Cards choose Whisenhunt .. Urban

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Cards choose Whisenhunt

By Darren Urban, Tribune
January 15, 2007

The day Ken Whisenhunt came to Tempe for his initial interview for the Arizona Cardinals’ vacant head coaching job, he was asked if he felt he was ready to be an NFL head coach. “Well, if you ask me, probably,” Whisenhunt said, before adding, “but I’m not the one making the decision on that.”

The Cardinals were making such a decision. And they agreed with Whisenhunt.

Sunday morning, Whisenhunt, 44, was named the Cards’ new coach. He signed a four-year contract with a team option for a fifth season, completing a two-week process to find a replacement for the fired Dennis Green.

“It became apparent to us, particularly when we got into the second phase of the interview process that Ken began to separate himself from the other candidates,” Cardinals vice president of football operations Rod Graves said. “It became obvious to us that his leadership ability, the plan he had for our football team and the organization he demonstrated was clearly the right one for this team.”

Whisenhunt, who returned to Pittsburgh Sunday, was not made available for comment.

With Whisenhunt’s trip home and the Martin Luther King holiday today, a news conference won’t be held until Tuesday.

“It’s good we can move on to the next phase,” Cardinals tackle Reggie Wells said.

The financial aspects of the deal were unavailable, although the Cardinals were expected to pay Whisenhunt somewhere between $2 million and $2.5 million a season.

Green was making $2.5 million a year.

Graves raved about the “plan” Whisenhunt has for the Cards, although Graves declined to give many specifics. Instead, Graves said Whisenhunt would reveal details when he is introduced Tuesday.

That includes whether Whisenhunt will retain any of the seven holdover assistant coaches from Green’s staff that remain under contract, specifically defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast.

Pendergast did meet with Whisenhunt before Whisenhunt was hired, however, and Pendergast is expected to return.

There are a couple of holdover offensive assistant coaches who are unlikely to stay, most notably offensive coordinator Mike Kruczek, who did not mesh well with quarterback Matt Leinart.

One possibility for offensive coordinator is Steelers receivers coach Bruce Arians.

The offense, however, will be shaped by Whisenhunt, who directed a Pittsburgh offense that helped win a Super Bowl in the 2005 season and finished seventh in the NFL in 2006.

Whisenhunt’s success with young Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was another factor in his hiring, given the Cards’ own young quarterback in Leinart.

Graves insisted the Cardinals had not leaned toward getting an offensive coach, despite the fact that six of the eight candidates interviewed had backgrounds on the offensive side.

But it is clear it was important, given the bulk of the Cards’ star power is on offense, with Leinart, running back Edgerrin James and wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald. The organization said it believes it should be more effective on that side of the ball.

The Cards were 18th in the NFL in total offense this season.

“If you look at our team and who we have, we are definitely a team that can build around the offense,” Wells said. “Hopefully he is a guy who can move us further (on offense) than were we were.”

Defensively, Whisenhunt had said he planned on being aggressive as well. He also seemed to feel he could work with a majority of the current roster, noting that in Pittsburgh “rather than try to make (players) fit our scheme, we have tried to adjust our scheme to fit them.”

Whisenhunt and Texans assistant head coach Mike Sherman were the only candidates to be brought back for second interviews. Graves emphasized Whisenhunt was the only candidate who was offered a job, contrary to a few different reports — including a couple that said Sherman had asked for a $4 million salary.

“There were a lot of rumors circulating over the last week over what was taking place with our interview process and I will say, quite frankly, a lot of those reports were misleading and false,” Graves said.

In coming to the Cardinals, Whisenhunt faces a daunting history. Each of the last nine coaches of the franchise that have been around for at least five games have losing records.

The last coach to leave with a winning mark? Don Coryell, who was 42-27-1 from 1973-77.

“I think he’ll be a good head coach,” Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said on ESPNews Sunday. “He’s got a lot of offensive weapons to work with. … He might be considered for that Coach of the Year (award).”

The Cardinals can only hope.

