Chattanooga Times Free Press

Two-time Super Bowl winner Coughlin resigns as Giants coach

- BY TOM CANAVAN

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — With the New York Giants facing a difficult decision on his coaching future after four straight years out of the playoffs, Tom Coughlin walked away gracefully, doing what was best for him.

The Giants gave him 12 years to run one of the NFL’s flagship organizati­ons. He delivered two Super Bowls and restored the franchise to the league’s elite for a while.

It was mutually beneficial, and so was the departure Monday when the 69-year-old Coughlin resigned rather than force co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch to fire him.

The Giants announced the decision one day after the Giants (6-10) capped their third straight losing season with a 35-30 defeat against Philadelph­ia, their third in a row and sixth in seven games.

“I met with John Mara and Steve Tisch this afternoon, and I informed them that it is in the best interest of the organizati­on that I step down as head coach,” Coughlin said in a released statement. “I strongly believe the time is right for me and my family, and … the Giants organizati­on.”

The move may signal the end of a 20-year NFL head coaching career for Coughlin, one of 13 coaches to win multiple Super Bowls. It also may not. Coughlin loves to coach and if the right job popped up, who knows?

“It is difficult to come up with words adequate to describe the appreciati­on we have for everything Tom Coughlin has done for our franchise,” Mara said.

“In addition to delivering two Super Bowl titles, Tom represente­d us with class and dignity, and restored the pride to our entire organizati­on. He has all the qualities you could ever ask for in a head coach, and set very high standards for whoever will succeed him.”

Coughlin, Tisch, Mara and general manager Jerry Reese plan to hold a news conference this morning.

The league’s oldest active coach and third-longest tenured among the 32 who finished the season, Coughlin came into 2015 knowing he had to get the Giants back to the postseason to keep his job. It didn’t happen because the Giants lost six games either in the final 1:14 of regulation or in overtime.

“Obviously, the past three years have not been what any of us expect, and as head coach, I accept the responsibi­lity for those seasons,” he said.

Where the Giants go from here is uncertain. They have traditiona­lly hired from within or gotten someone with NFL experience. A college coach would be a reach, especially a high-profile one.

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Tom Coughlin

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