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A record combined win total for the first
two seasons of any University of Notre Dame
head football coach, consecutive Bowl
Championship Series appearances for the first
time in Irish history, and the two most accomplished
passing seasons in Notre Dame football
annals - those are the most notable byproducts
of the first three seasons of the
Charlie Weis era in South Bend.
Weis, a 1978 Notre Dame graduate and
owner of four Super Bowl-champion rings as
products of a stellar 15-season career as a
National Football League assistant coach,
wasted no time putting his signature stamp
on his alma mater's program in his first two
years as Irish head coach in 2005 and 2006.
Weis and his Irish followed up a 9-3 record
in '05 and BCS appearance in the Tostitos
Fiesta Bowl with a 10-3 overall mark in '06
and a second consecutive BCS invitation, this
time to the Allstate Sugar Bowl. Those 19
combined wins (including eight straight in
the middle of the '06 regular season) qualified
as most in a two-year period by the Irish
since they collected 21 in 1992-93. It was also
the first time Notre Dame played in BCS
games in successive years and the most
prominent two-season bowl qualification
since the Irish played in the Fiesta and Orange
Bowls after the 1994 and '95 campaigns. The
only schools to play in BCS games after both
the '05 and '06 seasons were Notre Dame,
Ohio State and USC.
Notre Dame's 10 regular-season wins in
'06 marked the ninth time that figure had
been achieved in Irish history. Weis' 19 combined
wins in his first two seasons were the
most by a Notre Dame head football coach in
his first two years (the previous high was 17
by both Terry Brennan in 1954-55 and Dan
Devine in 1975-76). For the second straight
season in '06 Weis was one of three finalists
for the George Munger Award presented by
the Maxwell Football Club (of Philadelphia)
to the college coach of the year.
Irish Post Gaudy Offensive Numbers
The architect in '05 and '06 of the two
most prolific passing seasons in Notre Dame
football history, Weis effectively transformed
the Irish offense into one of the most productive
in the country, as Notre Dame scored
more points in `05 (440) than in any previous
season in school history - and also qualified
as the most improved offensive attack in the
nation, jumping its total offense production
(477.33 yards per game) a national-best
131.8 yards per game better than in '04. The
Irish followed that up with another strong
passing attack in '06, with Notre Dame's
average of 264.1 passing yards per contest
ranking 13th nationally and second all-time
in the Notre Dame record book (behind only
the 330.3 mark from '05). The Irish protected
the football nearly as well as any team in the
country in '06, with their 14 overall turnovers
in 13 games ranking tied for fourth of the 119
NCAA I-A teams.
On a combined basis in 2005 and '06
under Weis, Notre Dame led the nation in
interception avoidance with only 1.6 percent
of Irish passes picked off over those two years.
The Irish, thanks in large part to the play of
quarterback Brady Quinn, finished third in TD
passes with 69 and sixth in passing yards per
game (295.8) and passing rating (151.7). In
'05 and '06 combined, compared to the previous
two seasons, the Irish improved their
points per game by 11.5, and their total yards
per game by 90.9.
Offensive productivity, coupled with an
opportunistic, physical defense that forced
eight red-zone turnovers, and vastlyimproved
special teams, equated to a 9-3
mark in '05 that was good for a number-six
ranking in the BCS final regular-season standings
and a guaranteed at-large BCS berth in
the `06 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl opposite Big Ten
co-champion Ohio State. Notre Dame's only
losses in '05 came by three points in overtime
to then-unbeaten Michigan State, by three
points to top-ranked and unbeaten USC on a
last-second Trojan touchdown, then to
fourth-rated Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl.
The Irish again picked up an at-large BCS
position in '06 after their final 11th-place
standing in the BCS poll. Notre Dame's 10
wins included two of the most dramatic
comeback victories in Irish history - a 40-37
win at Michigan State after trailing by 16
points with nine minutes remaining and a 20-
17 win over UCLA thanks to a three-play, 80-
yard drive that resulted in the winning points
with 27 seconds left. Notre Dame's only
defeats in '06 came at the hands of fifth-rated
USC (the Trojans finished 11-2 after winning
the Rose Bowl), third-ranked Michigan (winner
of 11 straight games to open the '06
campaign) and fourth-rated LSU (the Tigers
finished 11-2).
