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Sid Gillman

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Sid Gillman
refer to caption
Gillman as coach of the Rams in 1959
Personal information
Born:(1911-10-26)October 26, 1911
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Died:January 3, 2003(2003-01-03) (aged 91)
Carlsbad, California, U.S.
Career information
High school:Minneapolis North (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
College:Ohio State
Position:End
Career history
As a player:
As a coach:
Executive profile at Pro Football Reference
Career highlights and awards
Head coaching record
Regular season:AFL/NFL: 122–99–7 (.550)
Postseason:AFL/NFL: 1–5 (.167)
Career:AFL/NFL: 123–104–7 (.541)
NCAA: 81–19–2 (.804)
Record at Pro Football Reference

Sidney Gillman (October 26, 1911 – January 3, 2003) was an American football player, coach and executive. Gillman's insistence on stretching the football field by throwing deep downfield passes, instead of short passes to running backs or wide receivers at the sides of the line of scrimmage, was instrumental in making football into the modern game that it is today. He was inducted as a coach into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983, and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1989.

Gillman played football as an end at Ohio State University from 1931 to 1933. He played professionally for one season in 1936 with the Cleveland Rams of the second American Football League. After serving as an assistant coach at Ohio State from 1938 to 1940, Gillman was the head football coach at Miami University from 1944 to 1947 and at the University of Cincinnati from 1949 to 1954, compiling a career college football record of 81–19–2. He then moved to the ranks of professional football, where he headed the NFL's Los Angeles Rams (1955–1959), the American Football League's Los Angeles and San Diego Chargers (1960–1969), and the NFL's Houston Oilers (1973–1974), amassing a career record of 123–104–7 in the National Football League and the American Football League. Gillman's 1963 San Diego Chargers won the AFL Championship.

Early life and college

[edit]

Sidney Gillman was born on October 26, 1911, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to a Jewish family.[1][2] His father was an Austrian immigrant who was in the movie theater business.[3] He attended North High School, and was elected captain of his high school football team in his senior year, and played on a state all-star team.[4][3][5]

He played college football at Ohio State University under coach Sam Willaman, forming the basis of his offense.[6] Gillman was not impressed by Willaman's coaching ability.[3] Gillman was an All-American at end in 1932 and 1933.[2] He was a team co-captain on the 1933 team,[7] and All-Big Ten Conference end in 1933.[7] Gillman played in the first Chicago All-Star Game (1934) with the college all-stars playing against the NFL champion Chicago Bears, where he was flattened by Bears legend Bronko Nagurski.[4]

While attending Ohio State, Gillman was a brother of the Nu chapter of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, living in the fraternity house for three years at college. He played piano in small bands during his college years to make extra money (including one called the Red Hot Peppers). He was a political science major.[3]

Career

[edit]

Gillman's innovations in passing offense are often praised as the foundation of modern football, but "Perhaps his most lasting legacy was his use of film to study players and formations...."[8] Always deeply interested in the game, while working as one of his family’s movie theater ushers, he removed football segments from newsreels the theater would show, so that he could take them home and study them on a projector he had bought.[8] This dedication to filmed football plays made Gillman the first coach to study game footage, something that all coaches do today.[9]

Gillman debated between pursuing a pro football career and entering coaching upon leaving college, with the Boston Redskins offering him a contract while Willaman wished to hire him as end coach at Western Reserve University.[10] His participation in the inaugural Chicago College All-Star Game caused him to arrive late for Redskins training camp, and he would fail to make the team.[11][12] He played one year in the American Football League (1936) for the Cleveland Rams.[8]

College football coach

[edit]

Gillman was a college football assistant coach for eight years before becoming a head coach.[8] Gilman became an assistant coach at Ohio State under College Football Hall of Fame head coach Francis Schmidt (1934, 1938-40); Denison University under Tom Rogers (1935-37, 1941); and Miami University (Ohio) under Stu Holcomb.[1][13]

At his Pro Football Hall of Fame induction, Gillman stated that Schmidt made a "definite contribution to [Gillman's] life".[4] Gillman considered Schmidt an offensive football genius, ahead of his time, and the greatest coach ever.[4][14] Schmidt's number of plays and formations far exceeded his contemporaries, and he instituted a wide-open high scoring offense, extremely unusual for the 1930s (outside of the Southwest Conference), which also was a boon to the school growing its attendance during the Great Depression. However, Schmidt's pursuit of high scoring, even in lop-sided games, resulted in his nickname being, Francis "Shut the Gates of Mercy" or "Close the Gates of Mercy" Schmidt.[14][15] Gilman's own offensive system as a coach was born under Schmidt's influence.[15]

