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Since Charlie Weis became head coach
three seasons ago, arguably no position
has enjoyed an increase in production as
much as the tight end position. For all
three of those years, Bernie Parmalee has
served as the position coach of the tight
ends and has seen two of his pupils
become the second- and third-most prolific
tight ends in school history. Based on
the production of Anthony Fasano and
John Carlson, coupled with some of the
recent commitments of top tight end talent
such as Mike Ragone, Kyle Rudolph
and Joseph Fauria, Notre Dame is on its
way to becoming "Tight End U."
Carlson started the final 23 games he
appeared and left the program with the
second-most receptions and third-most
receiving yards in a career by a tight end.
Carlson recorded the second and fifthmost
catches in a single-season by an Irish
tight end when he recorded 47 catches
and 40 receptions in 2006 and 2007. In
'07, he led the team in receptions and his
372 receiving yards also paced the Irish.
Will Yeatman started two games as the
Irish opened in a two-tight end package
and made six catches for 37 yards. Ragone
also earned playing time in his freshman
season and made solid improvements
under Parmalee's watch.
Carlson was on pace to shatter the
school record in 2006 for receptions and
receiving yards in a season by a tight end
before a knee injury sidelined him for the
final two and a half games of the regular
season. Still, Carlson registered 47 receptions
(tied for second-most by a tight end
in a season in school history) for 634 yards
(second-most by a Notre Dame tight end
in a season) and four touchdowns. He was
a finalist for the John Mackey Award and
named a second-team All-American by
SI.com. In his absence, Marcus Freeman
emerged in his fifth year totaling 98 yards
on nine receptions with two touchdowns.
Fasano, a finalist for the John Mackey
Award presented annually to college football's
finest tight end in 2005, posted
impressive numbers with 47 catches (second-
most in a season by an Irish tight end)
for 576 yards (third-most by a Notre Dame
tight end) and two touchdowns. Fasano
and Carlson combined for 54 catches for
632 yards and three touchdowns in 2005.
Fasano finished his career at Notre Dame
with 92 receptions (third-most by an Irish
tight end) for 1,102 yards (second-best by
and Irish tight end) and was drafted in the
third round of the 2006 draft by the Dallas
Cowboys.
Parmalee's role on special teams helped
Notre Dame produce a consistent opportunistic
unit that produced two touchdowns
(both on punt returns), three
blocked punts and two blocked field goals.
Parmalee finished his third season as a
member of the Dolphins' staff and his first
as Miami tight end coach in 2004. He
spent the 2003 season as an assistant special
teams/offensive assistant with the
Dolphins. He embarked on his NFL coaching
career in 2002 as Miami's assistant special
teams coach after a nine-year playing
career, including the first seven (1992-98)
with the Dolphins and the final two (1999-
2000) with the New York Jets.
He played from 1992-95 under legendary
Dolphins coach Don Shula, 1996-
98 with Miami under Jimmy Johnson and
1999-2000 with the Jets under Bill Parcells
and Al Groh, respectively (Irish head coach
Charlie Weis was the Jets' offensive coordinator
in 1999).
In 2002, Parmalee helped the Dolphins
rank second in the American Football
Conference in kickoff return average
(23.5), while Miami's opponents finished
with the fourth-lowest punt return average
(7.0) in the AFC. Meanwhile, kicker Olindo
Mare connected on 24 of 31 field goals. In
2003, Miami's punt-return defense again
rated among the AFC leaders (tied for second
at 6.4). Under Parmalee's tutelage in
2004, third-year Dolphin Randy
McMichael ranked among the league leaders
in receptions by a tight end with 73 for
791 yards and four touchdowns.
A featured running back, starting fullback
(four games in 1997), third-down
back and special teams stalwart at different
times during his professional career,
Parmalee played in 134 NFL games, starting
26 of them (10 in 1994, 12 in 1995
and four in 1997, all for the Dolphins). He
rushed for 2,179 career yards and 17
touchdowns on 567 carries, caught 168
career passes for 1,485 yards and three
touchdowns and returned 16 career kickoffs
for an 18.1-yard average.
Parmalee originally made Miami's roster
as an undrafted rookie free agent in 1992
after sitting out of football in 1991. In his
seven seasons with the club, he amassed
1,959 yards rushing and 15 touchdowns
on 513 attempts, and totaled 144 receptions
for 1,306 yards and three scores. His
rushing figure currently is 12th on the
Dolphins' all-time chart.
He led the team in rushing two straight
years - with 868 yards (216 attempts, 6
touchdowns) in 1994 for a Dolphins team
that finished 10-6,
won the AFC Eastern
Division title and won
a wild-card playoff
game against Kansas
City, then with 878
yards (236 attempts,
nine touchdowns) in
1995 on a Miami
team that finished 9-
7 and earned a wild-card playoff slot. He
also caught a career-high 39 passes for
345 yards and a touchdown in 1995, after
grabbing 34 for 249 yards and a score in
'94. Parmalee ranked eighth in the AFC in
rushing in '94.
His single-game high of 150 rushing
yards came against the Los Angeles Raiders
in 1994 (on a career-high 30 attempts) -
and he added 123 yards a week later versus
New England to set a Dolphin record
for combined rushing yards in consecutive
games. He notched three rushing touchdowns
in a game against Detroit in 1994.
Three of his 100-yard rushing efforts came
in 1994, the other three in 1995. He
ranked as the NFL's most improved running
back in 1994, going from 14 rushing
yards in 1993 to 868 in 1994.
In addition, Parmalee established himself
as one of the league's premier special
teams players during his tenure, recording
122 tackles on coverage units, including
31 in 1997 and 30 in 1998. He served as
Dolphins special teams captain in 1997
and 1998.
Parmalee was a four-year starter (1987-
90) as a running back under coach Paul
Schudel at Ball State where he remains the
Cardinals' all-time leading rusher with
3,483 yards and 26 touchdowns. He also
caught 96 career passes for 812 yards and
three touchdowns. He earned secondteam
All-Mid-American Conference honors
as a senior in 1990 when he rushed for
1,010 yards and caught 30 passes. The
best of his 16 career 100-yard rushing days
came as a senior when he gained 169
yards against Illinois State. He also had a
200-yard rushing outing as a freshman in
1987.
He became the Ball State career rushing
leader as a junior when he carried for 662
yards and five touchdowns. Parmalee also
rushed for 1,064 yards and 13 touchdowns
as a freshman when he was named
the MAC Freshman of the Year. He earned
his degree in business administration from
the Muncie, Ind., school in 1991.
A native of Jersey City, N.J., Bernard
Parmalee lettered in football (once) and
baseball (three times) at Lincoln (N.J.)
High School. Born Sept. 16, 1967, he and
his wife, Angela, are parents of a daughter,
Nakia Marie, and two sons, Tre Bernard
and Torian.
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