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A football coach even a Dallas Freeper could love (Gibbs)
National Review ^ | 01/09/04 | David Hickey

Posted on 01/09/2004 10:07:10 AM PST by Nightbird

No Ordinary Joe The Washington Redskins go back to the future.

By David Hickey

ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA — I hate the Washington Redskins. I'm not the only one, either, as most anyone who moves to this area and is a pro-football fan automatically hates the team. The reasons for playa hatin' are numerous: the incessant and idiotic Redskins coverage, the incredibly obnoxious Hogettes, the fact that transplants may already have a favorite team, and, of course, the young, meddlesome, football-neophyte owner Dan Snyder. About the only thing to like about the local professional football team is that they refuse to bow to the pressures of political correctness and change the name "Redskins" to something less insensitive, as when the local NBA squad changed its name from the allegedly violent "Bullets" to the nerdy "Wizards."

Redskin haters take a perverse pleasure in watching the Redskins fail, especially when expectations for the team are high. For the past decade or so, the pleasure has been intense. The team has made only one playoff appearance in the last eleven years. This past season just ended in a five-win debacle, with false messiah Steve Spurrier leaving town in disgrace. Over the years, I have thoroughly enjoyed watching hundreds of millions of dollars being wasted on over-the-hill free agents (Deion Sanders, Bruce Smith, etc.), on high draft picks turning into high-priced busts (Heath Shuler, Michael Westbrook, etc.), or seeing underachieving players leaving the Redskins to become bona fide stars on other teams (Super Bowl quarterbacks Brad Johnson and Rich Gannon, etc.), and four utterly confused head coaches in the last four years (Norv Turner, Terry Robiskie, etc.).

But in what has to be the most stunning news in the sports world since Michael Jordan announced his first retirement, the Boy Blunder showed former Redskin coaching great Joe Gibbs the money and lured him out of an eleven-year retirement with a five-year, $25 million contract. The last time someone so famous came back to our nation's capital to resume such a prominent position of leadership was when Grover Cleveland returned to the White House after a four-year absence in the late 19th century. Even the most steadfast Redskin hater, if he is a true football fan, has to be impressed with the rehiring of the legendary Coach Gibbs.

From a football perspective, you can't do much better than Gibbs. When he ran the Redskins in the Eighties and early Nineties, the team made it to four Super Bowls, winning three. Along the way, Gibbs won 67 percent of his regular-season games; during the postseason, the winning occurred at a 79 percent clip. And as if three Super Bowl victories in twelve years wasn't impressive enough, Gibbs's Redskins accomplished this feat with three different starting quarterbacks and three different starting running backs. It remains to be seen whether Gibbs can cope with a new generation of pampered and thuggish athletes, with a megalomaniac for an owner, and a free-agent system which guarantees that a team cannot keep a core set of players for any length of time. But anything's possible, especially in today's NFL. Two of Gibbs's Eighties contemporaries recently returned to the pro coaching ranks and have met with resounding successes. Bill Parcells came back and brought the moribund Dallas Cowboys back to the playoffs, and Dick Vermeil, who coached against Gibbs's Redskins in the early Eighties, recently came back after a 16-year coaching hiatus, winning the 1999 Super Bowl with the St. Louis Rams and having the Kansas City Chiefs primed for a championship run this season. There is no reason to believe that Gibbs, who is renowned for his football acumen and his tireless work ethic, cannot at least match the efforts of his Old School colleagues and bring the Deadskins back to respectability.

Gibbs's arrival is even bigger news than when Vince Lombardi walked across the Potomac to coach the Redskins in 1969. And like St. Vince, Gibbs also has a reputation for being socially conservative. His first stint in Washington almost perfectly coincided with the twelve years of the Reagan-Bush 41 era, and it was hard to tell who was more conservative during those heady days. Among other things, Gibbs lent his considerable prestige to an effort to pass a school-prayer amendment, joined a demonstration against abortion at a local hospital, made an anti-abortion video with several NFL players, and campaigned against pornography and illegal-drug use. He was always active in the local community and encouraged his players to make positive contributions to society. In 1983, he even joined President Reagan onstage at the annual National Prayer Breakfast. Gibbs is an unabashed born-again Christian, so much so that a rumor circulated that Christians had an easier time making the team than hard-drinking, card-playing athletes. Of course, since some of his best players included carousers such as John Riggins, Dexter Manley, and Joe Theismann, in retrospect the accusation seems to ring hollow. President George W. Bush may find a kindred spirit in Coach Gibbs, and don't be surprised if the Redskins new coach ends up befriending the president, much like Lombardi and (yet another) former Redskin coaching great George Allen were chummy with former President Richard Nixon. It's too bad that Gibbs is only coming back to D.C. as a coach, and not as an elected official.

It's a conundrum for a Redskin hater such as myself. The reasons to hate the Redskins are still there, only now there will be even more nonstop Redskins coverage in the papers and on the TV and radio, the Hogettes will probably be more visible and annoying than ever, and Dan Snyder will still be insufferable. Worst of all, now the Redskins will probably start to beat my favorite team, which had won 16 of 22 meetings since Gibbs's departure. Still, I won't be able to stop rooting for a coach who is one of the greatest of all time, and for a man who could once again provide a shining example of conservatism here in Washington.

Hail to the Redskins, indeed.

— David Hickey lives in Alexandria, Virginia, and is a long-time professional football and Dallas Cowboys fan.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; US: District of Columbia; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: football; joegibbs; nfl; prolife; redskins
Okay all you Redskin haters out there....try and do your worst
1 posted on 01/09/2004 10:07:11 AM PST by Nightbird
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2 posted on 01/09/2004 10:09:04 AM PST by Support Free Republic (If Woody had gone straight to the police, this would never have happened!)
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To: Nightbird
The hiring of Joe Gibbs pretty much mirrors Dallas' hiring of Bill Parcells last year. What is most notable about both of these hirings is that two particularly meddlesome team owners have gone out of their way to hire head coaches who are immune to any meddling by team owners.