Notre Dame finished ninth in the final
Associated Press poll for '05 (its first AP top 10
finish since the Irish were runnersup following
the '93 season), 11th according to USA
Today. The Irish ended the '06 season rated
17th by AP and 19th by USA Today.
Football Writers Honor Irish Coach
His team's `05 success helped make Weis
winner of the 2005 Eddie Robinson Coach of
the Year Award, as national college coach of
the year as selected by the Football Writers
Association of America. He also was one of
three finalists for the `05 Munger Award, one
of five finalists for the '05 Schutt Division I-A
Sports Coach of the Year (presented by
American Football Monthly) and finished
third in the balloting for the Associated Press
college football coach-of-the-year award.
Weis saw his Irish offense flourish right out
of the gate in '05 -- as Notre Dame set a
school record by scoring at least 30 points in
all but two outings and tied another record
by scoring 40 points on six occasions. He
helped put a handful of Irish players in contention
for major national awards, as Quinn
was a finalist for the Walter Camp Player of
the Year Award, one of three finalists for the
Davey O'Brien Award presented to the top
quarterback in the country - and finished
fourth in the '05 Heisman Trophy voting. In
addition, consensus first-team All-America
wide receiver Jeff Samardzija was one of three
finalists for the Fred Biletnikoff Award as the
top receiver nationally, as was tight end
Anthony Fasaso for the John Mackey Award as
the top tight end in the country.
Weis' charges added to that list of individual
accomplishments in '06 - as Quinn won
the Maxwell Award as the outstanding player
in the country and the Johnny Unitas Golden
Arm Award (as the top senior quarterback),
took third in the Heisman Trophy race (the
first time a Notre Dame player ever had finished
fourth or better in consecutive seasons)
and again was a finalist for the O'Brien Award
and the Walter Camp Foundation Player of
the Year Award. Meanwhile, Samardzija was a
Biletnikoff finalist and first-team All-American
for the second straight season - and tight end
John Carlson was a finalist for the Mackey
Award (as well as a first-team Academic All-
American). Safety and kick returner Tom
Zbikowski won third-team Associated Press
All-America honors in both '05 and '06.
Quinn A Star Under Weis' Guidance
Quinn, turned into a star in `05 and '06
under Weis' tutelage, as he set 36 career, single-
season, single-game and miscellaneous
records after breaking 25 in that '05 season
alone. Quinn qualifies as the Notre Dame
career and single-season leader in passing
yards (3,919 in '05; 11,762 in his career),
pass completions (292 in '05; 929 in his
career) and touchdown passes (37 in '06; 95
in his career). He ranked third in the country
in '06 with those 37 TD passes (behind only
Hawaii's Colt Brennan with 58 and Texas
Tech's Graham Harrell with 38). He also
ranked third in `05 with 32 TD passes (behind
only Brennan with 35 and UCLA's Drew Olson
with 34) -- and he set an Irish single-game
record with his six TD passes versus BYU in
'05. During the middle of the '06 season,
Quinn threw a best-in the-nation 226 consecutive
passes without an interception (that
streak ended in the 11th game of the season
vs. Army).
Meanwhile, Samardzija (an '05 NCAA
consensus first-team All-American, based on
his selection by The Sporting News and the
Football Writers Association of America team
- then a first-team pick again in '06 by the
FWAA) finished as runnerup for the '05 NCAA
title in TD receptions with 15. He and Rhema
McKnight finished one-two on Notre Dame's
career pass reception chart (with 179 and
170, respectively), after both surpassed Tom
Gatewood (he'd held the record with 157
since 1971) during the '06 season.
Meanwhile, McKnight's 15 TD receptions in
'06 tied Samardzija's single-season Irish mark
from '05 and ranked him tied for second
nationally in that category (behind only Rice's
Jarett Dillard with 21). Samardzija's season
total of 78 receptions in '06 broke the season
mark of 77 he tied in '05 (Gatewood caught
77 in '70).
Weis guided the `05 Irish offense to final
national rankings of fourth in passing offense
(330.25 yards per game), eighth in scoring
(36.67 points per game) and 10th in total
offense (477.33 yards per game). Then, in
'06, the Irish finished 13th in passing (264.1
yards per game) and 16th in scoring (31.0
points per game). In '07, his pass defense
ranked second in the nation in average yards
allowed per game (161.6), while defensive
tackle Trevor Laws led the nation in tackles by
a lineman (112).
