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View Full Version : Rest in Peace, Bill Walsh


philhos
07-30-2007, 09:34 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=kreidler_mark&id=2954718
Walsh a treasure in Bay Area
By Mark Kreidler
Bill Walsh? Oh, nothing special. He only reinvented football in Northern California. He only changed the tenor of an entire sporting generation with the success he fostered. He made it cool to like the NFL north of L.A. Other than that, no big deal.

Think Chuck Noll in Pittsburgh, Tom Landry in Dallas, Don Shula in Miami. That was Walsh in and around San Francisco, and he created almost all of that aura in one compact decade of NFL coaching. Almost 20 years later, you'll find no shortage of people still asking why Walsh wasn't more often consulted within the franchise lately. It's that kind of a shadow.
The NFL undoubtedly feels a collective loss at the passing of Walsh. But as important as he was to the league, and as far as the Walsh coaching tree's branches now extend, it is in Northern California that Walsh's absence is most acutely felt: San Francisco and Oakland, San Jose, Sacramento, Marin -- all the places where it came to feel all right to invest emotionally in the fortunes of a sports team because Walsh was the one coaching it.
Walsh was that important. He was less magnetic than Joe Montana, certainly, and on his best day not one-tenth as fiery as Hall of Fame safety Ronnie Lott. But without Walsh, the car just doesn't go.
If you were making a list of the most important things ever to happen to sports in Northern California and didn't put Walsh's ascension as coach up near the top, you'd be laughed out of the room. He was more than the 49ers' guy, for one thing. He did time at San Jose State as an assistant coach in the 1960s, drawing up plays on cocktail napkins for head coach John Ralston. He was the head coach at Stanford in the mid-'70s, and later returned there not once but twice, first as head coach again and then as the interim athletic director.
But it was the Walsh-Eddie DeBartolo relationship that sealed the deal. It was that relationship, with the brash young owner hiring the utterly self-confident coach -- a hiring settled over a bottle of wine at a landmark San Francisco hotel -- that altered the fortunes of a franchise for nearly a quarter century.
You wonder why the Bay Area loved Bill Walsh and never stopped loving him? The 49ers were so bereft when he took over as head coach in 1979 that his first season ended with a 2-14 record -- and no one blamed him. This was a franchise that had known some success over the years, had seen John Brodie in his prime, but it was lost in space by the time Walsh got down to the sideline. Undertalented, badly organized and absent a plan, the team had spun out completely.
By then, though, Walsh had cobbled together the basic components of what became known as the West Coast offense (interesting, since Walsh first began toying with it while an assistant with the Cincinnati Bengals in the late '60s). He knew he wanted quick quarterback drops and quick reads. He wanted passes so short and true they could be easily substituted in any run-traditional situation. He loved catch-and-run plays that put the ball in the hands of his receivers -- Dwight Clark, John Taylor, Jerry Rice, et al -- and then allowed them to be athletes.
He borrowed from the masters, people such as Sid Gillman and Paul Brown and Al Davis and others, but the resulting system was uniquely Walsh's -- until teams, always interested in copying whatever works, began spreading the West Coast religion throughout the NFL via Walsh protégés such as Mike Holmgren, Mike Shanahan and Jon Gruden. By then, Walsh's success was pretty much complete. Two years after that 2-14 debacle, his 49ers, now operating with Montana behind center, won their first Super Bowl. They would win five in all under the Walsh system, three for him and two for his successor, George Seifert -- and Seifert, for all his success in the Steve Young era, never did outrun the legend of the man he replaced.
One reason Northern Californians held Walsh in such regard, in fact, was the man's impeccable sense of dramatic timing. Walsh quit after an even decade as an NFL coach, in 1989, after winning another Super Bowl. He left on top. He gifted Seifert a team and a system that would go right out and win another championship the next season.
He didn't stay too long. In fact, Walsh did it just right, if the goal was to leave the people wanting a little more. And what's so interesting about all that is Walsh later regretted the move. He was tired, yes, and burned out after having served as coach, GM, president and jack-of-all-trades for the hard-charging DeBartolo. But Walsh spent some of his final years wondering just how much winning his 49ers might have accomplished had he stuck it out a while longer.
It's an imponderable, of course. Eventually, the NFL changed the salary rules that had allowed DeBartolo and Walsh to stockpile talent and keep it out of the hands of the competition (Young famously languished on the sideline for years, waiting for Montana to be done), and as Walsh's disciples fanned out across the league, they took with them some great modified versions of the offense he designed.
Those would have been some killer matchups, Walsh against Holmgren's Packers or Shanahan's Broncos. Instead, Walsh segued into a second stint at Stanford, and served as a kind of constant adviser to DeBartolo. In time, an embattled DeBartolo had to give up the franchise, and only then did it become apparent that the Walsh era had passed.
It passed with a whimper, the John York-Denise DeBartolo ownership axis just shredding the franchise, beginning with a nonsensical firing of Steve Mariucci from which the 49ers never really recovered. It only increased San Francisco's yearning for the Walsh years. It's something the fans in Northern California never really did get over, and that feels absolutely right. When you get the good stuff, accept no substitutes. Mark Kreidler's book "Four Days to Glory: Wrestling With the Soul of the American Heartland," published by HarperCollins, is in national release. A regular contributor to ESPN.com., Kreidler can be reached at mark@markkreidler.com (mark@markkreidler.com).
http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2007/0730/nfl_u_bwalshobit_skirmish.jpg (http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=kreidler_mark&id=2954718)

