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Martz allegedly had several conflicts with the St. Louis front office over the years which reportedly came to a climax in 2005. While recovering from his illness at home and watching a live Rams game on television, Martz was blocked by team president John Shaw from relaying a play call to Fairchild by phone. Martz continued to show up periodically at team practices late in the season, and was given medical clearance to coach the Rams' last regular season game on [[New Year's Day]]. However, the Rams declined to have Martz coach that game, and fired him on [[January 2]], [[2006]].
Martz allegedly had several conflicts with the St. Louis front office over the years which reportedly came to a climax in 2005. While recovering from his illness at home and watching a live Rams game on television, Martz was blocked by team president John Shaw from relaying a play call to Fairchild by phone. Martz continued to show up periodically at team practices late in the season, and was given medical clearance to coach the Rams' last regular season game on [[New Year's Day]]. However, the Rams declined to have Martz coach that game, and fired him on [[January 2]], [[2006]].


During the seven years in which Martz was involved with the Rams, the team went to two of the franchise's three Super Bowls. His record of 55-5 with a lead any time in the 4th Qtr [917 winning %] and 26.5 pts a game as a head coach were the best of all time at the end of 2005 season by any coach in the history of the NFL.
During the seven years in which Martz was involved with the Rams, the team went to two of the franchise's three Super Bowls. His record of 55-5 with a lead any time in the 4th Qtr [91.7 winning %] and 26.5 pts a game as a head coach were the best of all time at the end of 2005 season by any coach in the history of the NFL.


The Rams are 15-28 since Martz left.
The Rams are 15-28 since Martz left.

Revision as of 00:23, 22 August 2008

Mike Martz

Mike Martz (born May 13 1951, Sioux Falls, South Dakota) is the offensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers.

Martz is known for creating complicated offensive schemes, particularly in the passing game. He is best known as the offensive coordinator behind the NFL's St. Louis Rams high-powered 1999 team who won the Super Bowl that season.

Early career

Martz played tight end at San Diego Mesa College, the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Fresno State, and graduated summa cum laude from Fresno State in 1972. The following year his coaching career began at Bullard High School in Fresno, California. From 1974 to 1991, he was an assistant coach at seven colleges and universities, including two stints as offensive coordinator at Arizona State University.

He coached at the following schools
San Diego Mesa: 1974, 1976-1977
San Jose State: 1975
Santa Ana College: 1978
Fresno State University: 1979
University of the Pacific: 1980-1981
University of Minnesota: 1982
Arizona State University: 1983-1987 as quarterback and wide receiver coach. Was the offensive coordinator in 1984 and from 1988-1991.

From 1992 to 1996, he was a tight ends, receivers, and quarterbacks coach for the Los Angeles Rams. In 1997 and 1998, he was the quarterbacks coach for the Washington Redskins, and helped develop untouted Trent Green into a promising NFL quarterback.

St. Louis Rams

In 1999, Martz was hired as the offensive coordinator of the St. Louis Rams, who went on to win Super Bowl XXXIV that season.

Martz was then named head coach of the Rams on February 2, 2000 after Dick Vermeil (temporarily) retired. He led the Rams to a 10-6 regular season record, but they lost in the 1st round to the New Orleans Saints 31-28.

2001 saw the Rams cruise to a 14-2 record (with Martz's signature Greatest Show on Turf offense, behind two-time league MVP Kurt Warner) and the NFC West title. Martz's Rams went on to win the NFC Championship game against the Eagles before losing in the Super Bowl to New England.

In 2002 the Rams had a see-saw season in which Kurt Warner played injured and committed more turnovers than usual; Marshall Faulk was also not the factor he had been in previous years, although many faulted Martz for his, i.e. his tendency to emphasize the pass too much and not run Faulk more.

In 2003, Marc Bulger's first full year as a starter, the Rams fielded a much-improved defense under defensive coordinator Lovie Smith and led the NFL in forced turnovers, and they posted a 12-4 regular season record and made the playoffs. However, the Rams lost at home in the NFC divisional playoffs to the Carolina Panthers in a game that would have put them in the NFC title game. In that game, the Rams had the ball on the Panthers' 15 yard line with 42 seconds remaining and trailing by 3 points. Rather than go for the win in regulation, Martz made the controversial decision to run out the clock and settle for a game-tying field goal and overtime. The decision proved costly for the Rams as they lost in overtime.

