Parcells' Book Details Highs And Lows Of His NFL Coaching Career (2024)

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Let's talk now about the major decisions that an American has made in his career and in his life. It is Super Bowl weekend, and we're going to listen to Bill Parcells, who won two Super Bowls with the New York Giants. He also mentored coaches, including Bill Belichick, who's taking the Patriots to the Super Bowl Sunday. Parcells has a book out called, "Parcells: A Football Life," and he spoke with our colleague, David Greene.

DAVID GREENE, BYLINE: We sat down with him near his winter home in Jupiter, FL. Surprising thing, Parcells almost didn't coach football.

BILL PARCELLS: You know, I thought about law school a little bit. My dad had his law degree. I was working for a franchise called Pizza Hut when I was in school. And I was really in on the - literally the ground floor of that company.

GREENE: Wait a minute. This isn't the Bill Parcells I know. This is the Bill Parcells I know.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PARCELLS: (Yelling) I'm going to tell you, those [bleep] linemen are standing around, wandering around. O'Leary don't even know to get on the [bleep] line of scrimmage.

GREENE: With these fiery tirades on the sideline, he was known as one of the fiercest coaches in the game. Parcells says he got a lot of that from his upbringing in N.J. His mom had what he called a big heart and short fuse. And his players might say the same about him.

PARCELLS: You can't be pretentious in this business. It's easily identified by the players. So you kind of have to be who you are. And yet, if you're forthright and honest and trying to do the best for your team, it doesn't really matter how you deliver the message.

GREENE: I read, and it struck me, that you weren't totally satisfied with that being the image that people are kind of left with.

PARCELLS: Well, I think when you're on television and they're seeing you on the sidelines and they see you in moments under duress and in moments where you are angry and frustrated, I think they form an opinion that that's you. And that, in reality, is just a very fragment of what you are. And I am that way in some respects, no doubt. And I'm not always proud of that.

GREENE: Take me to a moment that you're not proud of.

PARCELLS: I would say I was an average parent at best. I cared about my children a great deal. But I wasn't always there for them. And I missed a lot. And I was too busy chasing my dreams.

GREENE: And his book focuses a lot on his regrets, missing graduations and precious time with his three daughters. And yet, he sounds so much like a father when he talks about his players, like Lawrence Taylor, a Hall of Fame Giants linebacker who struggled with drug abuse.

PARCELLS: The thing about Lawrence - he would never not tell me the truth. So when I couldn't get a hold of him for some reason, then I always worried.

GREENE: Listening to how you talk about him, it almost sounds like he's a son to you.

PARCELLS: Well, there's a lot of sons out there. He's not just the only one. He's just one of the - he was one of the squeakier wheels. And there are a lot of them out there - a lot. But that's what this game does. People don't - they don't understand. Inside these locker rooms, those are great laboratories for human behavior. You see it all there. And it's not all - it's not all what people think. There's a lot of sensitivity there. There's a lot of care in there. And those championship teams, they - they're kind of attached together.

GREENE: What about losing teams - perpetually losing teams...

PARCELLS: I don't know.

GREENE: (Laughter). I guess that's a good point.

PARCELLS: Really, I don't know that. Now, have I been through some disappointing seasons? Absolutely. And I have had a lot of heartache games that could have meant another championship and just didn't quite get to it.

GREENE: In his three decades as coach, Parcells won those two Super Bowls with the Giants. But the sweetest moment in his career, he says, was the game that got the Giants to the big stage the second time.

PARCELLS: We won the NFC Championship in 1990 against the San Francisco 49ers with three seconds on the clock.

(SOUNDBITE OF FOOTBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #1: And the kick is good. The Giants win it, 15-13.

GREENE: But then there are the low points. Late in his career, he felt like he still had a Super Bowl run in him. His Dallas Cowboys were in a 2007 playoff game against the Seattle Seahawks - fourth quarter, a minute left, they're down by one point.

(SOUNDBITE OF FOOTBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #2: So if you're Parcells, now, I mean, you're almost compelled to go for the field goal.

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #3: You have to kick the field goal.

GREENE: It's a really short field goal, almost automatic. Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo is going to hold the ball for the kicker.

(SOUNDBITE OF FOOTBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #2: Nineteen-yard field goal attempt. (Yelling) Oh, and it's fumbled by Romo. And then Romo's going to run to the end zone. And he's going to get tackled by Jordan Babineaux.

(CROWD CHEERING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER #2: Amazing.

PARCELLS: Of course, that was the last game I ever coached. So obviously, it had an effect on me.

GREENE: I mean, now that - now that you're away from football, not coaching, out of the front office, are you watching football...

PARCELLS: Oh, sure.

GREENE: Every weekend?

PARCELLS: Oh, yeah. And right now, this time of year, my phone's blowing up.

GREENE: Who's calling?

PARCELLS: It's blowing up every day.

GREENE: Who's calling?

PARCELLS: Coaches, general managers, owners, a lot of people that are still involved in the game. And that's a nice part of having been there and done it. When people are calling you and asking you for advice on certain subjects, it's nice, you know?

GREENE: How important has it been to watch some of these coaches who you've brought up, the Bill Parcells coaching tree? I mean, I think of Tom Coughlin with the Giants...

PARCELLS: Well, listen...

GREENE: And Belichick with the Patriots and...

