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Tony Dungy

football coach

Personal Information

Born on October 6, 1955, in Jackson, MI; son of Wilbur (a physiology professor) and Cleomae (an English teacher) Dungy; married Lauren Harris, c. 1982; children: Tiara, James, and Eric
Education: University of Minnesota, BA, 1977.
Memberships: American Diabetes Association, African American Program and School Walk for Diabetes campaign, national spokesperson, 2003-.

Career

Pittsburgh Steelers, defensive back, 1977-78, defensive assistant, 1981, defensive backs coach, 1982-83, defensive coordinator, 1984-88; San Francisco 49ers, defensive back, 1979; University of Minnesota, defensive backs coach, 1980; Kansas City Chiefs, defensive backs coach, 1989-91; Minnesota Vikings, defensive coordinator, 1992-95; Tampa Bay Buccaneers, head coach, 1996-2001; Indianapolis Colts, head coach, 2002-.

Life's Work

Individuals who coach professional sports teams for a living are a unique breed. Their personalities must be fiery enough to contend with the antics of the most pampered athletes. At the same time, they must be modest enough to credibly project the belief that it is the players, not the coaches, who are responsible for the outcomes of games. Pro football head coach Tony Dungy manages to belie both of those characterizations. Those with whom he has worked are unanimous in describing Dungy as the least excitable person ever to prowl a football sideline. And while he is the picture of humility, he is almost universally hailed as a coaching genius, capable of virtually single-handedly turning a football program around, transforming pathetic defenses into great ones, and changing losing organizations into winners.

Dungy was born on October 6, 1955, in Jackson, Michigan. Unlike many of his jock peers, Dungy grew up in a family that valued intellectual accomplishments as much as athletic ones. His father, Wilbur, is a retired physiology professor. His mother, Cleomae, was a high school English teacher for many years. Dungy's siblings include a sister who is an obstetrician, another who is a nurse, and a dentist brother. Even in a household where the focus was on academics, however, Dungy was drawn to football at an early age. Wilbur Dungy, when interviewed for a 1996 USA Today article, recalled that as a graduate student at Michigan State University, he would watch Detroit Lions football games with the six-year-old Tony. While the elder Dungy concentrated on his studies, "Tony would fill me in, telling me who handled the ball on every play and what happened."

Excelled as Gophers' QB

Dungy starred as a basketball guard and an option quarterback in football at Jackson's Parkside High School. It was his football exploits that captured the attention of University of Minnesota head coach Cal Stoll. By the end of his freshman year at Minnesota, Dungy had cracked the starting lineup. It quickly became clear that Dungy's approach to the game was a cerebral one. While his teammates hit the bars and engaged in other standard collegiate pursuits, Dungy spent his spare time watching game films and analyzing his opponents. As star quarterback for the Golden Gophers from 1973 to 1976, Dungy finished his college career ranked fourth in total offense among all players in the history of the Big Ten conference.

In spite of his accomplishments at Minnesota, Dungy's small stature and questionable throwing arm put off many pro scouts, and he was passed over in the NFL draft. He signed as a free agent with the Pittsburgh Steelers, where coach Chuck Noll quickly converted him into a defensive back. Although he lacked the size, power, and speed of other players at his position, Dungy made the team on the strength of his astute understanding of the defense the Steelers were running, and his ability to anticipate the moves of opposing receivers based on long hours of study and analysis.

Dungy soon came to play a key role as a reserve on Pittsburgh's famous "Steel Curtain" defense. In one 1977 game, he performed a rare feat by both making and throwing interceptions in the same game. In 1978, his second season with the Steelers, Dungy led the team with six interceptions--good for second in the AFC--and helped lead the Steelers to a Super Bowl championship. Eventually, however, it became clear that no amount of football smarts could make up for his lack of NFL-caliber speed. The Steelers traded Dungy to the San Francisco 49ers in 1979, and after a year there he was shipped to the New York Giants. The Giants cut Dungy toward the end of the 1980 preseason. Seeing that he had no future as an active player, Dungy retired, with a career total of nine interceptions over three seasons.