In 2004, the Rams got off to a slow start and Martz's popularity with the fans began to wane; the "online community" was particularly hostile. Despite the early struggles, a late-season rally combined with a weak NFC West allowed the Rams to sneak into the playoffs with an 8-8 record. They had to overcome an unusual number of injuries, but still managed to beat the Seattle Seahawks in the first round before losing to the Falcons in the divisional round. The loss of defensive coordinator Lovie Smith, who left for Chicago and took two of his assistants, clearly hurt the team.

On October 10 2005, Martz took a leave of absence from the Rams to treat a persistent bacterial infection in his heart. Assistant head coach Joe Vitt handled coaching duties as the interim head coach for the rest of the season and offensive coordinator Steve Fairchild served as the play-caller. Martz told the Rams that after being examined and evaluated by his treating physician, Dr. Victoria Fraser, that his illness would prevent him from performing his duties. Martz immediately announced he would miss the rest of the season.

Martz allegedly had several conflicts with the St. Louis front office over the years which reportedly came to a climax in 2005. While recovering from his illness at home and watching a live Rams game on television, Martz was blocked by team president John Shaw from relaying a play call to Fairchild by phone. Martz continued to show up periodically at team practices late in the season, and was given medical clearance to coach the Rams' last regular season game on New Year's Day. However, the Rams declined to have Martz coach that game, and fired him on January 2, 2006.

During the seven years in which Martz was involved with the Rams, the team went to two of the franchise's three Super Bowls. His record of 55-5 with a lead any time in the 4th Qtr [91.7 winning %] and 26.5 pts a game as a head coach were the best of all time at the end of 2005 season by any coach in the history of the NFL.

The Rams are 15-28 since Martz left.

Detroit Lions

Martz interviewed for head coaching vacancies in Oakland and New Orleans. After the interview, he withdrew his candidacy for the position in Oakland. After initially rejecting an offer due to financial considerations, on February 8, 2006, Martz accepted an offer from the Detroit Lions to be their offensive coordinator and their QB coach.

In 2006, his first season, the passing game improved considerably, ranking 7th overall behind unheralded QB Jon Kitna, who had his first 4,000-yard season at age 34. Yet Martz's near obsession with the pass tended to leave quarterbacks vulnerable and running backs poorly utilized, and was a big factor in the Lions allowing more sacks than all but one other team, ranking dead last in rushing, and having the third-most turnovers in the league. Detroit lost its first five games with Martz and finished 3-13 in his first season as coordinator. Though the offense obviously had its woes, Martz wasn't blamed for very much of the team's issues, as the defense was also bad and there were various injury and personnel issues.

In 2007, with expectations still high following the previous year's disaster, it appeared Martz's system was actually beginning to work, and the Lions looked to be playoff contenders, almost in competition with Green Bay for the division title at mid-season when they sat comfortably at 6-2. Though Kitna was still sacked far too much during this span, it was still a great improvement from the year before, and sacks aside, Detroit possessed one of the league's most potent passing games during this period. But the script turned so sour from here that it was arguably worse than '06, and Lions fans were once again painfully disappointed. After dropping six games in a row, Detroit faced Kansas City, who had been on quite a losing streak themselves, winning one more game, then dropping one to the Chargers en route to a disappointing 7-9 campaign. When even players began to complain of Martz's pass-happy and unbalanced offense, the Lions fired him in the offseason.[1]

San Francisco 49ers

On January 8, 2008 he signed a 2-year deal to become the offensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers, who hope that a fourth offensive coordinator in 4 years can re-energize the offense (most notably, QB Alex Smith's career). [2]

References

Preceded by St. Louis Rams Head Coach
2000–2005
Succeeded by
Preceded by Detroit Lions Offensive Coordinator
2006-2007
Succeeded by
Preceded by San Francisco 49ers Offensive Coordinator
2008-Present
Succeeded by

Template:NFLOffensiveCoordinators