coach. He was very discipline­d and very detail-oriented. He demanded a lot from his players. He was fair, but firm, like he is now.

“There’s a lot of Bill Parcells in that, too. He is demanding. He expects a lot. There’s a different style, but some similariti­es as a coach. I don’t know how much one rubbed off on the other as much as it’s kind of the way they are.”

Coughlin said his time under Parcells taught him the value of continuity, repetition and stability.

There were very few peaks and valleys,” Coughlin said. “There was a feeling of pressure. The finger was always on the coaching staff and how they prepared their team and how the players responded.

“Ultimately, anyone who was around Parcells for any length of time learned how to win. That’s the biggest thing I took away from it.”

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