Chicago Sun-Times

Former head coach of Packers, Colts

- BY TERRY SPENCER AND GENAROC. ARMAS

MIAMI — Lindy Infante, the hard-luck former coach of the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapol­is Colts, died Thursday. He was 75.

Infante’s wife, Stephanie, told The Associated Press that he died in St. Augustine after a lengthy illness.

Infante was a head coach for six years in the NFL, compiling a 36-60 record. He was the NFL Coach of the Year in 1989 with Green Bay, but his only postseason appearance came in 1996 when his Colts lost a wild card game to Pittsburgh, 42-14.

“He was the consummate father, husband & coach,” Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh said on Twitter.

Harbaugh was the Colts’ starting quarterbac­k in 1996. The next year, the Colts finished 3-13 and Infante was out of a job after two seasons with a 12-20 record. Indianapol­is drafted quarterbac­k Peyton Manning the following offseason.

There was bad timing at Infante’s first head-coaching stop in Green Bay, too. He went 24-40 from 1988-91. After the Packers finished 4-12 in his final season, the team overhauled its front of- fice, and the following year general manager Ron Wolf acquired Brett Favre from the Atlanta Falcons. The Packers reasserted themselves as one of the league’s top teams.

The organizati­on hailed the Infantes for their presence in the community. Packers President Mark Murphy also credited the Infante-led team in 1989 with rekindling enthusiasm in the fan base following a 10-6 season.

“For a franchise that had been struggling for so long to find a winning way, the emergence of that team under Lindy as new coach and (Don) Majkowski as its quarterbac­k gave us great promise for the future,” said Murphy’s predecesso­r, Bob Harlan. “It brought back a great deal of excitement in the community we hadn’t felt for a long time.”

Safety LeRoy Butler, a mainstay of the Packers defenses in the 1990s, expressed his condolence­s on Twitter.

“He is the one that convinced the Packers to draft me in 1990—‘we must have this guy,’” Butler wrote.

Infante coached the Jacksonvil­le Bulls of the USFL in 1984 and 1985. He played college football at Florida from 1960 to 1962.

 ?? | AP FILE PHOTO ?? Lindy Infante speaks to the media after he was named head coach of the Indianapol­is Colts on Feb. 15, 1996.
| AP FILE PHOTO Lindy Infante speaks to the media after he was named head coach of the Indianapol­is Colts on Feb. 15, 1996.

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