Mike Shanahan

Player

Birthday August 24, 1952

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.

Age 71 years old

Nationality United States

#30938 Most Popular

1952

Michael Edward Shanahan (born August 24, 1952) is an American football coach serving as an offensive consultant to the New York Jets, best known as the head coach of the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL) from 1995 to 2008.

During his fourteen seasons with the Broncos, he led the team to two consecutive Super Bowl victories in XXXII and XXXIII; along with being the first Super Bowl championships in team history, they were the seventh team to win consecutive Super Bowls in NFL history.

His head coaching career spanned a total of twenty seasons and also included stints with the Los Angeles Raiders and Washington Redskins.

He is the father of San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan.

1968

Shanahan played high school football at East Leyden High School, Franklin Park, Illinois, where he played wishbone quarterback for coach Jack Leese's 1968 and 1969 Eagles teams.

1969

Shanahan held the single-game rushing record of 260 yards on 15 carries (which was set in a 32–8 win over Hinsdale South on September 20, 1969) until it was broken in 1976 by Dennis Cascio.

1970

He graduated from high school in 1970.

He was a quarterback at Eastern Illinois University, where he joined Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity.

1972

In 1972, a piercingly hard hit on the practice field ruptured one of his kidneys, which caused his heart to stop for thirty seconds and nearly killed him.

A priest was summoned to administer the last rites to Shanahan, a devout Roman Catholic.

With his playing career abruptly ended, Shanahan entered coaching.

After graduation, he served as an assistant coach at Northern Arizona University and the University of Oklahoma.

He then returned to his alma mater as offensive coordinator and helped his school win the Division II football championship.

1980

Shanahan worked as the offensive coordinator for the University of Minnesota for a single season, before accepting the same position at the University of Florida under head coach Charley Pell in 1980.

1983

Shanahan stayed with the Gators through 1983.

1984

Shanahan first served as a receivers coach and later offensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos under Dan Reeves from 1984 to 1987.

This firmly places Mike Shanahan on the Tom Landry tree of coaching, as Dan Reeves was one of Landry's greatest disciples.

It was his skill as an offensive mind that garnered Shanahan the attention of maverick Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis.

1988

Shanahan was hired by the Los Angeles Raiders in 1988 to replace longtime Raiders coach Tom Flores.

He was the Raiders' first head coach hired from outside the organization since Davis himself 23 years earlier.

Shanahan (who proved very unpopular with the players) and the micromanaging Davis clashed almost immediately, and this was only exacerbated after the Raiders finished a disappointing 7–9, losing four of their last five games.

Tensions increased towards the end of the season when wide receivers coach and Shanahan loyalist Nick Nicolau got into a heated argument with assistant coach Art Shell (a Davis loyalist) in which Nicolau reportedly accused Shell of having a job only by virtue of his friendship with Davis.

When Shell went to Davis later to ask if this was true, Davis' response was to immediately fire Nicolau.

Shanahan responded by firing running backs coach Joe Scannella and offensive coordinator Tom Walsh (both Davis hires), but Davis ordered them both back to work.

At the end of the season, Shanahan fired defensive assistants Willie Brown and Charlie Sumner.

An enraged Davis re-hired Brown to a different position in the organization.

1989

After Shanahan and the Raiders parted ways four games into the 1989 season, Shanahan returned to the Broncos as quarterbacks coach on October 16, 1989.

He was fired a couple years later by Reeves after finding himself in the middle of a growing feud between Reeves and quarterback John Elway.

When the Raiders began 1–3 in 1989, Shanahan himself was fired and replaced by Shell.

Shanahan's final Raiders record was 8–12 in less than two seasons, going 2–7 after a 6–5 start.

1992

In 1992, Shanahan was hired as offensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers under head coach George Seifert, capping his rise with a victory in Super Bowl XXIX after the 1994 season.

His years under Seifert placed him in the Bill Walsh coaching tree.

1994

In 1994 while coaching for the 49ers, Shanahan added to the ongoing feud between him and Raiders owner Al Davis when he had then quarterback Elvis Grbac throw a football at Davis' head, which missed by a few inches as Davis was able to dodge it just in time; afterwards Davis responded with an obscene gesture.

1995

Shanahan's success with the 49ers earned him a head coaching spot once more, this time back in Denver with the Broncos beginning in 1995.

1996

Between 1996 and 1998, the Broncos set the NFL record for victories by going 46–10 over a three-year span.

1997

He led the Broncos to back-to-back Super Bowl championships in the 1997 and 1998 seasons, during which time the Broncos set a then-record for victories in two seasons.

1998

The 1998 Broncos won their first 13 games on their way to a 14–2 mark.

Shanahan, taking his cue from West Coast offense guru Bill Walsh, was well known for scripting the first 15 offensive plays of the game, and helped the 1998 Broncos set an NFL record for first quarter points scored in a season.

2005

In 2005, he passed Dan Reeves as the winningest coach in franchise history.

Shanahan is known for an offense featuring zone running plays and play-action passes.