Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Martz glad football has returned to San Diego

Former Rams coach in charge of Fleet, the city’s entry in AAF

- By Bernie Wilson

SAN DIEGO — Nearly 51 years ago, Mike Martz took his future wife, Julie, on their first date to watch Don Coryell’s San Diego State Aztecs at what was then called San Diego Stadium.

“I can’t tell you what section,” Martz recalled about that night in 1968. “It was behind the Aztecs bench on the 50-yard line, about halfway up the stands on the right side of the aisle.”

The date was a success. Classmates at Madison High, they would marry in 1971.

Martz will be back at the aging Mission Valley stadium Sunday night, this time on the sideline, coaching the San Diego Fleet of the Alliance of American Football against the Atlanta Legends in the return of pro football to a city that lost the NFL’s Chargers to the Los Angeles area two seasons ago.

“I’m thrilled,” Martz said. “I think we’re all thrilled. This is something I always dreamed of as a kid. I always wanted to coach here in San Diego.”

A week after literally taking it on the chin in a 15-6 seasonopen­ing loss at San Antonio, the Fleet will begin trying to fill the gaping hole left when the Chargers bolted from their home of 56 seasons after their plan for a new stadium was voted down.

“I told our players: Here’s a great opportunit­y to fill a void,” Martz said. “I think there are a lot of football people here in town that want football. They want their own football team. What a great opportunit­y for us to provide something that will be fun for everybody.”

The Alliance, co-founded by Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian and TV and film producer Charlie Ebersol, is the latest spring league. While others failed, this one has strong NFL connection­s and is full of players who hope to get a shot at the big time.

“This league has been needed,” Martz said. “It’s been needed for a long time, and for these players who want to keep playing.”

Martz never realized his dream of playing at SDSU for Coryell, who later revolution­ized the NFL’s passing game as architect of the Air Coryell offense with the Dan Fouts-led Chargers.

“I wanted to play for him in the worst way,” Martz said. “San Diego State’s tight end graduated, and I thought, ‘This is going to be a natural. Look at me, he’s going to come and get me.’ ” Coryell passed, so to speak. “I wasn’t good enough,” Martz said. “I was small, slow and a lot of other things. Other than that, I was pretty good.

Martz played at San Diego’s Mesa College and then Fresno State. A roundabout coaching career eventually took him to the NFL’s Rams, and he was the offensive coordinato­r of the “Greatest Show on Turf” team that won the Super Bowl behind Kurt Warner following the 1999 season.

Dick Vermeil retired after that victory and Martz was elevated to head coach. He took the Rams back to the Super Bowl two seasons later, losing to New England. He was fired after the 2005 season, during which he missed the final 11 games because of a heart ailment.

He later was an offensive coordinato­r in Detroit, San Francisco and Chicago, and since 2015 he had been a head coach in the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl.

That’s where he met quarterbac­k Philip Nelson, who will start Sunday night.

Martz doesn’t mess around with his offense. Mike Bercovici started the opener and stayed in the game after absorbing a crushing blow to the chin that sent his helmet flying. But he threw two intercepti­ons and was replaced by Nelson, who has been nicknamed “Admiral Nelson” after the British naval hero.

Martz doesn’t consider it a quarterbac­k controvers­y. He said Bercovici just isn’t ready to run the offense while Nelson “has pretty good control of the passing game. He understand­s it really well. I like his even-keel temperamen­t. He just needs to play.”

Nelson seems to be the epitome of the AAF.

After Nelson was elevated to starter, fans discovered his Instagram account was full of photos of him looking a lot like Fabio, with long, flowing hair and showing remarkable abs. It turns out that after failing to make the Bengals or Browns, Nelson had been doing some modeling and acting while continuing to train.

“Whatever you have to do to continue to keep the dream alive,” he said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Mike Martz is thrilled to be coaching in San Diego, where he leads the Alliance of American Football’s San Diego Fleet.
AP FILE Mike Martz is thrilled to be coaching in San Diego, where he leads the Alliance of American Football’s San Diego Fleet.

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