Assisted Stoll, Then Noll

Although Dungy was less than memorable as a player at the professional level, his understanding of the game apparently left a mark on some of the coaches with whom he had worked. Shortly after the end of his playing career, Dungy was invited by Stoll, his coach at the University of Minnesota, to return to his alma mater in the capacity of assistant coach in charge of defensive backs. The following year, Pittsburgh head coach Noll offered Dungy an assistant coaching spot with the Steelers. Dungy accepted the offer, and in 1981, at the age of 25--younger than many of the players on the team--he began his NFL coaching career.

Dungy quickly began to rise through the ranks in the Steeler organization. By 1982 he was named defensive backfield coach. Two years later Dungy became the first African American to be named defensive coordinator of an NFL team. He served as the Steelers' defensive coordinator from 1984 to 1988. During that time, Dungy-led defenses became known for overachieving, particularly in the area of causing turnovers. Dungy's name began to surface in conversations about who would become the NFL's first black head coach. In spite of his success as an assistant, however, Dungy was interviewed for only a handful of head coaching positions during this period. Many insiders attributed this lack of interest on the part of owners to Dungy's famously calm demeanor, which was considered unsuited to the position of head coach, a job more often associated with those like the fiery Vince Lombardi. Others suspected racism.

In 1989 Dungy left Pittsburgh to take over as defensive backs coach of the Kansas City Chiefs, where three of the players under his authority were named to the Pro Bowl. He remained there until 1992, when he was named defensive coordinator of the Minnesota Vikings. At Minnesota, Dungy led the NFL's top-rated defense team. Still, his desire to break into the head coaching ranks went unfulfilled, even as three other African Americans--Art Shell, Dennis Green, and Ray Rhodes--reached that goal ahead of him. Dungy stayed at Minnesota through the 1995 season.

Piloted Bucs' Turnaround

The long-awaited call finally came in 1996, when Dungy was hired as head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the least successful team in the history of the league. At Tampa Bay, Dungy, still fairly young for a head coach at 41, was faced with the task of turning around a team that had not enjoyed a winning season since the strike-shortened 1982 campaign. Dungy's start at Tampa Bay was not auspicious. The team lost its first five games of the 1996 season, and fans sensed yet another last place finish in the making. At midseason, however, things began to change. As Dungy's system began to sink in, the Buccaneers suddenly started showing signs of life. The team ended up winning five of its last seven games, including five straight on its home field, a first for the Tampa Bay franchise. At the end of the season, the team found itself somewhere other than last place for the first time since 1992.

Hopes were high in Tampa Bay as the 1997 season approached. Under Dungy's leadership, the team picked up where it had left off at the end of the previous season, winning its first five games. In spite of a midseason slump, Dungy was able to guide the Buccaneers to a second-place finish in the tough NFC Central Division, good enough for a playoff berth. The team won its wild-card game against the Detroit Lions. As Tampa Bay fans braced for their team's match up against the defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay Packers, spirits were soaring. Very few of those fans doubted that in Dungy they had finally found somebody capable of peeling the "perennial doormat" label off of their beloved team. Unfortunately they lost the game against Green Bay.

Dungy's calm coaching style has earned him the respect and dedication of his players and coaching staff alike. "You don't want to let Tony down," Buccaneers defensive end Marcus Jones told Insight on the News. "He gives us enough space to where we can be our own people. At the same time, he's a no-nonsense guy." Defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin concurred, commenting to Insight on the News, "You don't feel pressure coaching for him. You can just be yourself instead of wondering, 'What if I do something wrong and upset the coach?'" Dungy credited his calm to his Christian faith, for part of the faith is, as he told the Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, "realizing that there are things you might not ever understand and a lot of things you won't be able to control, so worrying about those things and getting frustrated is not fruitful." He also draws upon his experience as a former player, trying to treat team members as he would like a coach to treat him.

Pressured to Improve Team in 2001

Dungy spent five years with Tampa Bay, taking the Buccaneers to the playoffs three times and winning a division title in 1999. Dungy was the winningest coach in the team's history, but as the 2001 season opened with disappointing results, he came under pressure from team owners. With his job at stake, Dungy remained unflappable, telling the Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, "Every week you have to go out and get the job done. That's what you're judged on."