Ken Whisenhunt file
Age: 44
Cardinals contract: Signed through 2010, team option for 2011
College: Georgia Tech
Hometown: Atlanta, Ga.
Playing experience: Tight end and punter at Georgia Tech. Played nine seasons as tight end with Falcons, Redskins and Jets from 1985-1993.
Coaching resume: 1995-96 Vanderbilt University (special teams, tight ends and H-backs) 1997-98 Baltimore Ravens (tight ends) 1999 Cleveland Browns (special teams) 2000 New York Jets (tight ends) 2001-2003 Pittsburgh Steelers (tight ends) 2004-2006 Pittsburgh Steelers (offensive coordinator) Family: Wife Alice, son Kenneth Jr. (15) and daughter Mary Ashley (13).
 

blindseyed

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in Pittsburgh “rather than try to make (players) fit our scheme, we have tried to adjust our scheme to fit them.”


Wow that certainly would be a change from DGs 'my way or the highway' attitude
The more I read about this guy, the more I like him
 

Scott MS

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The financial aspects of the deal were unavailable, although the Cardinals were expected to pay Whisenhunt somewhere between $2 million and $2.5 million a season.

Green was making $2.5 million a year.

Not surprising. This is why the Cards have now hired Whisenhunt and not Sherman. I think it's a great hire, but don't pretend that money didn't play a role in it. They got a good guy and they got him at their price -- $2-$2.5M.

So Whisenhunt is guaranteed $10M over the next four years, maybe more if he does well. He's set for life.
 

RON_IN_OC

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There are a couple of holdover offensive assistant coaches who are unlikely to stay, most notably offensive coordinator Mike Kruczek, who did not mesh well with quarterback Matt Leinart.




Wow, hadn't heard anything like this before. Seemed like he really grasped coach K's playcalling and scheme after the Green Bay game. Maybe it's a personality thing.
 

Russ Smith

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Wow, hadn't heard anything like this before. Seemed like he really grasped coach K's playcalling and scheme after the Green Bay game. Maybe it's a personality thing.

That surprised me a bit too since I for one attributed Matt's slump after Rowen was demoted to losing the voice in his ear because Kruczek was the OC and not the QB coach. Sounds like Matt preferred Rowen then?

Arians sounds interesting, 3 years as OC in Cleveland, and was helping coach Peyton Manning when he entered the NFL. It sounds like Arians was the fall guy in Cleveland when after a ton of injuries, Butch Davis started firing coaches trying to keep his own job.
 

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That surprised me a bit too since I for one attributed Matt's slump after Rowen was demoted to losing the voice in his ear because Kruczek was the OC and not the QB coach. Sounds like Matt preferred Rowen then?

Arians sounds interesting, 3 years as OC in Cleveland, and was helping coach Peyton Manning when he entered the NFL. It sounds like Arians was the fall guy in Cleveland when after a ton of injuries, Butch Davis started firing coaches trying to keep his own job.

Yes...but the Pittsburgh papers this morning were saying that if Russ Grimm becomes the HC, he would likely tab Arians as the new OC...and that the QB coach, Mark Whipple could land in Arizona as OC for Whis.

Mark Whipple is a very intriguing choice...he's as unpredictable and wide open a play caller as there is...his teams at UMASS, where he won a Div. 1AA NCAA Championship were incredibly exciting to watch...very productive and highly unpredictable, with a twist of trickery here and there (just as Whis likes to do). I could see Whiz and Whipp being very much on the same page.
 

Russ Smith

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Yes...but the Pittsburgh papers this morning were saying that if Russ Grimm becomes the HC, he would likely tab Arians as the new OC...and that the QB coach, Mark Whipple could land in Arizona as OC for Whis.

Mark Whipple is a very intriguing choice...he's as unpredictable and wide open a play caller as there is...his teams at UMASS, where he won a Div. 1AA NCAA Championship were incredibly exciting to watch...very productive and highly unpredictable, with a twist of trickery here and there (just as Whis likes to do). I could see Whiz and Whipp being very much on the same page.


So the coach is the whiz and the OC is Mr. Whipple?
 

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Wow, hadn't heard anything like this before. Seemed like he really grasped coach K's playcalling and scheme after the Green Bay game. Maybe it's a personality thing.

