Chicago Sun-Times

SPECIAL-TEAMS GURU READY FOR SPECIAL JOB

EX-BEARS ASSISTANT TOUB, 57, CAN AFFORD TO WAIT FOR RIGHT FIT

- BY PATRICK FINLEY | pfinley@suntimes.com | @PATRICKFIN­LEY

AVENTURA, Fla. — There was a time when Dave Toub would have taken any head-coaching job. Now, the Chiefs special-teams coach said he’s more picky.

“Early on in my career, I just wanted a job, and it’d be great,” he said this week. “The older I get — I’m 57 now — I’m a little more like, ‘I gotta have a quarterbac­k, it’s gotta be the right place.’

“I don’t want to go a place where it’s not right. I see these guys getting beat up and getting fired.”

Whether Toub ever gets a head-coaching offer — some in league circles believe he’s overdue — is one question. Whether he gets the right one feels like an even longer shot. But a Super Bowl victory Sunday would immediatel­y become the shiniest line on his already-impressive resume.

His current highlight also took place at the Super Bowl in Miami — when return icon Devin Hester scored a touchdown on the opening kickoff of the Bears’ Super Bowl loss to the Colts.

“It was probably the epitome of my career, that one play,” he said.

Toub was the Bears’ special-teams guru from 2004-12, mentoring Hester, whom he believes is a future Hall of Famer, for all but two years. Toub parlayed that into two head-coaching interviews — with the Dolphins

in January 2012 and the Bears to replace Lovie Smith in January 2013.

General manager Phil Emery chose Marc Trestman instead, and hired Joe DeCamillis, who also had interviewe­d to be head coach, as the team’s special-teams coordinato­r. So Toub went to Kansas City, where he would interview for the Broncos’ and Chargers’ head-coaching jobs in 2017.

When the Giants named former Patriots assistant Joe Judge their coach this offseason, they doubled the number of specialtea­ms coordinato­rs-turned-sitting head coaches; the Ravens’ John Harbaugh is the other. Perhaps that signals the start of a shift.

Toub isn’t particular­ly concerned. He’s focused on his second Super Bowl appearance.

“That was early on — it came fast,” he said. “A world championsh­ip means a lot more. It’s been 13 years since. You know how hard it is to get here.”

NOTE: Oak Forest High School alum Tevin Coleman, who hurt his shoulder in the NFC Championsh­ip Game practiced in full and was cleared to play. So were 49ers linebacker Kwon Alexander (pectoral) and safety Jaquiski Tartt (ribs), as well as Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones (calf ), tight end Travis Kelce (knee), center Austin Reiter (wrist) and tight end Deon Yelder (Achilles tendon). ✶

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP ?? Chiefs special-teams coach Dave Toub interviewe­d with the Bears in 2013 to replace Lovie Smith.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP Chiefs special-teams coach Dave Toub interviewe­d with the Bears in 2013 to replace Lovie Smith.
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