The pressure was on, but Dungy was not about to change his coaching strategy. "People always want to know, 'What are you going to do to get to the next level? You've got to do something dramatic,'" Dungy told Insight on the News. "We want to be at the next level, but we believe that what will get us there is doing everything a little bit better, not making dramatic changes." In the previous season, the team had performed inconsistently, alternating between good and poor offense and winning three straight games, only to lose four in a row. This is what Dungy planned to work on in the 2001 season, as opposed to making sweeping changes. "He's so steady, so consistent," offensive coordinator Clyde Christensen told Insight on the News. "I've even looked to see if maybe there's some nervousness in having to change the quarterback position ... or others here and there, but it doesn't faze him. He just keeps on trucking."

In the end, composed perseverance was not enough to save Dungy's job. The season closed with a 31-9 playoff loss to Philadelphia, and two days later, he was fired. His farewell remarks, quoted by the Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, were optimistic: "We did the best we could. It wasn't quite good enough, but we're going to go out very proud of what we did."

Dungy began exploring his options, seriously considering a new career in prison ministry. "It's something I've always wanted to do, and I thought maybe the time had come to try it." he told Sports Illustrated. "I wasn't sure I still wanted to be a coach in the NFL." But when Indianapolis Colts president Bill Polian offered Dungy a coaching position, he accepted. The team, which had had difficulty enacting the complicated strategies of their previous coach, were glad to have Dungy. Defensive tackle Ellis Johnson told Sports Illustrated, "I've studied film of Tampa's defense for a long time, just because it's such a beautiful thing to watch. Having it here, well, it's been like night and day."

Awards

Member of 1979 Super Bowl Champion Pittsburgh Steelers; National Fatherhood Initiative, Fatherhood Award, 2002.

Further Reading

  • Ebony, September 1997.
  • Insight on the News, October 1, 2001.
  • Jet, December 22, 1997.
  • Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service, August 4, 2001; October 26, 2001; January 15, 2002.
  • Los Angeles Times, September 1, 1996.
  • PR Newswire, June 11, 2002; August 15, 2003.
  • Sport, February 1986.
  • Sporting News, June 17, 1996.
  • Sports Illustrated, June 10, 1996; September 2, 2002.
  • Sports Spectrum, January 1997.
  • USA Today, March 7, 1996; August 15, 1997.
  • Washington Post, August 2, 1997.
  • Wisconsin State Journal, December 4, 1997.

— Robert R. Jacobson and Jennifer M. York

 
 
Wikipedia: Tony Dungy
Tony Dungy
Tony_Dungy_Navy.jpg
Date of birth October 6 1955 (1955--) (age 52)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Jackson, Michigan
Position(s) Head Coach
Quarterback
Defensive back
College University of Minnesota
Career Highlights
Regular Season 119-62-0
Postseason 9-8
Career Record 128-70-0
Super Bowl
      Wins
2006 Super Bowl XLI
(as head coach)
1978 Super Bowl XIII
(as player)
Championships
      Won
2006 AFC Championship
(as head coach)
1978 AFC Championship
(as player)
Playing Stats DatabaseFootball
Coaching Stats Pro Football Reference
Coaching Stats DatabaseFootball
Team(s) as a player
1977-1978
1979
Pittsburgh Steelers
San Francisco 49ers
Team(s) as a coach/administrator
1980

1981-1983

1984-1988

1989-1991

1992-1995

1996-2001

2002-Present
University of Minnesota
(defensive backs coach)
Pittsburgh Steelers
(defensive backs coach)
Pittsburgh Steelers
(defensive coordinator)
Kansas City Chiefs
(defensive backs coach)
Minnesota Vikings
(defensive coordinator)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
(head coach)
Indianapolis Colts
(head coach)

Anthony Kevin "Tony" Dungy (born October 6, 1955) is a former professional American football player and the current head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League. Prior to that, between 1996 and 2001, he was the head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He became the first African American head coach to win the Super Bowl when his Colts defeated the Chicago Bears on February 4, 2007.