In 1948, after having started his head coaching career, he once more became an assistant coach, serving as the line coach under hall of fame head coach Earl Blaik of Army. He learned "situational substitution" (the platoon system) from Blaik, while teaching an innovative option blocking system to his players.[1][13][15] While at Army he befriended future hall of fame coaching great Vince Lombardi, with whom he discussed football strategy. Upon leaving Army, Gillman successfully recommended Lombardi as his replacement. Lombardi would use Gillman's blocking scheme to great effect as coach of the Green Bay Packers' championship teams. Lombardi also implemented Gillman's method of film study and player grades with those teams.[15]

In 1944, Gillman became head coach at Miami University, succeeding Holcomb, and coached there through 1947, where his record was 31–6–1.[13][15] Among his players was Ara Parseghian, a future College Football Hall of Fame coach at Miami, Northwestern and Notre Dame.[16] After a year at Army under Blaik, Gillman became head coach at the University of Cincinnati from 1949 to 1954, with a record of 50–13–1, three Mid-American Conference championships, and two bowl games; while making full use of situational substitution.[13][15][17] He used film study and player grades at Cincinatti, and was once admonished by the NCAA for having the players review film during halftime of a game.[18]

At the time he left Cincinatti, it was written that Gillman had a forceful, confident and determined personality; was impatient with mistakes, the hardest working coach, a perfectionist, aimed to succeed at the highest level; and could run up the score like Schmidt. There was a division between those who admired him and those who criticized him.[5] Altogether, he spent 21 years as a college coach or head coach, and his teams' total record as a head coach for these years was 81-19-2.[13] As a college head coach, his teams outscored their opponents 2,571–1,017.[5]

Professional football coach

[edit]

Los Angeles Rams

[edit]

He became a professional head coach for the first time with the Los Angeles Rams in 1955, after the team had declined in wins the previous two seasons (8–3–1 in 1953 and 6–5–1 in 1954).[19][20] The Rams were a team bolstered and hindered by its emphasis on explosive offense as quarterbacked by Norm Van Brocklin. A trade for Jim Cason with the San Francisco 49ers also proved helpful in the rookie season that saw Gillman's coaching described as "red-meat, un-finessed brand of football" on the way to a record of 8–3–1 that narrowly beat the Chicago Bears for the right to play for the 1955 NFL Championship Game (their fourth appearance in the past five seasons) against the defending league champion Cleveland Browns, appearing in their sixth straight NFL Championship Game. Playing at home in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum due to the rotation of the time, the Browns never trailed while forcing six Van Brocklin interceptions on their way to a 38–14 victory.[21]

His second season with the Rams, which saw them trade away future Hall of fame Defensive star Andy Robustelli[22] in the offseason after a falling out with Gillman, was a disaster, as the team lost eight of their first ten games for a 4–8 overall record,[23] their first losing mark since 1944 when the team was still in Cleveland.[20] The 1957 season was the last for both Van Brocklin (traded to Philadelphia after the season, where he would win a championship in 1960 over Lombardi's Packers[24]) and receiver Elroy Hirsch, each future members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Van Brocklin and Gillman had clashed over tactics in 1957, and Van Brocklin would at times override Gillman. After that season, Van Brocklin demanded a trade or he would stay home and run his business, rather than join the team for the 1958 season.[25] Hirsch retired after the 1957 season.[26]

A multi-player deal with the Cardinals for Ollie Matson did not help matters. The season ended on a middling note as the Rams won their last two games of the year to finish at .500. The 1958 season was the closest the Rams got to the top of the division, finishing one game behind the Baltimore Colts. The 1959 season saw the Rams close the year with eight straight losses that led to the dismissal of Gillman.[27][28][20]

Los Angeles/San Diego Chargers

[edit]

He then moved to the American Football League (AFL, 1960–1969), where he coached the Los Angeles and San Diego Chargers to five Western Division titles and one league championship in the first six years of the AFL's existence.[29][19]

His greatest coaching success came after he was persuaded by Barron Hilton, then the Chargers' majority owner, to become the head coach of the AFL franchise he planned to operate in Los Angeles. When the team's general manager, Frank Leahy, became ill during the Chargers' founding season, its one season in Los Angeles before moving to San Diego, Gillman took on additional responsibilities as general manager.[30][31][32] As the first coach of the Chargers, Gillman gave the team a mercurial personality that matched his own.[citation needed]

