Dick Nolan (American football)

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Dick Nolan
Photo of Nolan wearing a red San Francisco 49ers jacket and black pants crouching on the sideline
Personal information
Date of birth (1932-03-26)March 26, 1932
Place of birth Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Date of death Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Place of death Grapevine, Texas
Career information
Position(s) Safety
College Maryland
NFL Draft 1954 / Round 4 / Pick 41
Head coaching record
Regular season 69–82–5 (.458)
Postseason 2–3 (.400)
Career record 71–88–5 (.457)
Stats
Playing stats Pro Football Reference
Coaching stats (NFL) Pro Football Reference
Team(s) as a player
1954–1957 New York Giants
1958 Chicago Cardinals
1959–1961 New York Giants
1962 Dallas Cowboys
Team(s) as a coach/administrator
1962–1967 Dallas Cowboys (DC)
1968–1975 San Francisco 49ers (head coach)
1977 New Orleans Saints (LB)
1978–1980 New Orleans Saints (head coach)
1981 Houston Oilers (DC)
1982–1985 Dallas Cowboys (WR)
1986–1990 Dallas Cowboys (DB)
1991 Denver Broncos (DL)
1992 San Antonio Force Arena league

Richard Charles Nolan (March 26, 1932 – November 11, 2007) was an American football player and head coach in the National Football League. He was the father of college and NFL coach Mike Nolan.

Early years

In his youth, Nolan was the starting quarterback at White Plains High School. He accepted a scholarship from the University of Maryland, where he was converted to running back and safety. He received honorable-mention All-American honors as a senior.[1] He was a key contributor to the school's 1953 championship team.

Professional career

In the NFL, he played for a total of nine seasons (1954–62) in the defensive halfback, safety, and defensive back positions.[2] He was selected in the fourth round (41st overall) of the 1954 NFL Draft by the New York Giants.[3] On May 10, 1958, he was traded to the Chicago Cardinals.[4] He returned to the Giants in 1959.

On April 27, 1962, he was traded to the Dallas Cowboys in a three-team deal, with the Green Bay Packers acquiring kicking specialist Allen Green and the Giants obtaining a draft pick from the Packers.[5] He reunited with former teammate Tom Landry, who used Nolan as a "player-coach". When Nolan was injured halfway through his first season, he became the Cowboys' defensive coordinator.[6]

Coaching career

Nolan was on the Cowboys' staff for six years, the last year being the season in which the Cowboys played in the Ice Bowl. Afterwards, he was head coach of the San Francisco 49ers for eight seasons from 1968 through 1975, noted for developing the defense and taking the team to three straight NFC West division titles (1970–72), twice missing the Super Bowl by only one game (1970–71). Additionally, he was head coach for the New Orleans Saints from 1978–80 going 15–29. He was the first Saints head coach to win six, seven, and eight games in a single season, going 7–9 in 1978 and 8–8 in 1979.[7] Nolan was fired by the Saints in 1980 after an 0–12 start. His last game was on November 24 of that season, a 27–7 loss to the Los Angeles Rams on Monday Night Football. The Saints finished the 1980 season 1–15, as interim coach Dick Stanfel won only one of his four games, a 21–20 victory over the New York Jets in week 15.

His alma mater, the University of Maryland, College Park, interviewed Nolan for the head coach vacancy created when Jerry Claiborne left for Kentucky, but ultimately, chose Bobby Ross, instead.[8]

Nolan holds the dubious distinction of being the head coach of the Arena Football League's San Antonio Force in 1992, the only team in Arena history to be shut out, 50-0 by the Orlando Predators on June 13, 1992

Nolan was well known for wearing business suits while coaching, as did many other coaches during his era. The league has since disallowed this practice in most circumstances due to the league signing exclusive apparel deals with sportswear companies (specifically Reebok). The league made an exception after Nolan's death in 2007, allowing Nolan's son Mike [9] and Jack Del Rio, coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars, to wear suits in the elder Nolan's honor.[10]

References

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Houston Oilers Defensive Coordinator
1981
Succeeded by
Chuck Studley (vacant until 1983)