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masslive.com: So you want to work for Bill Belichick? Former Patriots assistants recall intense interview process


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By Kevin Duffy | krduffy@masslive.com 
on December 12, 2016 at 7:00 AM, updated December 12, 2016 at 12:13 PM

 

 

FOXBOROUGH -- In early 2000, Bill Belichick made three hires to round out his first staff with the Patriots, filling entry-level coaching assistant jobs that offered little creative freedom, even less financial freedom, and virtually zero life freedom.

"The 20/20 deal," said Patriots tight ends coach Brian Daboll. "Twenty hours a day for 20 grand a year. And it wasn't exactly 20 yet."

Recommended by Nick Saban, his boss at Michigan State, Daboll interviewed at the old Foxboro Stadium for several hours. He spent the morning in solitude, accompanied only by a pen, notepad, and the damn grainy game film that required him to squint or rewind to identify players' numbers.

Mark Jackson's tryout lasted several days. The staff's second coaching assistant and a holdover from the Pete Carroll era, Jackson was given a handful of NFL games to analyze in painstaking detail. Days later, he presented the project to Belichick.

"I thought an interview was an interview," Jackson said. "You come in, tell him (about yourself). This was more of an assignment."

 

And Ned Burke, the third coaching assistant, was brought over from the Jets. He didn't officially interview with the Pats. No need after what he went through to get hired by New York.

Burke had originally connected with Belichick in the late 90s at the Belmont Stakes, of all places. Eric Mangini was the link; Burke's childhood best friend went to college with Mangini, who was at the horserace with Belichick. The two groups convened, and Belichick sat next to Burke. Belichick soon learned that Burke had been a two-sport athlete at Cornell: a running back on the football team, and a four-year starter at midfield for lacrosse. The latter was of the utmost interest to Belichick.

"He just started grilling me about lacrosse," Burke said, "and what I thought about the game and where it was going. We talked for quite a while about lacrosse, not even about football."

They left Belmont Park with an agreement: If Burke ever wanted to venture into coaching, he should contact Belichick.

He did, and, as a trial, the Jets began to mail game film for Burke to analyze. Working as a teacher at a small private high school in Connecticut, Burke completed the breakdowns in his spare time and mailed them back. This correspondence lasted four or five months until the Jets finally gave him a shot in the scouting department.

 

When Belichick went to New England, Burke followed for a coaching assistant gig that is as enticing as it is unenviable.

That first year, Jackson picked up Daboll at 4:30 a.m. They often arrived to yellow sticky notes on their tiny desks -- either assignments from the head coach or corrections on previous assignments. Early in Josh McDaniels' three-year run as a coaching assistant, he'd submit a project and receive "like 100 sticky notes" from Belichick.

Even Belichick will concede that the job is "a grind."

Why wouldn't the interview be, too?

_________________

 

So you want to get your career started under Bill Belichick... Cool.

You will be a coaching assistant. Know this: Few people will be aware of your professional existence. All public credit for the gameplan -- for which you help lay the foundation -- will go to Belichick and the coordinators. You will occupy a four-sentence bio deep in the team's media guide, and that's about it.

Few people outside the building will be aware of your actual existence, too. Filling out a timecard, especially under Belichick, is akin to keeping a log of when you are awake. The pay, at least initially, is laughably low, and the work itself is an endless brain-frying loop.

"Incredibly laborious," said Burke, who has since embarked on a finance career, "but very educational."

The job is also a well-established launching pad, providing an invaluable base of knowledge for young coaches. It was a starting point, almost a rite of passage, for Daboll, McDaniels, Matt Patricia, Nick Caserio, Bill O'Brien, George Godsey, Josh Boyer, Brian Flores, and Steve Belichick, among others.

Its essence: Entry-level coaching assistants are responsible for weekly breakdowns of the upcoming opponent, handed in to Belichick more than a week in advance of the game so he can use them as reference points as he conceives a strategy. Offensive assistants focus on the opponent's defense. Defensive assistants focus on the offense. Both focus on details so insignificant that you'd think Belichick was playing a prank on these kids. 

 

Phil Savage, who worked as a coaching assistant in Cleveland under Belichick, remembers logging the direction in which the quarterback turned his head prior to each snap.

For many years, these breakdowns were recorded on what Belichick called "the pads." Coaching assistants would diagram each play, illustrating receiver splits, depth of routes, depth of the halfback behind the quarterback, alignment of the defensive players, shades of the defensive linemen, the protection of offensive line. Notations for each category were made at the top of the page.

"There was a box and a location to put it down, and then you had to draw each play by hand," said McDaniels, a coaching assistant from 2001-03. "And I'm not talking about a rough drawing. I'm talking about a drawing that would take you 10 minutes."

Between the identification of scheme and detail, each play could take as long 20 minutes to diagram in full. Each game had 50-70 plays on each side of the ball. Each coaching assistant had three breakdowns per week. Game breakdowns, not mental breakdowns. Although one could lead to the other.

 

As technology has advanced, "the pads" have been replaced, but fundamental demands of the position, the radical levels of detail, have not changed.

In this job, McDaniels said, "you learned the most valuable lesson that you keep to this day: everything is important."

_________________

 

Belichick has always sought to hire high-IQ, high-potential individuals, the kind of people who love the grunt work, but eventually outgrow it. "PhD-type people," Belichick used to say in Cleveland, according to former Browns coaching assistant Kevin Spencer. He also has sought toughness, and his interview techniques aim to assess just that.

"Those interviews are long days," Belichick said. "I think you see after 8, 9, 10 hours of an interview you see what kind of staying power they have, how excited they are to keep grinding through the information, how detailed they are, how important it is to them."

The morning begins in isolation. The candidate arrives and is sequestered to work on an extensive film breakdown. This can be a stress-inducing start, considering the absurd level of detail required.

Daboll, for example, was given several hours. When his time expired, he looked down and thought, wait a minute, this can't be right. He had finished about eight plays.

"Come to find out that those pads take like 8-10 hours to do, for one game," Daboll said. "Unbelievable."

When he interviewed in 2001, McDaniels did "five plays in an hour, maybe."

Then comes the intimidating part. The prospective coaching assistant, undoubtedly concerned about the minimal number of plays he just spent several hours diagramming, meets with several of his potential bosses.

 

"It puts them on the spot," Belichick said. "You're talking to a half-dozen people. What kind of poise and presence does he have in a group?"

Together, assistant coaches pepper the candidate with all sorts of questions -- football scheme and philosophy, application of such philosophy, career aspirations, etc.

"They're pushing you and testing you and seeing if you're going to break a little bit," McDaniels said. "...It was basically a test of whether or not I was willing to work the way they knew I was going to have to work, even though I probably didn't know it at the time."

Added Patricia, who left a lucrative job as an applications engineer to pursue coaching: "This was much more intense than a lot of those engineering interviews I went on."

...

Conthttp://www.masslive.com/patriots/index.ssf/2016/12/bill_belichick_patriots_coachi.html

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