Early life

Born in Jackson, Michigan, Dungy is one of the four children of Wilbur and CleoMae Dungy, both of whom were educators. Wilbur was a physiology professor, while Cleomae was a high school English teacher.[1] They encouraged a focus on academics early on in their children's lives. Tony Dungy attended Parkside High School, where he played guard position on the basketball team and the quarterback position on the football team.[1] Dungy was featured in the Sports Illustrated section Faces in the Crowd in the January 26, 1970 issue[2] which profiled his accomplishments as a high school athlete when he was 14 years old.[3]

College career

Dungy was recruited by University of Minnesota coach Cal Stoll and played for the Golden Gophers from 1973 to 1976. He entered the starting lineup as a quarterback during his freshman year and after playing for four years finished as Minnesota's career leader in pass attempts (576), completions (274), touchdown passes (25), and passing yards (3,577).[4] He also finished fourth in career total offense in the Big Ten Conference. He received Minnesota's Most Valuable Player award twice.[4] Dungy also played basketball as a freshman and coincidentally was a teammate and roommate of current Detroit Pistons head coach Flip Saunders.[5]

NFL career

Dungy was signed as a free agent by the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League as a defensive back, a fate many African-American quarterbacks in college football shared up until the middle - late 1980s when turning professional. He played as a reserve-special teams player for the Steelers in 1977 and the Super Bowl champion 1978 seasons, leading the team in interceptions in the latter campaign.

In 1979 Dungy was traded to the San Francisco 49ers, then finished his career a year later in the training camp of the New York Giants in 1980. Dungy is the only NFL player since the AFL-NFL merger to intercept a pass and throw an interception in the same game. Dungy was the emergency quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers in a 1977 game against the Houston Oilers when both Terry Bradshaw and Mike Kruczek went down with injuries on October 30 1977.[6] He played safety on defense.

Coaching career

Assistant coaching positions

Following his retirement, Dungy was invited to become an assistant coach for his alma mater, the University of Minnesota in 1980. After one season in charge of defensive backs, he was asked to come back to the NFL as a coach. He was hired as an assistant coach with the Steelers by Chuck Noll, his former coach, in 1981.

In 1982, he was named defensive backfield coach, and was promoted in 1984 to defensive coordinator. He left the Steelers in 1989 to become the defensive backs coach for the Kansas City Chiefs, and took over the defensive coordinator position for the Minnesota Vikings under Dennis Green in 1992. While at Minnesota, Dungy's defense was ranked first in the NFL.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Dungy finally achieved his dream when he was hired as head coach by Rich McKay to reform the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a team well-known for its lack of success, on January 22, 1996.[7] Dungy installed his version of the Cover 2 defense with Defensive Coordinator Monte Kiffin with a few new wrinkles now known as the famous Tampa 2. Despite losing his first handfull of games in 1996, the Bucs finished strong and showed signs of turning it around. After a home win vs the Raiders, The Bucs fell to a quick 14-0 hole to the Chargers in San Diego, where the Bucs had not won on the west coast in over 15 years. Instead of folding it in, Tampa Bay fought to a hard win, that many feel was the game the team turned the corner.

In 1997, the Buccaneers finished second in the NFC Central division, Tampa Bay's first winning season since 1982 after starting the season 5-0 matching the only time the Bucs were ever undefeated with as many wins in the 1979 season. In the last game played at Tampa Stadium, the Bucs defeated the Detroit Lions in their first playoff game, losing the next game to the defending champion Green Bay Packers.

Under Dungy's watch, the Buccaneers went to the playoffs four times and won their division in 1999 only to lose to the St Louis Rams in the NFC Championship Game. However Tampa Bay under Dungy struggled to reach the playoffs in his last four seasons. Also, in his last three playoff games, Tampa Bay was offensively shut out. Constant changes to the offensive coordinator position despite a successful 2000 offensive ranking was often to blame, as QB Shaun King had to work with 3 different coordinators in 3 years. Dungy was fired by the team on January 14, 2002[7] due to the club's repeated losses in the playoffs including two lopsided defeats (in 2000 and 2001) to the Philadelphia Eagles; and because it was determined by the team's higher management that the conservative offense that Dungy ran was too inconsistent against NFL teams. The following year, the Buccaneers easily defeated the Philadelphia Eagles in the 2002 NFC Championship game under coach Jon Gruden en route to the club's first Super Bowl appearance and victory.

