Chuck Cecil
Los Angeles Rams | |
Date of birth | November 8, 1964 |
---|---|
Place of birth | Red Bluff, California |
Career information | |
Position(s) | FS |
Height | 6 ft 0 in (183 cm) |
Weight | 205 lb (93 kg) |
US college | Arizona |
High school | Helix High School (La Mesa, California) |
NFL draft | 1988 / round: 4 / pick: 89 |
Drafted by | Green Bay Packers |
Career history | |
As coach | |
2001–2003 | Tennessee Titans (defensive asst./quality control) |
2004–2006 | Tennessee Titans (safeties and nickel backs coach) |
2007–2008 | Tennessee Titans (defensive backs coach) |
2009–2010 | Tennessee Titans (defensive coordinator) |
2012-present | St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams (defensive secondary coach) |
As player | |
1988–1992 | Green Bay Packers |
1993 | Phoenix Cardinals |
1995 | Houston Oilers |
Career highlights and awards | |
Pro Bowls | 1992 |
Awards | 1987 Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year 1988 Pac-10 Conference Medal winner[1] 1988 NCAA Today's Top VI Award recipient Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Decade (1980s)[1] |
Honors | 1991 All-Madden selection[2] 1987 UPI,[1] Football News,[1] Kodak,[1] Walter Camp[3] and coaches[4] All-America selection 2-time All-Pac-10 first team — 1986, 1987 3-time All-Pac-10 All-Academic team — 1985, 1986, 1987 1987 Academic All-America first team[5] 2-time Academic All-America second team — 1985, 1986[5] University of Arizona Sports Hall of Fame inductee (1993)[6] |
Career stats | |
Games started | 61 |
Interceptions | 16 |
Tackles | 445 |
INT return TDs | 1 |
| |
Charles Douglas Cecil (born November 8, 1964) is an American football coach and former player who is the defensive secondary coach of the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League (NFL). He is also a former NFL Pro Bowl safety.
Early years
Cecil was born in Red Bluff, California. He grew up in Hanford, CA. He graduated from Helix High School in La Mesa, California where he was a standout player on a defense which set a school record for fewest points allowed per game and won a state title.[1] At 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) and 150 lb (68 kg) (at the time), Cecil was considered too small to be a collegiate star and thus was not offered a scholarship out of high school.
College
He attended the University of Arizona where he walked-on for the Arizona Wildcats football team. He proved the recruiters wrong by eventually earning consensus All-America and Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year honors after his nine-interception senior season. When Cecil left Arizona, he held the Pac-10 record for career interceptions, with 21 (Lamont Thompson later broke the mark with 24), and set the Wildcats' school single-game record (and tied the Pac-10 record) with four interceptions against Stanford in 1987.[1]
In the 1986 game against rival the Arizona State University Sun Devils, Cecil returned an interception 100 yards to notch a Wildcats victory. This play has been voted the greatest play in Wildcat football history.[1]
He was inducted into the Wildcats' Sports Hall of Fame in 1993 and into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2009. He also spent two seasons (1999–2000) as a television analyst for University of Arizona football games.
Professional
Cecil was selected by the Packers in the fourth round (89th overall) of the 1988 NFL Draft. Cecil was known for his thunderous tackling and aggressive style during his time as a safety for the Packers (1988–1992), Cardinals (1993) and Oilers (1995), and earned a trip to the Pro Bowl and garnered All-Madden status in 1992 when he recorded four interceptions and 102 tackles on the season. In 95 career games he totaled 400 tackles and 16 interceptions. During his years with the Packers, he earned the nickname "Scud" Cecil because of his hit-or-miss approach to tackling opponents. He often left his feet and led with his helmet, and much like the infamous missiles launched during the Gulf War - would occasionally miss completely or arrive late.
Cecil is regarded as among the most vicious hitters in National Football League history. Chuck Cecil was featured on the October 11, 1993 issue of Sports Illustrated with the question: "Is Chuck Cecil Too Vicious for the NFL?"[7] Many photos taken of Cecil during games showed him with a bloodied nose.
During much of his career, Cecil was forced to wear a "Gazoo Helmet"; a helmet so named because it resembled the head of The Great Gazoo, a recurring character in The Flintstones animated series. The "Gazoo helmet" is actually a thick padding that fits on a helmet's shell to reduce the risk of receiving a concussion and reducing the risk of injury to opponents due to helmet-first hits, for which Chuck Cecil was fined numerous times. Despite the additional protection, recurring concussions forced Chuck Cecil into retirement.
Coaching career
In 2001 Cecil accepted a coaching position for the Tennessee Titans under Jeff Fisher, for whom he had played in his final season (when the team was the Houston Oilers). Cecil served as a defensive quality control assistant for three seasons. He was promoted in 2004, to work with the safeties and nickel backs. His responsibilities expanded in 2007 to cover all of the defensive backs.
On February 12, 2009, Cecil was named the Titans' defensive coordinator, replacing the departed Jim Schwartz, who had taken the position of Head Coach for the Detroit Lions.[8]
On October 3, 2010, during a game against the Denver Broncos, Cecil gave NFL officials the middle-finger gesture in an attempt to protest a neutral zone infraction call against one of his players. Live close-up video of Cecil was being aired at the time, and the gesture was broadcast without editing. For his inappropriate action, he was fined $40,000 by the league.
On January 20, 2011, it was announced that Cecil would not be retained as the Titans' defensive coordinator. He was informed of this decision on January 18. The Titans ranked 26th in total yards allowed and 29th against the pass in the 2010 season. [1]
On February 16, 2011, ESPN.com reported that Cecil will interview with the Pittsburgh Steelers to be their next secondary coach. He would fill the void left by Ray Horton when he departed to become the defensive coordinator of the Arizona Cardinals. [2] On February 13, 2012, he was hired as the St. Louis Rams defensive secondary coach. (http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/no-nonsense-cecil-to-coach-rams-secondary/article_c76cbbf8-3b63-5943-bfdd-60b30dec8aa8.html)
Personal
Cecil is married to author, columnist and television producer, Carrie Gerlach Cecil. The two have one daughter, Charli.
Coaching tree
Head Coach | Team | Capacity | Year(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Jeff Fisher | Tennessee Titans | defensive asst./quality control | 2001–2003 |
safeties and nickel backs coach | 2004–2006 | ||
defensive backs coach | 2007–2008 | ||
defensive coordinator | 2009–2010 | ||
St. Louis Rams | defensive secondary coach | 2012–present |
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h La Jolla Star Chamber Chuck Cecil bio, LJStarChamber.com (accessed online 2009-02-12)
- ^ All-Madden Team -- 1991, John Madden, ESPN.com (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- ^ Walter Camp Foundation All-America teams, WalterCamp.org (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- ^ American Football Coaches Assoc. All-America selections, AFCA.com (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- ^ a b Academic All-America All-time List, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- ^ Hall of Fame Inductees by Year, University of Arizona (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- ^ "Headlong and Headstrong"Sports Illustrated, October 11, 1993 (retrieved January 14, 2009)
- ^ Titans name Cecil Defensive Coordinator, Titans press release, February 12, 2009 (accessed online 2009-02-13)
- 1964 births
- Living people
- All-American college football players
- American football safeties
- Arizona Cardinals players
- Arizona Wildcats football players
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- Green Bay Packers players
- Houston Oilers players
- National Conference Pro Bowl players
- National Football League defensive coordinators
- People from Nashville, Tennessee
- People from Red Bluff, California
- Tennessee Titans coaches
- Players of American football from California
- St. Louis Rams coaches