The first time Snyder pesters Gibbs in his new capacity as head coach, Gibbs will tell him to "go f#ck off" and will re-retire in a heartbeat. The same goes for the relationship between Jerry Jones and Parcells in Dallas.

3 posted on 01/09/2004 10:14:49 AM PST by Alberta's Child (Alberta -- the TRUE North strong and free.)
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To: Nightbird
Life long Cowboy fan. Lived in DC for several years during the 80's and learned to hate Redskins fans. I have enjoyed seeing Dallas own the Skins for the last few years. All that being said, I always respected Gibbs and am glad to see him back. Those Cowboys-Skins games should start to get a whole lot more interesting now.
4 posted on 01/09/2004 10:18:22 AM PST by Grumpy Bear
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To: Alberta's Child
I met Joe Gibbs at a NASCAR event. Seemed like a down-to-earth, personable guy. I'm an Eagles fan though, so I can't like him too much.
5 posted on 01/09/2004 10:18:47 AM PST by Callahan
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To: Nightbird
Awesome article!

I remember david Letterman's opening monologue years ago when he stated something like: "The Washington Bullets are trying to soften the violent connotations of their team name, so they've decided to just call themselves "the Bullets." HA ha ha ha ha, hours of fun.

Anyhow as a former DC inhabitant, I will always love the Redskins. And Joe Gibbs brought the team out of obscurity (my apologies to the magnificent George Allen, but Joe won those three bowls) and into respectability. I would vote for Joe Gibbs to be President of the U.S.; I think he's that good of a manager.

Good luck, Joe. You have a monumental task ahead of you.
6 posted on 01/09/2004 10:23:24 AM PST by mallardx
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To: Nightbird
The football world has had a monumental shift toward parity since Gibbs last coached.

He will have to preform with much less talent, and much better competition than in his "Glory Years".

I wish him luck, he seems like a good guy, but he may be in for a SHOCKER.

7 posted on 01/09/2004 10:23:29 AM PST by StatesEnemy
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To: StatesEnemy
preform = PERFORM
8 posted on 01/09/2004 10:24:28 AM PST by StatesEnemy
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To: Nightbird
I've met Joe Gibbs several times and heard him speak as well. Joe is a great man whom I admire very much. Even if he was a lousy football coach the Redskins would still be lucky to have him.
9 posted on 01/09/2004 10:27:13 AM PST by T.Smith
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To: Nightbird
I'm not the only one, either, as most anyone who moves to this area and is a pro-football fan automatically hates the team.

Amen to that! I've been in the DC area since 1986 and I still don't give a hoot for this team. I really think it's that stupid song of theirs. You couldn't make-up a dumber one if you tried.

Of course, even long time Redskins fans have learned to hate Daniel Snyder to such a point that they actually laugh out loud when they show his face, looking all angry as the 'skins lose another one!

Gee, how big of a horse's rear-end do you have to be to make Redskin fans fondly recall the days of Jack Kent Cooke?

10 posted on 01/09/2004 10:35:40 AM PST by FormerLib (We'll fight the good fight until the very end!)
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To: FormerLib
Well former, every 'Skins fan I've ever known always loved the old man. Jack Kent Cooke simply opened his checkbook and said "get the job done fellas."

Sure he was eccentric, and that Colombian wife of his was always in the newspaper, but it's not like he was making draft picks or calling plays.

Not to mention, he built his own stadium. He didn't buy off politicians or pillage the taxpayers like the stadiums in Philly, Pittsburgh and Baltimore. He built the place and named it simply, Redskins Stadium. People suggested to him that he should name it after himself, but he found the idea silly. Once he died, they named it Jack Kent Cooke stadium, and it is now called FedEx field.

Old Jack always had the fans at heart, "the best bloody fans in football."
11 posted on 01/09/2004 10:49:06 AM PST by Nightbird
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To: Nightbird
I hate the 'Skins, but I really admire Joe Gibbs - class act all the way. I wish him luck with the new breed of player...
12 posted on 01/09/2004 10:51:25 AM PST by GodBlessRonaldReagan (where is Count Petofi when we need him most?)
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To: Nightbird
NFL Rookie Running Back of the Year (1976) was Mike Thomas of Greenville, Texas and played for the 'skins.
13 posted on 01/09/2004 11:17:43 AM PST by vetvetdoug
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To: Nightbird
Well former, every 'Skins fan I've ever known always loved the old man.

Then you clearly run with a different bunch of 'skins fans than the ones I know. They claim that he gave 'em the creeps.

Hey, it just doesn't matter to me! You'll be hard pressed to find a team that I care less about. That's right, I care more about the Cowboys than I do the Redskins (of course, my 'care' extends to hoping they fall flat on their Cowboys butts).

14 posted on 01/09/2004 11:26:10 AM PST by FormerLib (We'll fight the good fight until the very end!)
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To: Nightbird
HOOOORRRAAAHHH !! This town is alive with the news for the return of Gibbs. Its amazing. People are smiling and seem to be in a euphoric mood all around town. Everyone ran back to the dorms just to catch his news conference last night and people were all just staring and smiling at the TV screen. Give him a year or even 2 to adjust but the team has enough talent to win 8 maybe even 9 games next year.. By the way Bush and Gibbs ?? Don't see how a cowboy and a redskin can get along !
15 posted on 01/09/2004 11:30:32 AM PST by Independentamerican (Independent Freshman at the University of MD)
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