Indianapolis Colts

On January 22 2002, Dungy was hired as head coach of the Indianapolis Colts, a team that at the time was very potent offensively, but very weak defensively. He installed his "Tampa 2" defense immediately and ever since has set about retooling the Colts' defense to his liking. Since joining the Colts, Dungy has left the high-powered offense previously installed there by Jim Mora, in both playing style and in personnel, virtually unchanged. Dungy would be reunited with Tom Moore, who was retained as offensive coordinator. Moore and Dungy had previously worked together at Minnesota and Pittsburgh.[8]

During his early tenure in Indianapolis, Dungy struggled to fix the Colts' defense, and has had mixed results in the post season. In his first season at Indianapolis the Colts were shut out 41-0 by the New York Jets in a first-round playoff game, and the team lost postseason games to the New England Patriots in both 2003 (in the AFC championship game) and 2004 (in the second round of the playoffs). Dungy signed a three-year contract extension in October 2005[9] for US$ 5 million per year.[10]

The Colts focused on defensive improvements during the 2005 off season, signing five-year defensive tackle Corey Simon. Widely expected to be a Super Bowl contender, the Colts won their first 13 games, prompting much speculation about the possibility of the Colts becoming the NFL's first team to finish the season undefeated since the 1972 Miami Dolphins.

However, this dream was shattered when the Colts lost their 14th game to the San Diego Chargers. The Colts did manage to obtain home field advantage throughout the playoffs, but were defeated in the divisional playoff round against the Pittsburgh Steelers. This loss made the Colts the first team to ever start a season 13-0 and not reach the Super Bowl.

Dungy answers questions during  a visit to the White House
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Dungy answers questions during a visit to the White House

The Colts 2006 playoff run was characterized by a marked improvement in defensive play, as the Colts defeated the Kansas City Chiefs, holding one of the NFL's best running backs to less than 50 yards, and upset the favored Baltimore Ravens in the divisional round. On January 21, 2007, after trailing 21-3, the Colts defeated the New England Patriots to become AFC Champions and advanced to Super Bowl XLI. This was the largest comeback in the conference-title game history.[11]

On February 4 2007, Dungy and the Indianapolis Colts won Super Bowl XLI 29-17 over Lovie Smith and the Chicago Bears at Dolphin Stadium in Miami.

Coaching "firsts"

Dungy's career has included several notable "firsts". Among them, Dungy is the first NFL head coach to defeat all 32 NFL teams.[4] He was also the youngest assistant coach at age 25[4] and the youngest coordinator at age 28[4] in NFL history.

Although Dungy was the second black head coach to advance to the Super Bowl (along with Chicago Bears head coach Lovie Smith, who advanced a few hours before Indianapolis), he was the first black head coach to win. He was however the third black head coach to win a pro football championship in North America, behind Darren Arbet of the San Jose Sabercats (Arena Football League) who won ArenaBowl XVI in 2002 and Pinball Clemons of the Toronto Argonauts (Canadian Football League) who won the 92nd Grey Cup in 2004.

Dungy also became the sixth man to play in a Super Bowl and be the head coach of a Super Bowl team. He joins Dan Reeves, Sam Wyche, Mike Ditka, Forrest Gregg and Tom Flores. After the win in Super Bowl XLI, Dungy became the third man to win Super Bowls both as a player and a head coach. The other two are Mike Ditka and Tom Flores.

Coaching strategy

Main article: Tampa 2

On offense, Dungy's strategy involves a conservative, ball-control offense based primarily around running the ball and short, high-percentage passes when he was at Tampa Bay. At Indianapolis, he inherited and kept the offense designed by offensive coordinator Tom Moore because the offense was in the hands of someone he knew and trusted.[8] As in both cases, most of the offensive planning has been handled by his offensive coordinators.

On defense, Dungy uses a stifling "Cover 2" style zone defense, which is usually based on a formation with 4 linemen, 3 linebackers, and 4 defensive backs. The "Cover 2" defense Dungy uses involves having his linemen rushing the passer, the cornerbacks covering the passing flat area, the linebackers covering the middle of the field, and the safeties providing deep coverage on each half of their respective zones. While the Cover 2 defense is not a new concept, the personnel that Dungy uses in this defense is very specific, and as a result, his style of defense has earned the moniker of the "Tampa 2" around the NFL.[12]

Coaching tree

See also: coaching tree

Like Bill Parcells, Bill Belichick, Bill Walsh, Mike Holmgren and Marty Schottenheimer, Dungy is also credited with supporting and fostering the development of defensive-minded coaches, during his tenure with the Bucs. His contributions have had a great effect on the diversity of the league and helped lead to the institution of the Rooney Rule by Steeler's owner Dan Rooney, requiring teams to interview minority coaches.

