Difference between revisions of "Marty Schottenheimer"
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[[Image:Marty Schottenheimer.JPG|thumb|220px]] | [[Image:Marty Schottenheimer.JPG|thumb|220px]] | ||
− | '''Marty Schottenheimer''' (born September 23, 1943)is a former NFL head coach and current television broadcaster for [[ESPN]]. Since he first was named as a head coach of the [[Cleveland Browns]] in 1984, he has coached the Browns (1984-1988), [[Kansas City Chiefs]] (1989-1998), [[Washington Redskins]] (2001), | + | '''Marty Schottenheimer''' (born September 23, 1943)is a former NFL head coach and current television broadcaster for [[ESPN]]. Since he first was named as a head coach of the [[Cleveland Browns]] in 1984, he has coached the Browns (1984-1988), [[Kansas City Chiefs]] (1989-1998), [[Washington Redskins]] (2001), and [[San Diego Chargers]] (2003-2006). Schottenheimer is one of the most winning coaches in NFL history. He has a regular season record of 200 wins, 126 loses and one tie. However, he is also the most winning coach to never win a [[Super Bowl]].<ref>http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2763552</ref> |
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 15:16, July 27, 2016
Marty Schottenheimer (born September 23, 1943)is a former NFL head coach and current television broadcaster for ESPN. Since he first was named as a head coach of the Cleveland Browns in 1984, he has coached the Browns (1984-1988), Kansas City Chiefs (1989-1998), Washington Redskins (2001), and San Diego Chargers (2003-2006). Schottenheimer is one of the most winning coaches in NFL history. He has a regular season record of 200 wins, 126 loses and one tie. However, he is also the most winning coach to never win a Super Bowl.[1]