philhos
07-30-2007, 09:53 PM
Mike Brown's statement on the death of Bill Walsh:
"Bill's record speaks for itself. He was the top coach in the NFL during his time in San Francisco. During his eight years on our coaching staff (1968-75), he brought imagination and ideas to the game. He was a tremendous part of our staff, and we were lucky to have him. He set a mark on the game that is admired by everyone, and he will be greatly missed."

Klytus
07-30-2007, 10:22 PM
A fine review for one of the greatest coaches of all time. Pro Football is better for Bill Walsh's vision and mastery of football. And as most of you know, many of Walsh's assistants became head coaches. Walsh stated that the original idea of the West Coast offense came from Paul Brown. To paraphrase, Paul Brown told then coordinator Walsh, "I want you to create some motion during the plays."
I know the 49ers have been through some tough times but they have a good head coach and the team should have success this year.

GO STEELERS!!

calell83
07-31-2007, 09:50 AM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....

graphicguy
07-31-2007, 10:02 AM
One of the greatest coaching minds ever to stalk the NFL sidelines.He was the mastermind of all of those powerhouse 49er teams (that beat the Bengals in the SB).He could have been the HC here. I never could understand how the great Paul Brown would pick Tiger Johnson over Bill Walsh to be the Bengals HC. That's all in the past, though and has no bearing on the passing of a legend.May he RIP!

Beaker
07-31-2007, 11:57 AM
Harsh as it may sound, that guy cant be buried deep enough for me. Yeah, I know, football "genius", blah blah blah. He stuck it to the Bengals more than once.

philhos
07-31-2007, 01:13 PM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....
That's what happens when legends die. And yes, Walsh was a legend.

calell83
07-31-2007, 01:19 PM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....
That's what happens when legends die. And yes, Walsh was a legend.

He was but I don't need to hear them talk about for hours and days on end

philhos
07-31-2007, 01:25 PM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....
That's what happens when legends die. And yes, Walsh was a legend.

He was but I don't need to hear them talk about for hours and days on end


And I hate all the talk about Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton or even Hillary Clinton's "cleavage controversy," yet that's all that's talked about.
Some days, you just gotta move on to other things and ignore the news channels.

calell83
07-31-2007, 01:31 PM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....
That's what happens when legends die. And yes, Walsh was a legend.