Tony Dungy and Nathan Whitaker at the book-signing of Quiet Strength, Fort Wayne, Indiana, July 15, 2007 (Robert E. Nylund)
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Tony Dungy and Nathan Whitaker at the book-signing of Quiet Strength, Fort Wayne, Indiana, July 15, 2007 (Robert E. Nylund)

As of January 23 2007, four members from Dungy's coaching staff are head coaches of other NFL teams:[13]

Moreover, Mike Shula, the offensive coordinator under Dungy at Tampa, was the head coach of Alabama between 2003 and 2006. Joe Barry, a linebackers coach under Dungy at Tampa Bay, is the defensive coordinator for the Detroit Lions.[14] Leslie Frazier, a defensive backs coach under Dungy at Indianapolis, is the defensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings.[15]

Although Dungy is listed as not only a part of the Bill Walsh coaching tree, but also a part of the Marty Schottenheimer coaching tree, the Dungy tree grew from the roots of the Pittsburgh Steelers' dynasty of the 1970s. He was influenced by the defensive schemes learned under Chuck Noll and Bud Carson.[16] Dungy said that he inherited most of the coaching philosophies from Noll and he is proud be a protégé of Noll.[17]

Coaching philosophy

The coaches under Dungy are essentially teachers[18] who put faith and family ahead of football and do not belittle their players or scream at them. Also, like Dungy, they remain calm when things go badly. They guide instead of goad, and Lovie Smith found that perhaps the most instructive thing of all.

Smith said,

"We talked about how to do it, being a teacher instead of screaming and yelling, all that stuff." [19]

Smith also said,

"I think as you look to young coaches coming up in the ranks, a lot of us have a picture of how a coach is supposed to be, how he is supposed to act...And I think what Tony Dungy showed me is you don't have to act that way."[20]

Dungy said,

"I really wanted to show people you can win all kinds of ways. I always coached the way I've wanted to be coached. I know Lovie has done the same thing. For guys to have success where it maybe goes against the grain, against the culture ... I know I probably didn't get a couple of jobs in my career because people could not see my personality or the way I was going to do it ... For your faith to be more important than your job, for your family to be more important than that job ... We all know that's the way it should be, but we're afraid to say that sometimes. Lovie's not afraid to say it and I'm not afraid to say it."[21]

Dungy also learned from Noll that it takes all 53 of the players on the team to win so that a coach should train the 33rd player on the roster as he would the third player, which has become the spine of Dungy's own coaching philosophy,[22] which is the Next Man Up theory of calm coaching.[23] Dungy stressed that a team should have a thought process, a philosophy and the conviction to stick with it, even if the personnel changes during the games because of injuries.[24] Dungy said,

"Chuck's philosophy was to convince every guy on the team that his role was important. If you came in as a free agent and were just a gunner on the punt team or the third safety, you were doing something the team needed to win...It was his way of emphasizing that no one is irreplaceable. You have to coach everybody the same way. If Joe Greene goes out, Steve Furness goes in and we're not going to change anything. Chuck never panicked when someone got hurt or held out. We can still function. That made a big impression on me."[22]

Dungy put his coaching beliefs on his memoir, Quiet strength: the principles, practices, and priorities of a winning life. (ISBN 1-414-31801-4) Cam Cameron, head coach of the Miami Dolphins, highly recommended the book by buying 1,000 books to give away to football coaches at his preseason coaching clinic in July 2007 in South Florida,[25] and said,

"It dispelled so many myths about the coaching business -- that you had to be a yeller and a screamer to win. You can be your own person, treat people with respect, be very demanding but demanding in a way that doesn't trample on people. And you don't have to give up your faith to win in the NFL. It confirmed and re-affirmed an awful lot of the beliefs I held about coaching..."[25]