It was with the Chargers that Gillman developed the innovative aggressive downfield passing attack for which he would become known, and which would change football.[33][18] Gillman used the length and width of the field, and would stretch the field with the potential long pass, which opened up the middle of the field to runs and shorter passes.[28] As described by one of Gillman's first Chargers' offensive coaches, and future owner of the Oakland Raiders, hall of famer Al Davis,[34] "'Sid Gillman was the father of modern-day passing.... It had been thought of as vertical, the length of the field, but Sid also thought of it as horizontal. Sid used the width of the field.'''[19] Hall of Fame coach Bill Walsh, who is usually identified with developing the West Coast Offense, stated much of what he did derived from Gillman.[15] Walsh observed that Gilman had a level of understanding about football that only a few could fully comprehend.[8]

He had much to do with the AFL being able to establish itself. Gillman was a thorough professional, and in order to compete with him, his peers had to learn pro ways.[citation needed] They learned, and the AFL became the genesis of modern professional football.[28] "Sid Gillman brought class to the AFL," Oakland Raiders managing general partner Al Davis once said of the man he served under on that first Chargers team.[18] " Just being part of Sid's organization was like going to a laboratory for the highly developed science of professional football."[18] Others however, painted Gillman as someone who kept the team under pressure at all times regardless of how it felt for the players, with Dickie Post, a running back who played for Gillman from 1967-69, calling him a "dictator".[35][36] On the other hand, Chargers receiver and tight end Dave Kocourek (1960-65) found Gillman a people person who was not given proper credit for his interpersonal skills.[37][38] Future Hall of Fame receiver Lance Alworth said of Gillman, "Sid Gillman is a fantastic person, with a brilliant mind, and he has taught John [Hadl] a lot."[39]

Described as "impulsive" by quarterback John Hadl, in 1965, Gillman had arguments with defensive stars Ernie Ladd and Earl Faison over salaries and bonuses, in light of rookie bonuses being paid in sums that far exceeded the salaries of these two star players. Ladd and Faison took the position they would play out their contracts and become free agents. They were both traded to Houston before the 1966 season. The league's owners were all concerned about paying bonuses to veteran players, and the effect on the league's viability. When Faison was traded in 1966, Gillman called the former four-time All-AFL defensive end one who "has a long way to go to become average, much less outstanding."[40][41][42][43] Hadl stated that these removals were part of the beginning of the decline of the Chargers in the late 1960s.[44] When asked about the money made by players once, Gillman responded by saying “With some of them, football is a vocation. With some, it’s an avocation. You know what football is to me? It’s blood.”[15]

Through Gillman's tenure as head coach, the Chargers went 87–57–6 and won five AFL Western Division titles. The 1960 and 1961 teams were led by future Hall of Fame player Jack Kemp (1960-61) at quarterback to go with Paul Lowe (1960-61) and Keith Lincoln (1961) as running backs.[45][46][47] They narrowly lost each time in the AFL Championship Game to the Houston Oilers.[48][49] In 1962, with injuries to Kemp and rookie future Hall of Fame receiver Lance Alworth, the Chargers had their only losing season in their AFL tenure (4–10).[50][20] Even worse for Gillman, he put Kemp on waivers on a Saturday before a game to open up a roster spot, with the common custom being that no other team would claim a player when so waived. Lou Saban and the Buffalo Bills ignored custom and bought Kemp’s rights for $100. They made Kemp their starting quarterback at the end of the 1962 season until his retirement in 1969, where he won two AFL titles. Gillman was enraged beyond words, but could not undo the transaction.[51][52]

John Hadl had been drafted in 1962 as quarterback, but the 1963 season would have 35-year old Tobin Rote as the primary starter at quarterback.[53][54] Thar year, under an MVP season from Rote (with Alworth second in the balloting),[55] they captured the only league championship the franchise ever won by outscoring the Boston Patriots, 51–10, in the American Football League championship game in Balboa Stadium.[56] Gillman crafted a game plan, "Feast or Famine", that used motion, then seldom seen, to negate the Patriots' blitzes.[57][18] His plan freed running back Keith Lincoln to rush for 206 yards, and have another 123 yards receiving.[56]

