Steelers-Broncos pits 2 bright young coaches
By ARNIE STAPLETON
DENVER (AP) -The showdown between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Denver Broncos
on Monday night features two of the AFC's top teams, a couple of the
hardest-hitting defenses in the league and a pair of the NFL's brightest young
coaching minds.
Hired when he was 34, Mike Tomlin won a Super Bowl in just his second season
in Pittsburgh last year after guiding the Steelers to a division title and a
playoff berth in his first season.
He is 30-13 since replacing Bill Cowher in 2007, including 5-2 this season.
Like Tomlin, Denver's Josh McDaniels never was a head coach at any level
before he was hired at age 32 to replace Mike Shanahan last winter. His Broncos
are 6-1 and the biggest surprise of the first half of the season. McDaniels'
decision to send Pro Bowl passer Jay Cutler to Chicago for Kyle Orton or to
ship his first-round draft pick next year to Seattle don't look like such crazy
ideas anymore.
Both Tomlin and McDaniels say the opportunity to coach a superstar during
their days as an assistant accelerated their careers and prepared them for the
rigors of an NFL head coaching job while they were still in their early or
mid-30s.
For Tomlin, that player was safety John Lynch, whom he instructed as Tampa
Bay's defensive backs coach, his first NFL gig. Together, they won a Super Bowl
ring in 2002.
For McDaniels, it was New England quarterback Tom Brady, whom he tutored
from 2004-08. They won the 2004 Super Bowl when McDaniels was Patriots
quarterbacks coach.
``Tom is the hardest player I've ever had to coach, and that's a compliment
to him, not a knock on him in any way,'' McDaniels said. ``He was the hardest
because he required the most information and he required me to use every minute
that I had to spend with him in a productive way.''
McDaniels wouldn't dare try to fill up an hour-long meeting with 30 minutes
of instruction. So, he never went home the night before until he was certain he
had enough new lesson plans for Brady, a notorious bookworm and film freak.
McDaniels said all that late-night cramming and the time they spent together
made him a better teacher as he honed the skills he's now using to try to
restore Denver's dominance.
``You had to go above and beyond and you had to look at things differently
and you had to prepare harder and you had to study harder,'' McDaniels said.
``It was a challenge to go into those meetings and make a player who was
already great even better. When I had an opportunity to coach him, he had
already won two Super Bowls, and then to coach him just demanded so much from
myself and it made me a better coach.''
Tomlin understands completely.
``I think every coach that has been given an opportunity to rise up through
the ranks and excel (knows it's) because of a relationship or an interaction
that he's had with a player or with some players that have been significant to
him,'' Tomlin said.
``Really, the same thing can be said for players. Great players usually have
been instructed in some form or fashion or assisted in their growth and
development by some coach,'' Tomlin said. ``They are countless examples of
that. You can go back to the (Bill) Parcells and Lawrence Taylors, the Bill
Walshes, the Joe Montanas. I think it's a delicate ecosystem. I think there is
some codependency there.''
And nobody meant more to Tomlin's rapid rise through the ranks than Lynch,
who wound up his career in Denver in 2007, the same year Tomlin took over in
Pittsburgh after a season as Minnesota's defensive coordinator.
``He's a special guy,'' Tomlin said. ``My interaction with him and to have
an opportunity to work with him was truly a blessing.''
Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey said Lynch used to praise Tomlin back when
he wasn't a household name and was still rising through the assistant ranks.
``He always spoke highly of him,'' Bailey said. ``I wasn't surprised when he
got the (Steelers) job.''
So, what did Lynch have to say about Tomlin?
``He's a great motivator,'' Bailey said.
Just like McDaniels.
``They're both young, energetic, they both definitely know how to get their
guys ready,'' Bailey said.
McDaniels, who looks much younger than his 33 years, has proven a much more
fiery coach than Shanahan, never shy to get in players' or coaches' faces on
the sideline when things go bad. Or to fist-pump better than Tiger Woods after
a win.
He wears his emotions on his hoodie sleeve.
``He has a lot of energy. Whether it's good or bad energy, he's going to let
you know how he feels every day,'' Bailey said. ``I'm getting used to it. I
kind of like it because you know where it's coming from.''
The Broncos saw plenty of McDaniels' ``bad energy'' during the week after
their 30-7 beatdown in Baltimore that ended their unbeaten streak. The Steelers
bring the same sort of challenge with their physical style of play.
So, the Broncos are trying to get their mojo back by returning to the
well-coached, physical and disciplined team they were before the Ravens
outmuscled and outhustled them.
``You know that next day you will be hurting,'' said Broncos linebacker
Andra Davis, explaining that being physical is mostly mental. ``So just accept
the fact, go in there and bang, throw your body around and try to knock your
guy back. It will be an all-day effort. You have to go in there and bang, bang,
bang.''
Returning to Denver should bring back some happy memories for the Steelers,
who thumped Denver in the 2005 AFC championship on their way to their last
title under Cowher.
``It was a long time ago,'' Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said.
``When I come up there I think more about (John) Elway than I do about that
game.''
Still, the Steelers have 22 players left from the team that won the
conference championship on that watershed afternoon, and the Broncos have just
three holdovers: Bailey, linebacker D.J. Williams and guard Ben Hamilton.
These teams have gone in different directions since then, but the Broncos
seem to be turning things around, and McDaniels wouldn't mind following in
Tomlin's footsteps.
``He's certainly a guy that most of us would emulate,'' McDaniels said,
``winning a Super Bowl in his second year and being as successful as he's been
so far.''
11/06/09 23:12
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