Political career

In August 2007, President George W. Bush appointed Dungy a member of the President's Council on Service and Civic Participation.[26] The 25-member council represents leaders from government, business, entertainment, athletics and non-profit organizations committed to growing the spirit of service and civic participation. The two-year appointment requires attendance at two in-person meetings per year and quarterly phone conversations with assigned committees. After receiving the call from President Bush, Dungy remarked "It was something that was really hard to believe. Certainly, when you go into football coaching, you’re not expecting to get presidential appointments to anything."[26]

Personal

Dungy and the 2006 Colts visit President George W. Bush at the White House.
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Dungy and the 2006 Colts visit President George W. Bush at the White House.

Dungy's tenure in Tampa Bay as the head coach of the Buccaneers brought greater attention to his personal accomplishments outside of sports. Tony Dungy has earned widespread respect both on and off the field due to what many see as strong convictions and high personal standards of ethics and behavior, which affect his behavior as both a coach and as a member of his community. He has been active in many community service organizations in the cities in which he has coached. While in Tampa Bay, Dungy worked as a public speaker for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and Athletes in Action.[4]

He began a mentoring program for young people called Mentors for Life, and provided Buccaneers' tickets for the participants. He also supported other charitable programs in the area such as Big Brothers/Big Sisters, Boys and Girls Club, the Prison Crusade Ministry, foster parenting organizations, and Family First. His community involvement and care continues in Indianapolis where Tony helped launch the Basket of Hope program which aids patients at the Riley Hospital for Children. He continues to assist Big Brothers/Big Sisters and the Boys and Girls Club in Indianapolis. He also supports the Black Coaches Association National Convention and Indiana Black Expo.[4]

Dungy is a devout Christian and at one point in his coaching career considered leaving football for the prison ministry.[6] Throughout his career, he has remained involved with community service organizations.[27] On March 20, 2007, Dungy aligned himself with a socially conservative organization, the Indiana Family Institute, and openly supported an amendment to the Indiana constitution which would have defined marriage as solely between one man and one woman.

Dungy is married to Lauren Harris of Pittsburgh[6] and has two daughters, Tiara and Jade, and four sons, James (died December 22 2005), Eric, Jordan and Justin.

Dungy's memoir, Quiet Strength: The Principles, Practices, and Priorities of a Winning Life, was released on July 10, 2007[28] and reached No. 1 on the New York Times Best Seller list on August 5, 2007[29] and again on September 9, 2007.[30] Tyndale House Publishers said it was the first NFL-related book ever ranked No. 1.[31] When asked why he wrote Quiet Strength, Dungy said,

"It's not something I ever really thought of doing. I've had several people ask me about it for a number of years. Several people asked about it after winning (the Super Bowl). I was hoping, really, not to do it...I think it becomes kind of what happens. You win a Super Bowl, you have a big achievement, and you write a book. And I didn't want to be one of those guys, but a lot of people thought that it was the right time -- and it did turn out to be that. I think people were looking for something positive to read, and we had a lot of negative in the sports world. I think it just came out at the right time. Maybe the Lord's timing was good."[32]

On September 6, 2007, The Indianapolis Star reported that the Davie-Brown Index (DBI), an independent celebrity rating service for advertisers, places Dungy in the top 15 of the 900 actors, musicians, TV personalities, and sports celebrities it ranks for overall appeal, putting him on a level with actors such as Tom Hanks and Morgan Freeman. Among sports figures, he ranks second only to Hank Aaron.[27]

According to a spokesperson for the DBI: "Clearly, U.S. consumers find him likable."

Dungy signed with Simon & Schuster to publish a children's picture book called You Can Do It. It will be scheduled to be published in July 2008. The book tells the story of Dungy and his siblings, including younger brother Linden who figures out his life dream and is encouraged by his family to follow that dream.[33]

Books

  • Dungy, Tony; Nathan Whitaker (2007). Quiet Strength: the Principles, Practices, & Priorities of a Winning Life. Tyndale House. ISBN 1-414-31801-4. 

