John Fox (footbal player)
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John Fox | |
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Date of birth | February 8, 1955 (age 52) |
Place of birth | Virginia Beach, Virginia |
College | San Diego State |
Career Record | 44-36-0 (Regular Season) 5-2 (Postseason) 49-38-0 (Overall) |
Championships Won |
2004 NFC Championship |
Playing Stats | DatabaseFootball |
Coaching Stats | Pro Football Reference |
Team(s) as a coach/administrator | |
1985 1989-1991 1992-1993 1994-1995 1996 1997-2001 2002-present |
Los Angeles Express (USFL) (defensive backs coach) Pittsburgh Steelers (defensive backs coach) San Diego Chargers (defensive backs coach) Los Angeles Raiders (defensive coordinator) St. Louis Rams (personnel consultant) New York Giants (defensive coordinator) Carolina Panthers (head coach) |
John Fox (born February 8, 1955) is the third and current head coach of the Carolina Panthers of the NFL.
Fox was born in Virginia Beach, Virginia and raised in San Diego, California after moving there at age 15. Fox played football at Castle Park High School and Southwestern College (California) in Chula Vista from 1974-1975 before going to San Diego State, where he played defensive back with future NFL player & head coach Herman Edwards. Fox received a bachelor’s degree in physical education and earned teaching credentials from San Diego State.
Fox actually began his first coaching stint in the short-lived United States Football League with the Los Angeles Express. He entered the NFL in 1989 as the secondary coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers, later also holding this job with the San Diego Chargers. Fox was the defensive coordinator for the Los Angeles Raiders and later that of the New York Giants during Super Bowl XXXV, which they lost.
In 2002 Fox was signed as the third head coach of the Panthers, whose previous coach George Seifert had led the team to a disastrous 1-15 record in 2001. Fox's first regular season game was a 10-7 victory over the Baltimore Ravens which ended the Panthers' 15-game losing streak dating to the previous season. Fox and the Panthers posted a 7-9 record for the 2002 season (his first with the team), demonstrating a drastic improvement over the previous season.
In the 2003 season Fox led the Panthers to Super Bowl XXXVIII, losing 32-29 to the New England Patriots on a last-minute field goal by Adam Vinatieri (which was also the margin of victory for the Patriots in their Super Bowl victories in Super Bowl XXXVI and Super Bowl XXXIX). In taking the Panthers to the Super Bowl, Fox joined Vince Lombardi as the only coaches to inherit a team that had won only one game in the season immediately prior to their hiring, and then took that team to the Super Bowl. John Fox took the Carolina Panthers to the NFC Championship game in the 2005 season, but they were defeated by the Seattle Seahawks.
The 2006 season was disappointing for Fox and the Panthers, as a team that had Super Bowl aspirations fell out of the playoffs.
Preceded by Mike Nolan |
New York Giants Defensive Coordinator 1997-2002 |
Succeeded by Johnnie Lynn |
Preceded by George Seifert |
Carolina Panthers Head Coaches 2002–present |
Succeeded by Current coach |
Carolina Panthers Head Coaches |
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Capers • Seifert • Fox |
Current Head Coaches of the National Football League | |||
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American Football Conference | |||
East | North | South | West |
Jauron (Buffalo) | Billick (Baltimore) | Kubiak (Houston) | Shanahan (Denver) |
Cameron (Miami) | Lewis (Cincinnati) | Dungy (Indianapolis) | Edwards (Kansas City) |
Belichick (New England) | Crennel (Cleveland) | Del Rio (Jacksonville) | Kiffin (Oakland) |
Mangini (NY Jets) | Tomlin (Pittsburgh) | Fisher (Tennessee) | Turner (San Diego) |
National Football Conference | |||
East | North | South | West |
Phillips (Dallas) | Smith (Chicago) | Petrino (Atlanta) | Whisenhunt (Arizona) |
Coughlin (NY Giants) | Marinelli (Detroit) | Fox (Carolina) | Linehan (St. Louis) |
Reid (Philadelphia) | McCarthy (Green Bay) | Payton (New Orleans) | Nolan (San Francisco) |
Gibbs (Washington) | Childress (Minnesota) | Gruden (Tampa Bay) | Holmgren (Seattle) |