On an individual basis in `05, Quinn
ranked fifth nationally in total offense (334.08
yards per game) and seventh in passing efficiency
(158.40 rating points), and Samardzija
stood fourth in receiving yards per game
(104.08). Quinn in '06 ended up 11th in total
offense (269.0 yards per game) and 19th in
passing efficiency (146.66 points). Samardzija
in '05 broke the Notre Dame season marks
for receiving yardage (1,249) and TD receptions
(15) and tied Gatewood's 35-year-old
single-season record of 77 receptions from
'70, before claiming the single-season reception
mark for himself in '06 and the career
pass receiving yards record (2,593) and the
career TD reception mark (27).
Quinn finished 10th all-time among NCAA
I-A quarterbacks in passing yards (11,762),
11th in completions (929) and tied for seventh
in TD passes (95).
Weis' Irish Are Passing Fancies
The Irish in 2005 and `06 were easily the
two most productive passing teams in Notre
Dame history, with their '05 average of
330.25 passing yards per game shattering the
previous high of 252.7 aerial yards per game
from 1970 (and the '06 mark of 264.1 easily
breaking the record as well).
Notre Dame set another school record by
topping the 500-yard mark in total offense
seven times in '05, including a 663-yard per-
formance against Stanford in the regular-season
finale that marked the fifth-best singlegame
effort in the Irish record book. Notre
Dame in '05 became the first Irish team in history
to boast a 3,000-yard passer (Quinn with
3,919), a 1,000-yard rusher (Darius Walker
with 1,196) and two 1,000-yard receivers
(Samardzija with 1,249 and Maurice Stovall
with 1,149). Notre Dame in `05 set 11 singleseason
offensive team records, nine career
individual records, 14 season individual
records, seven single-game individual
records, plus six other miscellaneous records.
With the season-opening Irish victories at
23rd-ranked Pittsburgh and at third-rated
Michigan in `05, Weis became the first Irish
head coach to win his first two career games
on the opponents' home fields since Knute
Rockne in 1918 and the first Notre Dame
head football coach ever to open with two
victories over ranked opponents. The Irish
also won at 22nd-rated Purdue in '05 to post
three wins over ranked opponents (all on the
road) in their first five games of the campaign.
Notre Dame in '06 added a seasonopening
victory over a solid Georgia Tech
team that eventually finished 9-5 (and 25th in
the USA Today final regular-season poll) and
played in the Atlantic Coast Conference title
game - as well as wins over '06 postseason
participants Penn State (9-4 and 24th in the
final AP poll), Purdue (8-6), UCLA (7-6) and
Navy (9-4).
Irish Achieve in Classroom as Well
Weis has impacted the Irish program off
the field as well, with his football players combining
to top the 3.0 grade-point average
mark in a record five straight semesters. His
players achieved a then-program-record
3.044 combined grade-point average during
the '05 fall semester, with 56 of 97 players
earning a 3.0 average or better -- and added
another 3.0 semester in the spring of '06 with
a program-best 3.072 mark.
Notre Dame's team produced a thirdstraight
3.0 semester with a 3.041 GPA for
the '06 fall semester -- including 61 of 104
players (and 17 of 24 starters, including
punter and placekicker) achieving a 3.0 or
better average. Ten Irish players were enrolled
in graduate studies during the fall of '06 - five
others graduated in December '06 after only
three and a half years of study. Notre Dame
produced its first football Academic All-
American in 13 years in Carlson in '06. The
fourth 3.0 semester came in spring 2007 with
a combined 3.041 GPA (59 players finished at
3.0 or better).
Notre Dame's fifth consecutive 3.0 semester
came in fall 2007, with 51 players individually
achieving that level or better. Carlson
and Laws both were second-team Academic
All-Americans in '07, with Carlson winning
postgraduate scholarships from both the
NCAA and the National Football Foundation.
In addition, Notre Dame received the
2007 Academic Achievement Award (shared
with Northwestern) from the American
Football Coaches Association - with both
schools graduating 95 percent of their freshman
classes that entered in 2001. That made
Notre Dame a seven-time winner of the AFCA
award.