References and notes

  1. ^ a b Tony Dungy biography. Thomas Gale. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
  2. ^ The January 26, 1970 issue of Sports Illustrated selling on eBay. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
  3. ^ Michael Wilbon (2006-12-21). A year later, Christmas means something different for the Dungys. The Washington Post.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Tony Dungy bio. The Indianapolis Colts. Retrieved on 2007-02-05.
  5. ^ Nicholas J. Cotsonika (2007-01-27). Dungy rarely rattled in patient drive to Super Bowl. Detroit Free Press.
  6. ^ a b c Chuck Finder (2006-01-13). Colts' coach Dungy preaches what he practices. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  7. ^ a b The Tony Dungy file. The St. Petersburg Times (2002-01-15). Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
  8. ^ a b Mark Maske (2007-02-03). Less without Moore. The Washington Post.
  9. ^ Dungy leaves open possibility of retiring. The Associated Press (2006-01-17).
  10. ^ Belichick stands Pat: signs back long tenure. Boston Herald (2007-07-25).
  11. ^ Manning's greatest drive not uphill, even though it felt that way. The Associated Press (2007-01-22).
  12. ^ Michael Smith (2005-12-28). 'Simple' scheme nets big gains for trio of defenses. ESPN.com.
  13. ^ Roy Cummings (2007-01-23). Tony Dungy's Family Tree. The Tampa Tribune.
  14. ^ Nicholas J. Cotsonika (2007-01-24). Dungy tree flourishes. Detroit Free Press.
  15. ^ Vikings hire Frazier as defensive coordinator. The Associated Press (2007-02-09).
  16. ^ Chris Harry (2007-02-02). Dungy inspires devotion, discipline and dedication in his disciples. Orlando Sentinel.
  17. ^ Scott Brown (2007-02-01). Dungy proud to be legendary Steelers coach Noll's protégé. Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  18. ^ Don Pierson (2007-02-02). Dungy’s legacy could be coaching tree. MSNBC.com.
  19. ^ Karen Crouse (2007-01-23). Bears Coach Smith reflects on his roots. The New York Times.
  20. ^ Eddie Pells (2007-01-23). Smith, Dungy blazing a trail. The Associated Press.
  21. ^ Hal Habib (2007-01-23). On his terms: Colts' Dungy stays true to principles. Palm Beach Post.
  22. ^ a b Rick Gosselin (2007-08-22). Colts' Dungy learned team aspect early. The Dallas Morning News.
  23. ^ Judy Battista (2007-10-08). Short-handed Colts find a way to win on their bench. The New York Times.
  24. ^ Jim Souhan (2007-10-12). Life is fine at the top. Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  25. ^ a b Peter King (2007-08-06). Monday Morning QB: Factoid of the week that may interest only me I. SI.com.
  26. ^ a b Colts "Dungy appointed to committee by President Bush" August 14, 2007 at Colts.com
  27. ^ a b Mark Montieth (2007-09-06). Dungy keeps the faith. The Indianapolis Star.
  28. ^ Bob Kravitz (2007-07-10). Dungy's new book transcends football. The Indianapolis Star.
  29. ^ Best sellers: hardcover nonfiction. The New York Times (2007-08-05).
  30. ^ Best sellers: hardcover nonfiction. The New York Times (2007-09-09).
  31. ^ Michael Marot (2007-08-01). Super Bowl-winning coach Dungy poised to become best-selling author. The Associated Press.
  32. ^ John DeShazier (2007-09-06). Colts' Dungy gives nice guys good name. The New Orleans Times-Picayune.
  33. ^ Kimberly Maul (2007-09-24). Tony Dungy To write children's book. The Book Standard.

External links


Preceded by
Woody Widenhofer
Pittsburgh Steelers Defensive Coordinators
1984-1988
Succeeded by
Rod Rust
Preceded by
Sam Wyche
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Head Coaches
1996–2001
Succeeded by
Jon Gruden
Preceded by
Jim Mora
Indianapolis Colts Head Coaches
2002-
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Bill Cowher
List of Super Bowl winning Head Coaches
Super Bowl XLI, 2007
Succeeded by
Incumbent



Persondata
NAME Dungy, Tony
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Dungy, Anthony Kevin
SHORT DESCRIPTION professional American football player and head coach of the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League
DATE OF BIRTH October 6, 1955
PLACE OF BIRTH Jackson, Michigan
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

 
 

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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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