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NFL Family ties never hurt for making NFL connections

By Teresa M. Walker

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES » Rams assistant coach Wes Phillips knows only too well just how difficult — and rare — reaching a Super Bowl can be.

His grandfather, Bum, never got to the NFL’s biggest game, losing two AFC championship games as coach of the then-Houston Oilers. His own father, Wade, coached 42 seasons and made it to three Super Bowls, winning only one.

Sunday: Rams vs. Bengals, at Inglewood, 3:30 p.m., NBC

He worked his way to assistant o ensive line coach, special teams assistant, and finally got his first position group as tight ends coach in 2013 working with Jason Witten.

JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Former Raiders receiver Cli Branch was posthumously named to the Hall of Fame Class of 2022 on Thursday.

NFL’s first Black owner. He told The Associated Press on Thursday night that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft approached him in November 2019 about buying a team.

The NFL’s ownership ranks are overwhelmingly white. Of the league’s 32 teams, the only minorities to have a controlling ownership stake are the Jacksonville Jaguars’ Shad Khan and the Buffalo Bills’ Kim Pegula, who co-owns the team with her husband, Terry.

GIANTS STAFF WILL FEATURE ITS FIRST

WOMAN » Giants coach Brian Daboll filled out a majority of his sta Friday, hiring the first woman to hold a coaching position in the team’s history along with a pair of coordinators new to New York.

Laura Young will be the team’s director of coaching operations, coordinating and organizing practices, as well as game-day operations. She has 18 years of NFL experience, the last four with Daboll in Bu alo, where she was the Bills’ player services coordinator.

Mike Kafka will be the new o ensive coordinator and Don “Wink” Martindale will run the defense.

BEARS FINALIZE STAFF » New Chicago Bears coach Matt Eberflus finalized his sta by hiring three more assistants.

The Bears added former NFL linebacker Carlos Polk as assistant special teams coach, assistant defensive line coach Justin Hinds and coaching assistant Kevin Koch.

Polk, a Rockford, Illinois, native, had a similar job with Jacksonville this past season. He has 11 years of NFL coaching experience and 12 overall.

“So I’m just grateful for this opportunity,” Wes Phillips said. “Fifteen years in the league, and this is my first opportunity to play in Super Bowl. Actually, it was the first year that I was on a team that went past the divisional round.”

With former Miami coach Brian Flores suing the NFL alleging racism hiring practices, this Super Bowl o ers a reminder that family ties can play a big role in creating business opportunities for men moving in and up in this league.

Consider:

• Rams coach Sean McVay. His grandfather John not only was head coach of the New York Giant for three seasons in the 1970s, he also was general manager for five Super Bowl championships with the San Francisco 49ers in the 1980s and 1990s.

• Cincinnati o ensive coordinator Brian Callahan. His father Bill is a former head coach of the Raiders and Washington. The elder Callahan was the Raiders’ head coach when they lost to Tampa Bay in the 2003 Super Bowl.

• Bengals coach Zac Taylor. He started as a graduate assistant at Texas A&M for Mike Sherman and followed his father-inlaw to the NFL when Sherman was hired as Miami Dolphins o ensive coordinator. Taylor stayed with the Dolphins after Sherman was fired. His brother, Press, is a senior o ensive assistant for the Indianapolis Colts.

Rams o ensive assistant Zak Kromer’s dad is former Rams o ensive line coach Aaron Kromer, who was recently hired by Bu alo. Linebackers coach Chris Shula is the grandson of Hall of Fame coach Don Shula and son of former Bengals head coach Dave Shula. Phillips and Kromer stayed with the Rams even after McVay essentially fired their fathers.

Phillips is the Rams’ tight ends coach and passing game coordinator. He got his NFL start in 2007 working as a quality control/o ensive assistant with his father as head coach in Dallas. Phillips stayed three more seasons in Dallas after Wade was fired.

Being the son and grandson of NFL coaches certainly helped Phillips. Imagine all the conversations at home, especially when watching a football game together. Clock management and timeouts were big topics.

“It wasn’t like I was at home drawing up things on the grease board, really, with him,” Phillips said.

Coaches’ sons do get other opportunities. Phillips went to the team facility, sitting in on some meetings. He also was a ball boy during training camp.

Darrin Simmons, the Bengals’ special teams coordinator, got the chance to help out for a couple years at Browns’ training camps. His connection? His uncle, longtime Cleveland Browns strength coach Jerry Simmons.

“All through my high school days growing up, we would go out during training camp and help him ... with stu in the weight room,” Simmons said.

Callahan also grew up around the NFL. Watching his father influenced his decision to go into coaching, especially when his own playing career peaked as a walk-on quarterback at UCLA who later earned a scholarship.

His father called to congratulate him when the Bengals beat Kansas City in overtime at the AFC championship game, earning Cincinnati’s first Super Bowl berth since the 1988 season. His father’s best piece of advice was to focus on the job he has and do his best, not worrying about what’s next.

“Certainly my dad has been a huge influence on me personally and professionally,” Callahan said. “He’s my mentor kind of in all facets. There’s probably a long list I could get you, but that’s probably one of the most important ones.”

Growing up inside the NFL also means the chance to meet other coaches. Phillips credits Dan Reeves, his father’s boss in Denver and later Atlanta, as being a big influence. Thanks to his grandfather and father, Phillips knew well that Reeves played for Dallas coaching legend Tom Landry.

“You could see the attention to detail on the practice field,” Phillips said. “He was demanding, but also a great, great person, and he had an influence on me as a young kid, just how he treated me even.”

Chase Dittrich and Jeff Chen

Super quiz

Previous solution

The goal is to ll the grid with consecutive numbers that connect horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Each puzzle has only one possible solution. The rst and last numbers of a puzzle will be in circle markers.

Sudoku X

No more than two X’s or two O’s can be next to each other on any line, across or down. There must be ve X’s and ve O’s in each row and column. No two rows or columns can be the same.

Previous solution

Previous solution

Follow all of the rules of a classic Sudoku game — no repeats within the same row, column or 3x3 grid — but be careful. Each axis of the X of black squares that criss-crosses the puzzle is another no-repeat zone.

Previous solution

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