PARCELLS: I want to say this. They're their own men. They are - they're their own men. You can say Parcells coaching tree, but they're their own guys. And they've done it basically on their own. But all of us need a - just a little push in the right direction - not that my way was the right way for everybody or even the right way for very many. But it's nice to see that guys came up with you to go on and be successful.

GREENE: And win Super Bowls.

PARCELLS: And win Super Bowls. That's - yeah, I take a great deal of pride in that.

GREENE: And when Bill Belichick, a member of that Parcells coaching tree, leads the New England Patriots on Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks, going for his fourth Super Bowl title, you can understand what's on the line just by listening to a speech from Bill Parcells. It's from his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2013.

(SOUNDBITE OF SPEECH)

PARCELLS: We've got happiness. We've got humor, practical jokes, hilarity, success, achievement. And then we've got that momentary time of exhilaration when you hoist that championship trophy over your head. And I don't know what happens, but some mystical blood kinship is formed. And although it's a fleeting moment, that kinship lasts for the rest of your life.

GREENE: That's Bill Parcells. His book is called "Parcells: A Football Life."

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Parcells' Book Details Highs And Lows Of His NFL Coaching Career (2024)

FAQs

What made Bill Parcells a good coach? ›

One of Parcells' greatest attributes as a coach was his ability to have success with franchises that had been struggling to do so prior to his arrival. New York had just one winning season from 1973-83 until Parcells guided the Giants to their first of three consecutive playoff berths in 1984.

When did Bill Parcells stop coaching? ›

Parcells retired for a second time in 1999, but returned again in 2003 as the head coach of the Cowboys. The Cowboys made two playoff appearances under Parcells, although both ended in first-round defeats, leading to his third and final retirement in 2007.

Did Belichick coach with Parcells? ›

Belichick is a descendant of the Bill Parcells coaching tree. He began his coaching career in 1975 as an assistant for the Baltimore Colts and became the defensive coordinator for New York Giants head coach Bill Parcells by 1985.

Did Bill Parcells coach the Jets? ›

An acrimonious relationship with Patriots ownership led to Parcells's departure soon after the Super Bowl. He then became head coach and general manager of the New York Jets, which he took from a 1–15 record the year before his arrival to a 12–4 mark and a berth in the conference championship game in his second season.

How many Super Bowls did Bill Parcells coach in? ›

ESPN Classic - Parcells won two Super Bowls with Giants. Jan. 25, 1987 - Bill Parcells took a gamble with his Giants leading the Denver Broncos 10-9 in the third quarter of Super Bowl XXI in Pasadena.

Who was the toughest football coach? ›

Robert Victor "Bull" "Cyclone" Sullivan (December 10, 1918 – September 8, 1970) was an American college football coach. He was the head coach at East Mississippi Community College for 16 seasons, from 1950 to 1952 and again from 1956 to 1969.

Why are Parcells called tuna? ›

The story goes that during the 1986 season, Parcells was having dinner with his coaching staff, and he ordered a tuna melt sandwich. Lawrence Taylor, one of the star players on the team, noticed the size of the sandwich and started calling Parcells "the Big Tuna" as a playful and affectionate nickname.

Why did Parcells leave Patriots? ›

Parcells grew increasingly frustrated with his lack of personnel control, with Kraft instead empowering people he believed were “incompetent” to construct the Patriots roster. The friction between both sides reached its crescendo ahead of the team's matchup against the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXI.

Did Sean Payton coach under Parcells? ›

Payton served as an assistant head coach and quarterbacks coach under Parcells with the Dallas Cowboys from 2003-2005. He then became the head coach of the New Orleans Saints and studied the methodology of another member of Parcells' coaching tree: Bill Belichick.

Who is the oldest coach in the NFL? ›

Andy Reid is now the oldest head coach in the NFL after their respective teams moved on from Bill Belichick (71) and Pete Carroll (72). That leaves five other coaches who are 60 or older. John Harbaugh is the next oldest coach at 61 years old.

Does Robert Kraft like Bill Belichick? ›

The months since Bill Belichick's departure from the Patriots have featured stories about bad feelings between him and Patriots owner Robert Kraft as their working relationship came to an end, but the two men got along well at a roast of Tom Brady in Los Angeles on Sunday.

Who did Bill Parcells marry? ›

Does Belichick have a wife? ›

Who are the coaches in the Shanahan Tree? ›

Mike Shanahan's coaching tree continues to branch out, and each branch is bearing fruit. As has been well documented, Shanahan built an impressive coaching staff in Washington in 2013 that included Kyle Shanahan, Sean McVay, Matt LaFleur, Mike McDaniel and Raheem Morris.

Why was coach K such a good coach? ›

He was an outstanding coach technically, which helped me learn the game. And he was an intense preparer. If you couple preparedness with the passion to win, there's a good chance that you're going to be successful. I also admired the emotional investment he made in each of his teams, each of his games.

What makes Bill Belichick such a good coach? ›

He's the best coach, in my belief, in the history of the game," said Tom Brady, the greatest player in the history of the game. What makes Belichick so great? He blended an unwavering philosophy that included a rare willingness to change. In other words, Belichick never changed and always changed.

Why were Bill Parcells called Big Tuna? ›

The story goes that during the 1986 season, Parcells was having dinner with his coaching staff, and he ordered a tuna melt sandwich. Lawrence Taylor, one of the star players on the team, noticed the size of the sandwich and started calling Parcells "the Big Tuna" as a playful and affectionate nickname.

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