In addition to Lincoln, Alworth, Kemp, Lowe, Ladd, Faison and Hadl on Gillman's teams through the '60s, Gillman also coached such notable players as future hall of fame offensive tackle Ron Mix,[58] Speedy Duncan,[59] Kenny Graham,[60] Dick Westmoreland,[61] and Frank Buncom.[62] Mix grew up in Los Angeles in a sometimes hard-pressed Jewish family, living in a neighborhood where they were the only Jews, and had taken great pride as a young teenager in 1955 when he learned the Rams new head coach, Gillman, was also Jewish. As a player, he found Gillman hard but fair, treating everyone equally.[63] Gillman and Al Davis (also Jewish), emphasized recruiting from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU), and Gillman instituted a training camp policy that players would room together based on position so that black and white players would room together, a rarity in the early 1960s.[28]

Gillman was one of only two head coaches to hold that position for the entire 10-year existence of the American Football League[28] (the other being fellow Hall of Fame coach Hank Stram, who coached the Dallas Texans and Kansas City Chiefs from 1960 through 1974[64]). Gillman approached NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle in 1963 with the idea of having the champions of the AFL and the NFL play a single final game,[1] but his idea was not implemented until the Super Bowl (originally titled the AFL-NFL World Championship Game) was played in 1967. Gillman left the Chargers nine games into the 1969 season due to a hiatal hernia only to come back to coach the first ten games of the 1971 season.[65][15] He resigned as head coach and executive vice-president in November 1971, with general manager Harland Svare finishing out the year as coach.[66]

Later NFL career

[edit]

Gillman served as a quality control coach for the Dallas Cowboys in 1972.[13] In March 1973, Bud Adams hired Gillman to serve as executive vice president and general manager of the Houston Oilers (to replace John W. Breen) after head coach Bill Peterson won one game in his inaugural season as coach. The 1973 season turned out to be a worse disaster, as the Oilers continued their losing ways. Before the fourth game, Gillman took over the duties of offensive coordinator.[67] After a fifth straight loss to start the season, Gillman took over as coach by firing Peterson, which saw them win once the rest of the way.[68]

In 1974, Gillman hired Bum Phillips (the defensive coordinator for the 1967-71 Charger teams) to serve as defensive coordinator.[69][70] The 1974 team won on opening day before going on a five-game losing streak.[71] Midway through the season, Gillman and the Oilers acquired future Hall of Fame defensive tackle Curley Culp[72] and a first-round draft choice in 1975 from the Kansas City Chiefs for John Matuszak (each player had threatened to jump to the World Football League).[73] They then won four games in a row to get to 5–5 before trading wins and losses in the last four games of the year, which included a win over the Cleveland Browns to close the season at 7-7 (.500), their first non-losing season in four years.[71] He was awarded the AFC Coach of the Year by UPI after the season before electing to move back to the GM position while Phillips was promoted to head coach.[74][75][69][15]

The matter of who would do what for personnel proved to key in the eventual departure of Gillman. The contract that Phillips had signed with Gillman had a clause that gave him final approval of the moves that Phillips wanted to make, but this clause was asked to be removed by Phillips in a meeting between him and Adams when Gillman was out of town, which was accepted. Later, with the support of Adams, Phillips had Gillman barred from being able to attend practice or be in the locker room. Gillman appealed to Adams about the changes but resigned when Adams sided with Phillips, who was later quoted as stating "I had control of the team. I had the right to draft, waive, trade. I had the control I needed. That’s what [Gillman] gave me. I told Sid that’s what I wanted, and he said that was fine. We didn’t have any disagreement over that. Evidently, the disagreement was with Bud. “There was a whole lot of stories running around, I guess. Believe me, I’m telling you what happened. I worked for [Gillman] for six years, and I enjoyed it for six years. If he wanted to draft somebody that I didn’t want to draft, we wouldn’t have drafted him. I had no problem with knowing my responsibilities."[69] With Phillips at the helm and a defensive front that would have Culp for years to come alongside that draft choice used to draft future Hall of Fame linebacker Robert Brazile,[76] the Oilers jumped to ten wins in the following season (1975).[77][72]

In 1977, Gillman was hired as offensive coordinator for the Chicago Bears.[78] The Bears, with Walter Payton leading the way in rushing yards (1,852), won 9 games and earned their first postseason appearance in 14 years, which ended in a loss in the Divisional Round. However, Gillman resigned after the year when his ideas about opening up the offense was rejected.[15] For four months of 1978, Gillman was the coach of the football team at United States International University; one of the coaches he hired was Tom Walsh, who would coach the team when Gillman left in early 1979.[15]