Me neither... Could just be the justification for firing him though..

“It became apparent to us, particularly when we got into the second phase of the interview process that Ken began to separate himself from the other candidates,” Cardinals vice president of football operations Rod Graves said. “It became obvious to us that his leadership ability, the plan he had for our football team and the organization he demonstrated was clearly the right one for this team.”
Translation:

It became clear that Mike Sherman wanted too much money and that Ken would be willing to accept a salary that is less than what the Defensive Coordinator of the Miami Dolphins makes. Furthermore, he also caved in and allowed us to keep Clancy Pendergast. Also, Graves pointed out that he wanted to interview Ron Rivera again but was immediately silenced by Bill and Mike Bidwill who wanted to hire someone cheaper and with offensive experience.
 

Redheart

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Me neither... Could just be the justification for firing him though..


Translation:

It became clear that Mike Sherman wanted too much money and that Ken would be willing to accept a salary that is less than what the Defensive Coordinator of the Miami Dolphins makes. Furthermore, he also caved in and allowed us to keep Clancy Pendergast. Also, Graves pointed out that he wanted to interview Ron Rivera again but was immediately silenced by Bill and Mike Bidwill who wanted to hire someone cheaper and with offensive experience.


You sir, are a hater.
 

CardShark

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Me neither... Could just be the justification for firing him though..


Translation:

It became clear that Mike Sherman wanted too much money and that Ken would be willing to accept a salary that is less than what the Defensive Coordinator of the Miami Dolphins makes. Furthermore, he also caved in and allowed us to keep Clancy Pendergast. Also, Graves pointed out that he wanted to interview Ron Rivera again but was immediately silenced by Bill and Mike Bidwill who wanted to hire someone cheaper and with offensive experience.

How about correcting that to say opinion instead of translation, unless of course you have evidence to back it up and I don't mean media and poster speculation.
 

Dr. Jones

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How about correcting that to say opinion instead of translation, unless of course you have evidence to back it up and I don't mean media and poster speculation.

The Kool-Aid hath runeth over....

Obviously we all form our own opinions based on the mountains of speculative, and factual reporting we have all seen, heard, and read.

My problem lies within this mountain.

1. Backbone: Obviously we all know the Wiz has one. My problem is with the way he was dictated to in the interview process. No head coach should be told that he has to keep certain members of the former coaches staff. That should not be the reason why a coach is hired or not hired either. Furthermore, the fact that the Wiz agreed to the offer makes me suspicious as to his motives. Clearly this was not his first choice of destinations. The Steelers and Falcons were clearly #1 and 1A.

2. Motives on both sides of the fence: Is he silently not in the running in Pittsburgh anymore? Why did Atlanta move off of him so quickly? Why would he tell the Pittsburgh papers he wanted the Steelers job but not wait for the hiring process to end? We know Rod had love for Rivera. We know Bill had love for Sherman. Rod, to me, is an empty suit and had no chance to get his guy, and Bill is too cheap to pay for the guy he wanted. That leaves us with the guy who would accept the job at the price we were willing to pay. Not technically the right man for the job. We might be stumbling into the right man for the job, but we will never know as long as price dictates the move.

Trust me.... I love this move. In fact, he was my second choice behind Chow. I just will continue to remain uneasy about any off-season move with this franchise until the positive starts outweighing the negative.

Our head coach makes less than some DC's in the league.... Why do we have to put up with that when you consider the small city that was just built for them in Glendale?

Clements/Samuel
Adalius Thomas/L. Briggs.

It would help if they picked up 2 of these 4.
 

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The Kool-Aid hath runeth over....

Obviously we all form our own opinions based on the mountains of speculative, and factual reporting we have all seen, heard, and read.

My problem lies within this mountain.

1. Backbone: Obviously we all know the Wiz has one. My problem is with the way he was dictated to in the interview process. No head coach should be told that he has to keep certain members of the former coaches staff. That should not be the reason why a coach is hired or not hired either. Furthermore, the fact that the Wiz agreed to the offer makes me suspicious as to his motives. Clearly this was not his first choice of destinations. The Steelers and Falcons were clearly #1 and 1A.

