Los Angeles Times

Chip Kelly’s journey to UCLA

Long before his success at Oregon, Kelly yearned to learn all he could about offensive football, and he was about to set the game on its ear

- By Ben Bolch

The first of a three-part series on the Bruins’ new coach looks at the early days of his football education in New Hampshire.

This is the first of a three-part series on Chip Kelly, UCLA’s new football coach.

DURHAM, N.H. — Chip Kelly veered away from the other young football coaches on that spring day three decades ago.

As 25 or so of his peers herded into one room at the University of New Hampshire to hear from Jack Bicknell Jr., a fledgling college assistant whose star power resulted largely from his once being Doug Flutie’s teammate and his father being the head coach at Boston College, Kelly headed next-door.

Kelly wanted to learn from Gary Crowton, then a relatively anonymous offensive coordinato­r who would go on to design some of college football’s most prolific offenses.

“Everybody went with Jack except for Chip,” Crowton remembered.

Kelly had Crowton all to himself, which meant that Crowton had Kelly all to himself. The college coach found the offensive coordinato­r from nearby Manchester Central High to be engaging and inquisitiv­e during their hour-long conversati­on, asking about the nuances of quarterbac­k and receiver play at the college level.

Learning different positions gave Kelly a deeper understand­ing of the responsibi­lities and tendencies of more players. But it seemed he always wanted to know more. His yearning for football knowledge would lead him to make more stops than an early transconti­nental airline route long before landing at UCLA late last year as Jim Mora’s replacemen­t.

Kelly has studied schemes at the high school, college and profession­al levels — even inquiring about the latest trends in the Canadian Football League and NFL Europe in addition to the NFL — with equal fervor. He also examined successful business practices and the team-building methods of Navy SEALs. When he ran with the bulls in Pamplona, Spain, in the

‘I’ve always been a “why” guy, trying to figure out why things happen and what they are and just curious about it from that standpoint.’ — CHIP KELLY

summer of 2012, he watched video beforehand and conducted a walk-through of the route the bulls would run the next day.

“He’s a huge informatio­n-gatherer,” said Sean McDonnell, the New Hampshire coach who has known Kelly since the late 1970s, when McDonnell was a high school coach and Kelly a rival player.

Kelly’s quest for intelligen­ce continued after becoming a wildly successful coach at Oregon who guided the Ducks to four major bowl games in as many years before spending four years in the NFL. The Ducks won with a dizzying no-huddle, spread offense that blended many of the zone-read concepts Kelly had absorbed over the years.

The coach acknowledg­ed not being an innovator so much as an orchestrat­or of ideas conceived by others. But his inquisitiv­eness was singularly Charles Edward “Chip” Kelly.

“I was probably a pain in the ass as a little kid, I would imagine,” Kelly, who declined to be interviewe­d for this story, said in 2014. “I questioned everything. I’ve always been a ‘why’ guy, trying to figure out why things happen and what they are and just curious about it from that standpoint.”

Kelly’s nomadic rise through the coaching ranks started with five years at Manchester Central, his alma mater.

His early failures sometimes came in spectacula­r fashion.

“There were a couple of times when I said, ‘You go three and out again, somebody on the defense is going to kill you,’ ” Bob Leonard, then a defensive assistant on Kelly’s staff, recalled with a laugh. “Because it was really quick, man. You threw, that was two seconds. You threw, that was four seconds. We punted. OK. We’re back on defense.”

Kelly earned his first college job in 1990 coaching freshman defensive backs and varsity outside linebacker­s at Columbia. He went to New Hampshire two years later to coach the running backs at his alma mater — his name spelled “Chip Kelley” in the media guide, an ode to the thanklessn­ess of the parttime position.

Then came a yearlong stint as defensive coordinato­r at Johns Hopkins followed by a return to New Hampshire to coach the running backs for three more years. Finally, in 1997, a full-time position opened as the team’s offensive line coach.

Kelly’s boss, Wildcats coach Bill Bowes, was reluctant to give the job to someone who had never coached the position … until he sat down with the candidate to discuss how he might handle things.

“At the end of my interview with him,” Bowes recalled, “I realized that, hey, he knows what he’s doing.”

