Chiefs hire Haley; Jack Harry wrong
| Todd Haley |
The Kansas City Star says the Chiefs have hired Arizona Cardinals offensive coordinator Todd Haley.
Haley's Cardinals made it to the Super Bowl but lost.
The Chiefs haven't confirmed the hire yet, but ESPN's Chris Mortensen says Haley is taking the job.
Here's the blog talk:
Arrowhead Addict: Breaking: Haley-Chiefs negotiations in final stages
Arrowhead Pride: Todd Haley is the Kansas City Chiefs' new head coach
Red Zone: The Chiefs weren't kidding with this business about going younger
Update: After the jump, the full news release.
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
February 6, 2009
TODD HALEY
NAMED KANSAS CITY CHIEFS HEAD COACH
Kansas City Chiefs Chairman
Clark Hunt announced on Friday that Todd Haley has been named head coach. Haley
joins the team after spending the past two seasons as the offensive coordinator
of the Arizona Cardinals. At 41 years old, Haley becomes the second-youngest
head coach in franchise history.
"We are very pleased to
welcome Todd to the Chiefs," Hunt said. "Todd is an outstanding football coach
with a proven track record of success at every stop in his career, and we look
forward to his leadership."
"I am very excited that Todd
has accepted the position of head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs," General
Manager Scott Pioli said. "Todd is an outstanding football coach and he has been
an integral part of several very successful organizations.
"Having worked with Todd in
New York from '97-99 and having been mentored by some of the same people, we
have a shared vision of what it takes to build a successful franchise in the
National Football League," Pioli continued. "He will bring passion, dedication
and energy to Kansas City, and I am confident that this is the beginning of a
partnership that will serve the Chiefs well."
Haley said he was eager to
begin his work in Kansas City.
"I am extremely excited and
proud to be a part of the Kansas City Chiefs family and the Kansas City
community," Haley said. "I am looking forward to working with Scott to
re-establish the winning tradition that the tremendous fans in Kansas City
deserve."
Haley enters his 15th season
in the National Football League and his 13th campaign in a coaching capacity in
2009. He enjoyed previous NFL coaching
experience with Arizona (2007-08), Dallas (2004-06), Chicago (2001-03) and the
N.Y. Jets ('97-00), earning playoff berths with each of those franchises. He
helped the Cardinals win the NFC Championship and reach Super Bowl XLIII,
marking the first time the franchise had advanced to the NFL title game since
'47. Haley was also a member of Bill Parcells' N.Y. Jets staff that guided that
franchise to the '98 AFC Championship Game. It was during his tenure with the
Jets that he began his association with Pioli, who served as Director of Pro
Personnel for the Jets from '97-99.
Under Haley's guidance, the
Cardinals offense in 2008 was one of the league's most innovative and explosive
units. Arizona tied for third in the league in scoring, registering a
franchise-record 427 points (26.7 ppg). The Cardinals were fourth in total
offense, averaging 365.8 yards per game. Arizona was second in the league in
passing offense (292.1 ypg) and ranked sixth in the NFL with 20.5 first downs
per game.
Haley's offensive unit in
Arizona featured a trio of Pro Bowl performers in 2008. QB Kurt Warner led all
NFC passers and established single-season franchise records with a 96.9 rating
and 30 TD passes. Warner threw for 377 yards and three TDs in Super Bowl XLIII.
Meanwhile, WRs Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin formed the league's most
potent receiving tandem. Fitzgerald led all NFC receivers with 96 catches for
1,431 yards with 12 TDs. He enjoyed a seven-catch, 127-yard, two-TD performance
in Super Bowl XLIII and set NFL single-season postseason records for receptions
(30), receiving yards (546), TD receptions (seven) and 100-yard games (four)
during the 2008 playoffs. Boldin had 89 receptions for 1,038 yards with 11 TDs
during the regular season, while WR Steve Breaston had 77 receptions for 1,006
yards, making the Cardinals just the fifth team in NFL history to boast three
1,000-yard receivers in a single season.
Arizona's offensive resurgence
began when Haley joined
the Cardinals as offensive coordinator in 2007. That season the Cardinals ranked
fifth in the league in passing (254.1 ypg) and set a single-season franchise
record with 32 TD passes. Arizona also ranked second in the league with a 94.0
scoring percentage inside the Red Zone. The Cardinals ranked seventh in the
league in scoring by averaging 25.3 ppg after ranking 19th in that category in
2006 (19.6 ppg). The Cardinals also rose to 12th in total offense
(344.1 ypg) in 2007, an improvement of 31.6 ypg after ranking 18th in that
category one year earlier.