Philadelphia Eagles coach Dick Vermeil hired Gillman in 1979 to take over an offense ranked 27th, 19th, and 18th the previous three seasons. In Gillman's three years under Vermeil, the Eagles scored the 3rd-most points in the NFL, won the 2nd-most games, reached the playoffs all three seasons, and reached their first Super Bowl in 1980, with Vermeil stating that the appearance in the Super Bowl would not have happened without the "encylcopedia" knowledge of Gillman.[79][15] He had retired after the 1980 season as “Physically and mentally drained" before returning in 1982 to the Eagles.[15] Eagles quarterback Ron Jaworski considered Gilman his closest mentor. At this point in his career, Gillman was the measured buffer between Jaworkski and the hard-driving intense Vermeil.[80] Gillman taught Jaworski and future Hall of Fame receiver Harold Carmichael their signature "meet me at the corner" play.[81][82]

In July 1983, at age 71, Gillman came out of retirement after an offer from Bill Tatham Sr. and Bill Tatham Jr., owners of the United States Football League (USFL) expansion team the Oklahoma Outlaws.[83] Gillman agreed to serve as director of operations and signed quarterback Doug Williams, who later led the Washington Redskins to victory in Super Bowl XXII.[84][85] Although Gillman signed a roster of players to play for the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based franchise, he was fired by Tatham six months later in a dispute over finances.[86] Gillman then served as a consultant for the USFL's Los Angeles Express in 1984, where John Hadl was the coach and future Hall of Famer Steve Young was the quarterback.[87][88] He later did work for the Eagles as a quarterback coach in 1985 (Randall Cunningham's rookie year[89]) before serving as an unpaid consultant to the University of Pittsburgh football team (as coached by Mike Gottfried) in 1987, earning a game ball after Pitt upset Notre Dame.[15][19] Even when he was out of coaching by 1991, Gillman was still at the helm of looking at tapes of game film, with a number of teams regularly sending him coaching tapes for him to view through multiple VCRs.

Influence

[edit]

Gillman's influence on the modern game can be seen by listing the current and former coaches and executives who either played with him or coached for him, or coached under such people, including among others:

Coaching tree

[edit]
Sid Gillman
George AllenAl DavisChuck Knox[citation needed]Don CoryellDick Vermeil (1)[citation needed]Chuck Noll (4)
John Madden (1)Tom Flores (2)Art ShellBill Walsh (3)Joe Gibbs (3)Tony Dungy (1)
Jim FasselPaul HackettMike Holmgren (1)Sam WycheGeorge Seifert (2)Dennis Green
John FoxMike McCarthy (1)Bruce CosletMike MularkeyBrian Billick (1)Mike Tice
Scott Linehan
Jon Gruden (1)Mike ShermanRay RhodesSteve MariucciAndy Reid (3)Mike Shanahan (2)Jeff Fisher
Bill CallahanMarty MornhinwegGary Kubiak (1)Jack Del RioMike SmithVic Fangio
Brad ChildressJohn Harbaugh (1)Ron RiveraDoug Pederson (1)Sean McDermottPat ShurmurJim CaldwellMike Tomlin (1)Lovie SmithRod Marinelli
Brian DabollBruce Arians (1)

Numbers in parentheses indicate Super Bowls won by Gillman's "descendants" as head coach, a total of 29.

Don Coryell, the coach at San Diego State University when Gillman was coaching the San Diego Chargers, would bring his team to Chargers' practices to watch how Gillman ran his practices.[100] Coryell went on to coach in the NFL, and some of his assistants, influenced by the Gillman style, included coaches Joe Gibbs, Ernie Zampese, Tom Bass, and Russ A. Molzahn.[101][102] A larger and more extended version of Sid Gillman's coaching tree, which in some ways could be called a forest, can be found here.[103][90]

Honors and awards

[edit]

Gillman has received the following awards and honors, among others;

  • Gillman was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983[104]
  • He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1989[105]
  • He was inducted into the Ohio State Hall of Fame in 1981[106]
  • He was inducted into the University of Cincinnati James P. Kelly Athletics Hall of Fame in 1981[107]
  • He was inducted into the Chargers Football Hall of Fame in 1985[108]
  • He was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1990[109]
  • He was inducted into the Miami University Hall of Fame in 1991[110]

Personal life and death

[edit]

