BREAKING NEWS: Joe Gibbs Quits as Redskins Coach

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Digger

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(To that, I say "Good riddance" - Andy)

WASHINGTON - Joe Gibbs resigned as coach and team president of the Washington Redskins on Tuesday, three days after his team’s playoff loss concluded a season marked by the killing of safety Sean Taylor.

The Redskins said in a statement that Gibbs will remain part of the Redskins family and serve as a special adviser to owner Dan Snyder. Gibbs was to discuss his decision at a 3 p.m. news conference at Redskins Park.

The Redskins will begin a search for a new coach immediately. Among the certain candidates are two former head coaches on Gibbs’ staff, Gregg Williams and Al Saunders.

Gibbs went 31-36, including 1-2 in the playoffs, after emerging from NFL retirement and his NASCAR career to sign a five-year, $27.5 million contract in 2004. He had always maintained that he intended to fulfill the contract, but the 67-year-old coach wavered from that stance Monday when asked if he would return for the final year of his deal.

Gibbs’ resignation brings an apparent end to a Hall of Fame coaching career in which he twice raised the Redskins from mediocrity into a playoff team, although he failed in his goal of bringing the team back to the Super Bowl during his second stint in Washington. Gibbs won three NFL titles during his first tenure from 1981-92; the second time around he took the team to the postseason in two of his four seasons.

It also follows one of the best coaching performances of his career, his leadership helping the Redskins focus after Taylor’s death on Nov. 27. Washington won its final four regular season games after Taylor’s funeral, going from 5-7 to 9-7 to claim the final playoff berth in the NFC.

The emotional run ended Saturday, when the Redskins lost 35-14 at Seattle in the wild-card playoffs.

“It was the toughest (season) for me,” Gibbs said Monday. “When you go through a season like that, for a while it’s kind of hard to re-grasp reality.”

Gibbs has also endured a personal crisis for a year. One of his grandsons, Taylor, was diagnosed with leukemia last January at the age of 2. Gibbs frequently talks lovingly about his “grandbabies,” and he made an overnight to North Carolina on Sunday to be with his family, interrupting the postseason routine of meetings that usually follow the final game of the season.

Still, for much of the season, Gibbs seemed intent on returning to coach. Players and coaches said publicly and privately over the last week that they would be shocked if he didn’t stay on to finish the job. Last month, he said he would be open to discussing a contract extension so that he would not return next season as a lame-duck coach.

At a news conference Monday, Gibbs spoke about plans for next season — the team’s approach to free agency, offseason workouts and the possibility of an open quarterback competition at training camp — as if he were going to remain on the sidelines. However, he hedged when asked if he would definitely be back, saying it would hinge on his meeting Monday night with Snyder.

“Everybody’s situation will be taken into context here — including mine, and my future here and all that,” Gibbs said Monday.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
(To that, I say "Good riddance" - Andy)

WASHINGTON - Joe Gibbs resigned as coach and team president of the Washington Redskins on Tuesday, three days after his team’s playoff loss concluded a season marked by the killing of safety Sean Taylor.

The Redskins said in a statement that Gibbs will remain part of the Redskins family and serve as a special adviser to owner Dan Snyder. Gibbs was to discuss his decision at a 3 p.m. news conference at Redskins Park.

The Redskins will begin a search for a new coach immediately. Among the certain candidates are two former head coaches on Gibbs’ staff, Gregg Williams and Al Saunders.

Gibbs went 31-36, including 1-2 in the playoffs, after emerging from NFL retirement and his NASCAR career to sign a five-year, $27.5 million contract in 2004. He had always maintained that he intended to fulfill the contract, but the 67-year-old coach wavered from that stance Monday when asked if he would return for the final year of his deal.

Gibbs’ resignation brings an apparent end to a Hall of Fame coaching career in which he twice raised the Redskins from mediocrity into a playoff team, although he failed in his goal of bringing the team back to the Super Bowl during his second stint in Washington. Gibbs won three NFL titles during his first tenure from 1981-92; the second time around he took the team to the postseason in two of his four seasons.

It also follows one of the best coaching performances of his career, his leadership helping the Redskins focus after Taylor’s death on Nov. 27. Washington won its final four regular season games after Taylor’s funeral, going from 5-7 to 9-7 to claim the final playoff berth in the NFC.

The emotional run ended Saturday, when the Redskins lost 35-14 at Seattle in the wild-card playoffs.

“It was the toughest (season) for me,” Gibbs said Monday. “When you go through a season like that, for a while it’s kind of hard to re-grasp reality.”

Gibbs has also endured a personal crisis for a year. One of his grandsons, Taylor, was diagnosed with leukemia last January at the age of 2. Gibbs frequently talks lovingly about his “grandbabies,” and he made an overnight to North Carolina on Sunday to be with his family, interrupting the postseason routine of meetings that usually follow the final game of the season.