He joined Ken Whisenhunt's
staff in Arizona after serving a three-year stint as Passing Game
Coordinator/Wide Receivers coach for Dallas (2004-06). In 2006, the Cowboys
offense ranked fourth in the NFL in passing (239.8 ypg) as QB Tony Romo
developed into a Pro Bowl performer in his first year as a starter and Dallas
qualified for the postseason. Haley's passing attack
helped the Cowboys finish fourth in the league in scoring (26.6 ppg) and second
in third-down efficiency at 48.8%. Dallas boasted a pair of 1,000-yard pass
catchers in WRs Terrell Owens and Terry Glenn. In 2005, Glenn averaged 18.3
yards per catch to tie for the NFL lead and posted 1,136 receiving yards, the
first 1,000-yard campaign by a member of the Cowboys since '99. In his debut
with the Cowboys in 2004, WR Keyshawn Johnson recorded 70 catches for 981 yards
with six TDs with Haley serving as his position coach.
Haley joined the Cowboys after a
three-year tour of duty as wide receivers coach for Chicago (2001-03) under head
coach Dick Jauron. In 2001, the Bears went 13-3 and won the NFC Central for the
first time since '90 as WR Marty Booker set a single-season franchise record
with 100 catches. Under Haley's tutelage a year a later, Booker became just the
second player in franchise annals to post back-to-back 1,000-yard campaigns,
becoming Chicago's first Pro Bowl wide receiver since '71.
His initial NFL experience
came as a member of the N.Y. Jets ('95-00), where he served as that club's wide
receivers coach from '99-00. In his initial season in that capacity, he helped
WR Keyshawn Johnson earn his second straight Pro Bowl berth as he accumulated
89
receptions for 1,170 yards and caught eight TDs in '99. Prior to becoming a
position coach, Haley worked as an offensive assistant/quality control coach for
Jets ('97-98), working closely
with offensive coordinator Charlie Weis, who currently serves as the head coach
at Notre Dame. Haley began his career with the Jets as an assistant in the
scouting department in '95, where he scouted
regionally for the team and assisted in player evaluations.
Owning a distinguished football
pedigree, he is the son of Dick Haley, a 43-year NFL
veteran. After enjoying stints as the Director of Player Personnel for
Pittsburgh ('71-90) and the N.Y. Jets
('91-02), the elder Haley served as a
Personnel Consultant for the Jets (2003-07), and currently is a Player Personnel
Analyst for the Miami Dolphins. One of the architects of the great Steelers
teams of the 1970s, Haley's '74 draft class with Pittsburgh featured four Hall
of Famers - LB Jack Lambert, C Mike Webster, as well as WRs Lynn Swann and John
Stallworth. The elder Haley also selected Hall of Fame LB Jack Ham in '71 and
tabbed hall of Fame RB Franco Harris in '72, forming the nucleus of a team that
would claim four Super Bowl crowns over a six-year span from '74-79. The elder
Haley spent six seasons playing cornerback in the NFL with Washington ('59-60),
Minnesota ('61) and Pittsburgh ('61-64).
The younger
Haley spent his formative years in Pittsburgh, immersed in football with his
father and the Steelers organization. A former ballboy for the Steelers, Haley
spent many summers as a youth at training camp with the club, and frequently
watched film alongside his father. In attendance for many of the greatest games
in Steelers history, he later served as a member of the Steelers chain gain on
gamedays during his teenage years. He attended Upper St. Clair High School in
Pittsburgh, where he was a multi-sport standout.
Born on February 28, 1967 in Atlanta, Georgia, Haley was a member of the
collegiate golf squads at the University of Florida and the University of Miami
and participated in the NCAA golf tournament during his time at both schools. He
later earned a degree in Communications from the University of North Florida in
'91. Haley and his wife, Chrissy, have four daughters: Taylor, Peyton, Kady, and
Ella and one son, Richard Todd, Jr.
HALEY'S FOOTBALL
CAREER
Years Team
Position
1995-00 N.Y.
Jets Scouting Assistant
('95-96)
Offensive Assistant/Quality Control ('97-98)
Wide Receivers ('99-00)
2001-03 Chicago
Bears Wide Receivers
2004-06 Dallas
Cowboys Passing Game Coordinator/Wide
Receivers
2007-08 Arizona
Cardinals Offensive Coordinator
2009
Kansas City Chiefs Head Coach




3 comment(s) / Post a Comment