He was but I don't need to hear them talk about for hours and days on end


And I hate all the talk about Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton or even Hillary Clinton's "cleavage controversy," yet that's all that's talked about.
Some days, you just gotta move on to other things and ignore the news channels.

I agree, I woudl much rather hear about Walsh then any of those trampy rich girls over and over...Mostly why I don't watch the news

philhos
07-31-2007, 01:39 PM
I respect the man as a great coach and Football man. However, does there need to be consatnt coverage of this. He was 75 and had Leukemia. Since it broke yesterday that has been all that is on ESPN, ESPN Radio and sports discussion in general. Pay your respects and move on....
That's what happens when legends die. And yes, Walsh was a legend.

He was but I don't need to hear them talk about for hours and days on end


And I hate all the talk about Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton or even Hillary Clinton's "cleavage controversy," yet that's all that's talked about.
Some days, you just gotta move on to other things and ignore the news channels.

I agree, I woudl much rather hear about Walsh then any of those trampy rich girls over and over...Mostly why I don't watch the news

Or worse, you gotta hear people talk about the following (***Warning! Do not scroll below if you have a sensitive stomach***):













http://women.timesonline.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00192/hillary_clinton_192969a.jpg

doctorhook18
07-31-2007, 01:46 PM
Man that was disgusting! I just ate too....

philhos
07-31-2007, 01:48 PM
Man that was disgusting! I just ate too....
Hey! I warned you.
Would these make you feel better?
http://www.all4humor.com/images/files/Scary%20Hillary%20Clinton.jpg
http://www.usasurvival.org/images/hillary.jpg
http://steelturman.typepad.com/thesteeldeal/images/hillary_clinton_boobs_bill_cleavage.jpg

doctorhook18
07-31-2007, 01:53 PM
Man that was disgusting! I just ate too....
Hey! I warned you.
Would these make you feel better?
http://www.all4humor.com/images/files/Scary%20Hillary%20Clinton.jpg
http://www.usasurvival.org/images/hillary.jpg
http://steelturman.typepad.com/thesteeldeal/images/hillary_clinton_boobs_bill_cleavage.jpg


There is no way Big Bill is hitting that..... (impossible to get an erection! She's the anti-erection!)

philhos
07-31-2007, 02:02 PM
There is no way Big Bill is hitting that..... (impossible to get an erection! She's the anti-erection!)
WRONG! Margaret Thatcher is the anti-erection.
"Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day. Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day."

http://www.profindsearch.com/Img/Margaret_Thatcher_80th_Birthday.jpg

Beaker
07-31-2007, 02:42 PM
"Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day. Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day."

http://www.profindsearch.com/Img/Margaret_Thatcher_80th_Birthday.jpg

Hit.

philhos
07-31-2007, 03:02 PM
"Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day. Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day."

http://www.profindsearch.com/Img/Margaret_Thatcher_80th_Birthday.jpg

Hit.

Now? Or when she was still alive?

doctorhook18
07-31-2007, 03:10 PM
We are so disgracing Bill Walsh with pictures of Hillary and Thatcher on his RIP thread. LOL

Steely_J
08-01-2007, 10:49 AM
"Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day. Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day."

http://www.profindsearch.com/Img/Margaret_Thatcher_80th_Birthday.jpg

Hit.

Now? Or when she was still alive?


Does it really matter?

Beaker
08-01-2007, 02:00 PM
We are so disgracing Bill Walsh with pictures of Hillary and Thatcher on his RIP thread. LOL
Pffft to bill walsh.

philhos
08-01-2007, 03:12 PM
"Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day. Margaret Thatcher naked in the woods on a cold day."

http://www.profindsearch.com/Img/Margaret_Thatcher_80th_Birthday.jpg

Hit.

Now? Or when she was still alive?


Does it really matter?

Eeeeeeeeeeeeeewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww, gross, Steely. [+o(]

SteelTorch
08-01-2007, 03:28 PM
Any chance we could at least stop quoting the picture over and over? [+o(][+o(][+o(]