Still, for much of the season, Gibbs seemed intent on returning to coach. Players and coaches said publicly and privately over the last week that they would be shocked if he didn’t stay on to finish the job. Last month, he said he would be open to discussing a contract extension so that he would not return next season as a lame-duck coach.

At a news conference Monday, Gibbs spoke about plans for next season — the team’s approach to free agency, offseason workouts and the possibility of an open quarterback competition at training camp — as if he were going to remain on the sidelines. However, he hedged when asked if he would definitely be back, saying it would hinge on his meeting Monday night with Snyder.

“Everybody’s situation will be taken into context here — including mine, and my future here and all that,” Gibbs said Monday.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


WOW ~
Joe definately didnt need the money when he came back to the "skins"

Wasnt real sure why he did it....but all said and done

the way Joe carries himself, thru up n down and what he has accomplished, others could learn a thing or two..

yes he didnt win but how he wins says alot

When NE ran up the score most coaches would have "whined in a hearbeat" but not Joe...
 
I'm wondering if he knows he'll have to be heavily involved with the switch to Toyota and he wouldn't have time for the Deadskins. Or, he's put in his time and maybe he just wants to step back a bit.
 
I'm wondering if he knows he'll have to be heavily involved with the switch to Toyota and he wouldn't have time for the Deadskins. Or, he's put in his time and maybe he just wants to step back a bit.

That's it! I've had enough of your yappy happy mouth! :mad:

Okay, just kidding everybody. But seriously, DON'T INSULT THE REDSKINS!

They did come back after what is the single largest tragedy a football team can face. No NFL team has lost an active starter in over 30 years (before the death of All-Star Safety Sean Taylor). The "Deadskins" came back from a season that was dead and made the NFC Playoffs.

I hardly consider that a bad season.

Joe had to go though. Nobody's gonna forget about the back-to-back tmeouts.
 
They did come back after what is the single largest tragedy a football team can face. No NFL team has lost an active starter in over 30 years (before the death of All-Star Safety Sean Taylor). The "Deadskins" came back from a season that was dead and made the NFC Playoffs.

I hardly consider that a bad season.

Joe had to go though. Nobody's gonna forget about the back-to-back tmeouts.

So some people will never forget about the back-to-back timeouts, but they will apparently forget completely about the multiple Super Bowls he won with that franchise? And I suppose that the team was able to comeback from all of this tragedy and still make the playoffs IN SPITE of Joe Gibbs leadership and integrity? Man I am glad I don't live in the angry little world those people live in. :rolleyes:

Joe Gibbs will go down as one of the greatest coaches and greatest men in league history. If he feels he needs to step away, God bless him. I wish the man well in the future.
 
But seriously, DON'T INSULT THE REDSKINS!
Andy, my heart bleeds for you. I only wish that your Skins would have more seasons like they did with Joe, the Toe, Thiesman when he kicked that wonderful punt against the Bears. I used to have a soft spot in my heart for those old time Skins, but with your comments, I'll have to forget them and will forever insult the politically incorrect Washington (DC because the actual state of Washington wouldn't even think of insulting the American Indian) Redskins, who wish that they could have the likes of Kansas running back John Riggins, but will never again attain such a top notch player. Why? Because they ARE the Washington Redskins. Andy, bring back Joe will ya? We need to see some great punts and a few broken legs again. :rolleyes:
 
Actually instead of calling them the Deadskins (and this has been a long time term and shouldn't be confused as to referring to Taylor) maybe we should call the Foreskins.

Cause they done get beat more times than a young lad's tallywhacker...
 
That's it! I've had enough of your yappy happy mouth! :mad:

Okay, just kidding everybody. But seriously, DON'T INSULT THE REDSKINS!

They did come back after what is the single largest tragedy a football team can face. No NFL team has lost an active starter in over 30 years (before the death of All-Star Safety Sean Taylor). The "Deadskins" came back from a season that was dead and made the NFC Playoffs.

I hardly consider that a bad season.

Joe had to go though. Nobody's gonna forget about the back-to-back tmeouts.


Didn't Denver lose a DB a year or two ago when he was shot? And I'm pretty sure Derrick Thomas was a starter when he was killed in a car accident.

As far as " the single largest tragedy a football team can face", go rent the movie We Are Marshall.
 
Didn't Denver lose a DB a year or two ago when he was shot? And I'm pretty sure Derrick Thomas was a starter when he was killed in a car accident.

As far as " the single largest tragedy a football team can face", go rent the movie We Are Marshall.

Yeh that was a good movie, all i can say is that Coach Gibbs was a great coach and has proven to be a great Nascar leader as well. I would imagine the stress of the NFL coaching duties was taking its' toll on Coach. I wish him well he is going to need some patience this season with Toyota and all his team members that he will have to babysit.
 
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