Gillman and his wife Esther had four children and were married for 67 years (until his death).[111] They resided in Carlsbad, California before moving in 2001 to Century City in Los Angeles.[112]

On January 3, 2003, Gillman died in his sleep at age 91.[111] He was interred in the Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Head coaching record

[edit]

College

[edit]
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Miami Redskins (Independent) (1944–1947)
1944 Miami 8–1
1945 Miami 7–2
1946 Miami 7–3
1947 Miami 9–0–1 W Sun
Miami: 31–6–1
Cincinnati Bearcats (Mid-American Conference) (1949–1952)
1949 Cincinnati 7–4 4–0 1st
1950 Cincinnati 8–4 3–1 2nd L Sun
1951 Cincinnati 10–1 3–0 1st
1952 Cincinnati 8–1–1 3–0 1st
Cincinnati Bearcats (Independent) (1953–1954)
1953 Cincinnati 9–1
1954 Cincinnati 8–2
Cincinnati: 50–13–1 13–1
Total: 81–19–2
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

AFL/NFL

[edit]
Team Year Regular Season Post Season
Won Lost Ties Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
LA 1955 8 3 1 .727 1st in NFL Western Conference 0 1 .000 Lost to Cleveland Browns in NFL Championship
LA 1956 4 8 0 .333 T-5th in NFL Western Conference - - -
LA 1957 6 6 0 .500 4th in NFL Western Conference - - -
LA 1958 8 4 0 .667 T-2nd in NFL Western Conference - - -
LA 1959 2 10 0 .200 6th in NFL Western Conference - - -
LA Total 28 31 1 .475 0 1 .000
LA Chargers 1960 10 4 0 .714 1st in AFL West Division 0 1 .000 Lost to Houston Oilers in AFL championship game
SD 1961 12 2 0 .857 1st in AFL West Division 0 1 .000 Lost to Houston Oilers in AFL championship game
SD 1962 4 10 0 .286 4th in AFL West Division - - -
SD 1963 11 3 0 .786 1st in AFL West Division 1 0 1.000 Beat Boston Patriots in AFL championship game
SD 1964 8 5 1 .615 1st in AFL West Division 0 1 .000 Lost to Buffalo Bills in AFL championship game
SD 1965 9 2 3 .818 1st in AFL West Division 0 1 .000 Lost to Buffalo Bills in AFL championship game
SD 1966 7 6 1 .538 3rd in AFL West Division - - -
SD 1967 8 5 1 .615 3rd in AFL West Division - - -
SD 1968 9 5 0 .643 3rd in AFL West Division - - -
SD 1969 4 5 0 .444 3rd in AFL West Division - - -
SD 1971 4 6 0 .440 3rd in AFL West Division - - -
LA/SD Total 86 53 6 .619 1 4 .200
HOU 1973 1 8 0 .111 4th in AFC Central - - -
HOU 1974 7 7 0 .500 2nd in AFC Central - - -
HOU Total 8 15 0 .348 - - -
Professional Total 122 99 7 .552 1 5 .167

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b "Sid Gillman". www.jewishsports.net. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Tobias, Todd. "An Interview with Sid & Esther Gillman". Tales from the AFL. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d "Sid Gillman | Pro Football Hall of Fame". pfhof. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c Lawson, Earl (October 8, 1955). "Football's Man Without Mercy". Saturday Evening Post.
  6. ^ Peterson, Bill (August 16, 2006). "Cincinnati's Connection to Football's "West Coast Offense"". City Beat. Archived from the original on January 28, 2007. Retrieved September 7, 2006.
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  27. ^ Gomez, Johnny (August 23, 2013). "1959: The Gillman era falls flat - Rams Talk". Retrieved February 16, 2024.
  28. ^ a b c d e Tracy, Marc (February 3, 2011). "How Three Jews Behind the AFL Invented the Modern Media Spectacle That is Pro Football Today". Tablet Magazine. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  29. ^ "Los Angeles Chargers Team Records, Leaders, and League Ranks". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  30. ^ Elwood, Hayley (September 20, 2019). "Remembering Chargers Founding Owner Barron Hilton". www.chargers.com. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  31. ^ Gardner, Sam (January 12, 2017). "Original Charger remembers when the team called Los Angeles home". FOX Sports. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  32. ^ "Ailing Leahy Quits Charger Post". New York Times. July 2, 1960.
  33. ^ "Head Coach, Sid Gillman, NFL 100". NFL.com. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  34. ^ "Al Davis | Pro Football Hall of Fame". pfhof. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
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