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Eric Mangini

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Title
  
Defensive coordinator

Regular season
  
33–47 (.413)

Education
  
Wesleyan University

College
  
Wesleyan

Spouse
  
Julie Mangini (m. 2001)

Position(s)
  
Nose tackle

Role
  
Coach

Name
  
Eric Mangini


Eric Mangini 1370108915000c02web29130601165334jpg


Date of birth
  
(1971-01-19) January 19, 1971 (age 44)

Past teams coached
  
New York Jets (Head coach, 2006–2008)

Similar People
  
Geep Chryst, Jim Tomsula, Mike Holmgren, Romeo Crennel, Chad Pennington

Place of birth
  
Hartford, Connecticut

Jets fire head coach eric mangini


Eric Anthony Mangini (born January 19, 1971) is an American football coach who last served as the defensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL). Mangini had been with the 49ers since 2013 and served as the team's tight ends coach for two seasons before being promoted to defensive coordinator in 2015, only to be fired in 2016 by new head coach Chip Kelly (himself fired by the 49ers at season's end).

Contents

Eric Mangini Eric Mangini Is Excellent Hire By San Francisco 49ers

Mangini is a former head coach, having served as the coach of the New York Jets from 2006 until 2008 and the Cleveland Browns in 2009 and 2010. Prior to taking his position with the 49ers, Mangini was an NFL analyst for ESPN.

Eric Mangini Eric Mangini Hire Not a Home Run for 49ers but Defense

Mangini is known for being a former assistant under Bill Belichick, serving under him as a defensive assistant while Belichick was the defensive coordinator with the Jets and later following him to the New England Patriots, where he succeeded Romeo Crennel as defensive coordinator in 2005 after Crennel took the head coaching position with the Browns (a position he would also be succeeded in by Mangini).

Eric Mangini Raiders are interested in Mangini Off the Record OTR

Eric mangini fired as coach of the browns


High school

Eric Mangini Eric Mangini WMEIMG Speakers

Mangini was a linebacker at Bulkeley High School in Hartford, Connecticut.

College

Mangini played nose tackle at Division III Wesleyan University and holds the school's single-season (11.5) and career (36.5) sacks records. During the second semester of his junior and senior years, he coached the Kew Colts, a semi-professional football team in Melbourne, Australia, to two regional championships. Mangini joined the Chi Psi Fraternity that coaching mentor Bill Belichick, another Wesleyan alumnus, was part of two decades earlier.

Assistant coach

Mangini first caught the attention of Bill Belichick, under whom he would coach for nine seasons, as a 23-year-old ball boy with the Cleveland Browns. His work ethic impressed Belichick, and the head coach was instrumental in promoting Mangini to a public relations intern, and later, an offensive assistant.

After spending 1996 as an offensive assistant with the Baltimore Ravens, Mangini rejoined Belichick and spent three seasons as a defensive assistant with the New York Jets. When Belichick was hired as the New England Patriots head coach in 2000, he brought along Mangini as his defensive backs coach. Mangini, who won three Super Bowls with the Patriots, turned down defensive coordinator positions with the Miami Dolphins, Oakland Raiders and Cleveland Browns before accepting the role with New England in 2005.

Head coach

New York Jets

Mangini, 35, became the youngest head coach in the NFL when he was hired by the Jets on January 17, 2006, to replace Herm Edwards. He beat internal candidates Donnie Henderson, Mike Heimerdinger and Mike Westhoff and external candidates Jim Haslett, Mike Tice, Tim Lewis and Joe Vitt for the job. He was quickly nicknamed "The Penguin" by receiver Laveranues Coles because of his waddle and fierce stare.

In his first season, Mangini led the Jets to a 10-6 record and a postseason berth with NFL Comeback Player of the Year quarterback Chad Pennington. New York, which finished the previous year 4-12, lost to New England in a wild-card playoff game.

New York went 4-12 in 2007, failing to make the playoffs. Early in the regular season, Mangini complained to league officials that Belichick's Patriots illegally filmed the Jets' defensive signals, exposing the "Spygate" scandal.

In 2008, a late-season collapse—the Jets missed the playoffs despite an 8-3 start—led to Mangini's firing on December 29, 2008, one day after the season ended.

Cleveland Browns

Mangini was hired as the head coach of the Cleveland Browns on January 7, 2009, signing a four-year deal. Mangini faced early criticism in his tenure with Cleveland for his tendency to micromanage the team and his disregard for the team's history (one of his first acts was to tear down a mural of Browns greats on the wall of the team office). Sports Illustrated columnist Joe Posnanski went so far as to call Mangini's hiring by the Browns as the worst coaching hire from the past 25 years. In his 2013 memoir, former player Nate Jackson, who was briefly part of the Browns practice squad during the 2009 preseason, sharply criticized Mangini. Jackson wrote that Mangini's coaching style had so alienated his players that they seemed "deep in despair" with "no fight left in them" only a few months after Mangini took over.

After starting his first season in Cleveland 1-11, the Browns bounced back with a win over their division rival and defending Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers. This started a four-game winning streak to end the season with a 5-11 record. On January 7, 2010 it was announced that Mike Holmgren had decided to retain Mangini as head coach of the Browns for the 2010 season.

Mangini's second season was highlighted with back-to-back upsets over the defending Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints and New England Patriots. The Browns had been forced to start rookie quarterback Colt McCoy due to injuries to starting quarterback Jake Delhomme. The season also saw the breakout of running back Peyton Hillis. These developments however did not amount to any marked improvement, as the Browns once again finished 5-11.

On January 3, 2011 Mangini was fired with a 10-22 record as the head coach of the Browns.

San Francisco 49ers

Mangini was hired by the 49ers as a senior offensive consultant on June 4, 2013. On February 20, 2014, he was promoted to be the tight ends coach. On January 22, 2015, he was again promoted to be the defensive coordinator. However, after just one season, he was released along with most of the coaching staff after head coach Jim Tomsula was fired and replaced by Chip Kelly.

Coaching tree

NFL head coaches under whom Eric Mangini has served:

  • Ted Marchibroda: Baltimore Ravens (1996)
  • Bill Parcells: New York Jets (1997–1999)
  • Bill Belichick: New England Patriots (2000–2005)
  • Jim Harbaugh: San Francisco 49ers (2013–2014)
  • Jim Tomsula: San Francisco 49ers (2015)
  • Assistant coaches under Eric Mangini who became NFL head coaches:

  • Dan Quinn: Atlanta Falcons (2015–present)
  • Personal life

    Mangini and his wife Julie have three sons, Jake, Luke and Zack, whose middle names honor influential figures in his career. Jake Harrison is named after former Patriots safety Rodney Harrison, Luke William is named after Patriots head coach Bill Belichick and Zack Brett is named after former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre. Zack was born on Favre's 39th birthday, and Mangini had promised Favre that he would name his son after the quarterback if he signed with the Jets.

    Toronto Blue Jays President Mark Shapiro is Mangini's brother-in-law and sports agent Ron Shapiro, who currently represents him, is his father-in-law.

    Mangini had a cameo role in an episode of the mob drama The Sopranos. In the scene, Mangini is referred to by his nickname, "Mangenius."

    On August 4, 2011, it was announced that Mangini would join ESPN as an NFL studio analyst on NFL Live, SportsCenter, ESPN First Take, and other programs.

    References

    Eric Mangini Wikipedia