By Nick Wagoner
Senior Writer
The Rams have chosen Steve
Spagnuolo as their new head coach, the team announced officially on Saturday
evening.
He will be introduced at a news conference on Monday at 11 a.m.
Spagnuolo, the New York Giants defensive
coordinator, and the Rams agreed on a four-year deal only hours after
Dallas offensive coordinator Jason Garrett departed St. Louis following his one
night visit.
Spagnuolo was believed to be a favorite of ownership after an
impressive presentation and interview in Los Angeles on Thursday afternoon.
Rams owners Chip Rosenbloom and Lucia
Rodriguez along with senior adviser John Shaw, general manager Billy Devaney and
director of player personnel Lawrence McCutcheon were part of three interviews
this week involving Spagnuolo, Garrett and Minnesota defensive coordinator
Leslie Frazier.
After those interviews concluded, Devaney
made his recommendation to ownership. That recommendation as it turned out, was
Spagnuolo.
"We considered some very qualified and outstanding candidates
for this position but we kept coming back to Steve Spagnuolo,” Devaney said.
Rosenbloom said he was in agreement with Devaney after all of
the hard work his general manager put in to find the right candidate.
"On behalf of Lucia (Rodriguez), Stan (Kroenke) and
me, Billy did a spectacular job of presenting some fabulous candidates,”
Rosenbloom said. “We’re very excited that Steve
will be our head coach and are looking forward to an exciting
season.”
In his two seasons in New York, Spagnuolo’s
defenses have earned a reputation for a fierce pass rush combined with exotic
and creative blitz schemes. With the likes of Michael Strahan, Justin Tuck and
Osi Umenyiora at his disposal, it wasn’t a major surprise the Giants defense had
such success rushing the passer in 2007.
This season, the Giants played without a
retired Strahan and lost Umenyiora to injury before the season. Spagnuolo’s unit
still finished the season ranked fifth in defense, allowing 292 yards per
contest.
New York’s front four was so dominant in
2007 and in the playoffs, that it earned Spagnuolo a raise to about $2 million a
year, making him one of the highest paid assistants in the league.
Spagnuolo is well respected and liked by his
players for his ability to take into account their thoughts, adjust his game
plans accordingly and resistance to point fingers when something goes wrong.
Considering Spagnuolo’s history, it’s not
surprising that his defenses mirror his personality. Spagnuolo cut his teeth
under legendary Philadelphia defensive coordinator Jim Johnson for eight seasons
as a defensive assistant, defensive backs and linebackers coach for the Eagles.
There, Spagnuolo, 49, learned the many
exotic and creative blitz packages that Johnson has a reputation for.
Spagnuolo took those
principles with him to New York, running a base 4-3 defense that emphasizes a
variety of blitz packages and various other ways to create pressure on the
quarterback.
"Steve has been on
some outstanding defensive staffs during his ten seasons in the NFL,” Devaney said. “He
represented what we were looking for when this process began."
Born in Whitinsville, Mass., Spagnuolo
played his college football at Springfield College where he was a wide receiver.
An east coast guy through and through,
Spagnuolo developed a relationship with Devaney when the two were with the
Redskins at the same time in 1983. At the time, Spagnuolo was a player personnel
intern while Devaney was a scout.
A decade later, Spagnuolo was a scout in San
Diego where Devaney was director of player personnel. That relationship combined
with the Giants playoff run helped Devaney skip the preliminaries with Spagnuolo
and advance him directly to the finalist round of interviews.
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