Kelly got the job, but it didn’t feel like an arrival so much as just the next step. The following year he made one of his frequent selffunded visits to see Crowton, who was on the verge of becoming the Chicago Bears’ offensive coordinato­r after three years as head coach at Louisiana Tech. Kelly was fascinated by some of the zoneblocki­ng schemes Crowton had used and figured they might accentuate the skills of New Hampshire running back Jerry Azumah.

But first Kelly had to convince Bowes and McDonnell, then the Wildcats’ offensive coordinato­r, that it was the right fit for a team that ran the somewhat staid I formation.

“He was really impressed with how it could work with the people we had, give Jerry some vision, some opportunit­ies to see some things and run with them based on his ESP, that sense of seeing things,” McDonnell said. “It worked out really well for all of us.”

Azumah finished the 1998 season with 2,195 yards rushing and 23 touchdowns, winning the Walter Payton Award as the nation’s top player in Division I-AA. ::

As a wisp of a high school quarterbac­k, Kelly had a way of doing things differentl­y by design.

He was known for his scrambling and ability to make something out of broken plays. It didn’t matter that he was only 5 feet 9 and 165 pounds if the defense couldn’t get its hands on him.

“He made up plays on the go,” said Frank Kelley, one of Kelly’s teammates and study partners at Manchester Central. “I used to try to hit him at practice and he was hard to hit. Very elusive and fearless.”

Kelly displayed his speed while running the second leg of the 400-meter relay, taking the baton from Kelley as part of a team that won the New England meet. He also played hockey as a tenacious forward whose durability allayed the fears of his football coach, who shuddered at the thought of his quarterbac­k going down on the ice.

“You didn’t think he was a tough kid when you looked at him,” said Leonard, who was Kelly’s coach before leaving his teaching job for the insurance business and later working alongside Kelly as an assistant, “but he was tough.”

Leonard, whose specialty was defense, enjoyed Kelly’s analytical mind most when he served as a last resort while playing safety as one of the team’s many two-way players.

“Chip was the one that I counted on that if we all went where we weren’t supposed to,” Leonard said, “somebody was back there to clean up the mess.”

Kelly’s independen­t thinking seemed familiar to Kelley, whose Pop Warner coach also happened to be Kelly’s father, Paul. One of Paul’s mantras had been to always compete, Kelley recalled, because good things tended to happen when kids gave all-out effort.

The elder Kelly had been studying to become a Jesuit priest when he abandoned the pursuit to marry the woman who would become Kelly’s mother, an educator who reared four boys with her new husband. Paul worked as a trial lawyer, the perfect occupation for someone with a natural inclinatio­n to question things.

Paul kept close tabs on his son’s playing career. He sometimes watched from a hill above a low-lying area dubbed Death Valley after Chip arrived at New Hampshire in the fall of 1981 as a preferred walk-on. Chip’s moptop made him look more suited to join a Beatles cover band than become a college football sensation.

He played occasional­ly and made only a cameo appearance on the stat sheet during his four seasons as a quarterbac­k-turned-defensive back, logging one tackle.

Kelly’s biggest influence at the school remained years away.

When McDonnell succeeded Bowes in 1999, New Hampshire’s new coach might as well have announced Kelly as his offensive coordinato­r at the introducto­ry news conference.

“It was the easiest decision I’ve probably had to make as a head coach,” McDonnell said.

The Wildcats started relying heavily on a hurry-up, nohuddle offense not as a result of some master plan but because they enjoyed success with it at the end of first halves and games when they were in two-minute-drill situations. Kelly continuall­y refined the scheme as a result of his visits to other schools that ran similar offenses, returning with new wrinkles that he incorporat­ed into his team’s playbook.

Players used to more conservati­ve high school offenses immediatel­y felt liberated by what they saw from a coach with a heavy bent toward going fast and faster. Kelly called plays as if he was embracing the state motto, Live Free or Die.

“We were up here spreading it out and playing with three receivers, so it seemed like genius to me at the time,” said former Wildcats receiver Keith LeVan. “We all bought in, like there was no other way to play but as fast as you can go.”

The speed helped compensate for a lack of size and talent. More possession­s also meant more opportunit­ies to score, tilting the efficiency odds in the Wildcats’ favor.

New Hampshire often benefited most in the fourth quarters as its opponents wore down from nonstop pursuit. Runs that might have gone for four yards earlier in the game would go for 14 yards, if not more. The only reliable counter among defenses was to suffer an injury — real or fake — to momentaril­y stop the clock.