2. Motives on both sides of the fence: Is he silently not in the running in Pittsburgh anymore? Why did Atlanta move off of him so quickly? Why would he tell the Pittsburgh papers he wanted the Steelers job but not wait for the hiring process to end? We know Rod had love for Rivera. We know Bill had love for Sherman. Rod, to me, is an empty suit and had no chance to get his guy, and Bill is too cheap to pay for the guy he wanted. That leaves us with the guy who would accept the job at the price we were willing to pay. Not technically the right man for the job. We might be stumbling into the right man for the job, but we will never know as long as price dictates the move.

Trust me.... I love this move. In fact, he was my second choice behind Chow. I just will continue to remain uneasy about any off-season move with this franchise until the positive starts outweighing the negative.

Our head coach makes less than some DC's in the league.... Why do we have to put up with that when you consider the small city that was just built for them in Glendale?

Clements/Samuel
Adalius Thomas/L. Briggs.

It would help if they picked up 2 of these 4.


1. The whole world laughed at the idea of paying Sherman $4 mm a year (if true) -- and I can imagine the meltdown on this board if it not only was Sherman, but Sherman at $4 mm a year. Good grief.

2. Lets see the staff before we get worked up on if coaches were forced on the guy.

3. At the rumored $2 mm + a year -- Wis salary should be solidly in the median -- I would guess that it ranks somewhere in the 16 - 20 range- which for a guy who has never been a head coach before, is probably where it should be. So, the Cards certainly could have gone a cheaper route if that was the motivating factor.
 

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Me neither... Could just be the justification for firing him though..


Translation:

It became clear that Mike Sherman wanted too much money and that Ken would be willing to accept a salary that is less than what the Defensive Coordinator of the Miami Dolphins makes. Furthermore, he also caved in and allowed us to keep Clancy Pendergast. Also, Graves pointed out that he wanted to interview Ron Rivera again but was immediately silenced by Bill and Mike Bidwill who wanted to hire someone cheaper and with offensive experience.
:trout: :slap:
 

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The Kool-Aid hath runeth over....

Obviously we all form our own opinions based on the mountains of speculative, and factual reporting we have all seen, heard, and read.

My problem lies within this mountain.


1. Backbone: Obviously we all know the Wiz has one. My problem is with the way he was dictated to in the interview process. No head coach should be told that he has to keep certain members of the former coaches staff. That should not be the reason why a coach is hired or not hired either. Furthermore, the fact that the Wiz agreed to the offer makes me suspicious as to his motives. Clearly this was not his first choice of destinations. The Steelers and Falcons were clearly #1 and 1A.

2. Motives on both sides of the fence: Is he silently not in the running in Pittsburgh anymore? Why did Atlanta move off of him so quickly? Why would he tell the Pittsburgh papers he wanted the Steelers job but not wait for the hiring process to end? We know Rod had love for Rivera. We know Bill had love for Sherman. Rod, to me, is an empty suit and had no chance to get his guy, and Bill is too cheap to pay for the guy he wanted. That leaves us with the guy who would accept the job at the price we were willing to pay. Not technically the right man for the job. We might be stumbling into the right man for the job, but we will never know as long as price dictates the move.

Trust me.... I love this move. In fact, he was my second choice behind Chow. I just will continue to remain uneasy about any off-season move with this franchise until the positive starts outweighing the negative.

Our head coach makes less than some DC's in the league.... Why do we have to put up with that when you consider the small city that was just built for them in Glendale?

Clements/Samuel
Adalius Thomas/L. Briggs.

It would help if they picked up 2 of these 4.

Someone concerned with the mountain of speculation.. mixed with some fact... might thoughtfully refrain from adding to the mountain. :bang:
 

Cbus cardsfan

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If they were going strictly on salary then Chow would have been the choice. He probably would've taken the job with no pay increase for his OC role in Tennessee. That's how bad he wants to be a HC. Sherman may have wanted 4 mill/year but Ross Verba also thought he was worth 6-7 mill/year. I think, if the Cards wanted Sherman first, they would have negotiated with him to get a contarct done and not just ended it when he supposedly asked for that.
 
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