Kelly varied his play-calling but wouldn’t hesitate to get monotonous if it provided an edge. LeVan recalled Kelly’s willingnes­s to have his quarterbac­k throw 25 passes in one game to star receiver David Ball. When the Wildcats upset Rutgers in 2004, LeVan said, quarterbac­k Ricky Santos threw “something like 14 tunnel screens” because they kept working.

“Don’t outthink yourself,” LeVan said, repeating one of Kelly’s core philosophi­es. “Don’t assume that they have it covered or figured out.”

New Hampshire broke 29 school offensive records the same season it beat Rutgers, the Wildcats making the playoffs for only the third time in school history. The team’s offensive prowess drew a slew of coaches from other schools to spring practices.

Kelly was becoming a coveted commodity. ::

John Neal first noticed him in the spring of 2005. The mystery man would sit in the back corner of one of Oregon’s football offices toiling on a laptop computer as Crowton, the Ducks’ new offensive coordinato­r, busied himself nearby formulatin­g his plans to install the spread.

His curiosity piqued, Neal, Oregon’s defensive backs coach, walked into the office and asked the stranger who he was. He said his name was Chip Kelly.

“I told him, ‘Man, you’re working harder than anyone here,’ ” Neal said.

Neal asked Kelly, who was making one of his yearly trips to visit Crowton, to show him one of his plays from New Hampshire. It was a bootleg in which the quarterbac­k, running away from his linemen, completed a pass to a wide-open receiver.

Neal asked to see more and Kelly showed him several other plays. The result was always the same: big, easy yardage.

“I said, ‘God, I already hate your guts,’ ” Neal told Kelly with a laugh.

Neal completed a quick check of Kelly’s background and discovered that New Hampshire had scored 35 points against Rutgers during the upset of its Division I-A counterpar­t. The Wildcats would top that in 2006 by beating Northweste­rn. Neal made a mental note: This is a guy we need to get on our staff.

Crowton didn’t need any convincing, having known Kelly since that coaching clinic nearly two decades earlier.

When Crowton departed for Louisiana State in 2007, he suggested that Oregon coach Mike Bellotti consider Kelly as his replacemen­t. The six other candidates were far more establishe­d. They included an NFL assistant coach and a handful of former college head coaches and currently employed major college offensive coordinato­rs.

None matched Kelly’s command of the spread offense and what he wanted to do with it.

“Of all the guys I interviewe­d,” Bellotti said, “Chip was the only one I believed we could take a step forward without taking two steps back.”

But if Bellotti was sold, Kelly wasn’t. He loved his job making a reported $62,000 a year at New Hampshire. It was the place where Kelly had played and rose through the coaching ranks for more than a decade.

“He had a nice thing there,” said Kelley, Kelly’s high school teammate. “It took a lot of convincing to get him to move from that.”

Crowton pitched Kelly on his love for Eugene. Bellotti mentioned the track record of his coordinato­rs going on to bigger things as well as the opportunit­y to elevate a userfriend­ly offense while working with a talented group of players.

Kelly thought it over for a long while. Ultimately, he said yes. Once more, he was venturing out on his own.

Saturday: Kelly is a big hit at Oregon, but takes plenty of hits in the NFL

ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter: @latbolch

 ?? University of New Hampshire ?? CHIP KELLY HAD an undistingu­ished college career as a quarterbac­k and defensive back at Division I-AA New Hampshire, but it was when he turned to coaching that he made his mark.
University of New Hampshire CHIP KELLY HAD an undistingu­ished college career as a quarterbac­k and defensive back at Division I-AA New Hampshire, but it was when he turned to coaching that he made his mark.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AFTER GOING 46-7 as Oregon’s head coach and 28-35 in four years in the NFL, Chip Kelly comes to UCLA.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AFTER GOING 46-7 as Oregon’s head coach and 28-35 in four years in the NFL, Chip Kelly comes to UCLA.
 ?? University of New Hampshire ?? KELLY (9) arrived in New Hampshire at a walk-on, and made only a cameo appearance on the stat sheet.
University of New Hampshire KELLY (9) arrived in New Hampshire at a walk-on, and made only a cameo appearance on the stat sheet.

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