Midway through the '05 season Weis
agreed to a new 10-year contract that took
effect in 2006 and extends through the 2015
season. He ranked 53rd on The Sporting
News Power 100 list of the most powerful
people in sports, as the highest-ranked individual
associated with college athletics (Jan.
13, 2006, issue of The Sporting News). The
Notre Dame Monogram Club presented him
with an honorary monogram prior to the '07
Blue-Gold game.
Super Bowls Mark Weis Era with Pats
A widely-respected disciple of professional
coaching standouts Bill Parcells and Bill
Belichick, Weis concluded his first year at
Notre Dame in 2005 (he was hired Dec. 12,
2004, as the 28th Notre Dame head football
coach, signing an original six-year contract) -
after spending the previous five years as the
highly-regarded offensive coordinator of the
New England Patriots (under Patriot head
coach Belichick). He played an integral role in
New England's victories in three of the previous
four Super Bowls, including a 24-21 victory
over Philadelphia in Super Bowl XXXIX in
Jacksonville to cap the 2004 season. That run
by Weis and the Patriots marked the most
sustained Super Bowl success in the history of
that event -- matching Dallas' three wins in a
four-year period following the 1992 through
'95 seasons.
Weis currently is one of seven former
Belichick assistants now serving as head
coaches - with the list also including Romeo
Crennel (Cleveland Browns), Kirk Ferentz
(Iowa), Al Groh (Virginia), Pat Hill (Fresno
State), Eric Mangini (New York Jets) and Nick
Saban (Alabama).
Weis qualifies as the first Notre Dame
graduate to hold the football head coaching
position at his alma mater since Hugh Devore
(a '34 graduate) served as interim coach in
1963 (the Irish finished 2-7 that year - Devore
also coached the Irish to a 7-2-1 mark as
interim coach in 1945). Weis is the first Notre
Dame graduate to serve as the Irish football
coach on a full-fledged basis since '38 graduate
Joe Kuharich did it from 1959 through
'62.
Now pointing for his 30th season overall
in coaching in 2008, Weis spent nine seasons
with the Patriots and five as the team's offensive
coordinator - plus three seasons each
with the New York Giants (1990-92) and New
York Jets (1997-99). In those 15 NFL seasons,
his coaching contributions helped produce
those four Super Bowl championships (Giants
following 1990 season, Patriots following '01,
'03 and `04 seasons), five conference titles,
six division titles and a 15-3 playoff record.
Weis has been a winner everywhere he has
coached - and he has received widespread
notice as one of the most creative and innovative
offensive coordinators in football.
All along the way, Weis has displayed the
ability to develop successful offensive players.
He helped advance the careers of New York
Jets' running back Curtis Martin, Jets' wide
receiver Keyshawn Johnson, Patriots' tight
end Ben Coates and, most notably, Patriots'
two-time Super Bowl MVP quarterback Tom
Brady. Under Weis' tutelage, the former sixthround
draft choice became one of the NFL's
premier signalcallers in just four seasons as a
starter. Including the playoffs, Brady compiled
a 57-14 record as a starting quarterback
after stepping in early in 2001, when Weis
also was serving as the New England quarterbacks
coach, through the end of the '04 campaign.
Weis Tutors Brady to All-Star Status
In addition to his offensive coordinator
responsibilities, Weis mentored the Patriot
quarterbacks both in 2001 and 2002. In `01,
Drew Bledsoe started the first two games of
the season before being sidelined with a serious
chest injury. By the third week of the season, Weis was preparing Brady for his first
NFL start and, over the course of the season,
Brady blossomed into a Pro Bowl performer
and earned the MVP award in Super Bowl
XXXVI. Brady only continued to improve,
leading the NFL with 28 TD passes in 2002,
then turning in a second Super Bowl MVP
performance in '03.
Weis' offense permitted youthful Patriot
offensive stars such as Brady, Deion Branch,
Notre Dame graduate David Givens and
Kevin Faulk to flourish. His offense also
allowed New England veterans such as Troy
Brown, Christian Fauria and David Patten to
enjoy resurgences in their careers. Brown
established a New England record with 101
receptions in 2001, earning his initial Pro
Bowl invitation in his ninth NFL season. Fauria
led the Patriots with seven TDs in 2002 (his
eighth pro campaign), while Patten's 61
catches in `02 were the most of his seven-year
career.
Weis also made great use of contributions
from a pair of 2002 draft picks to help the
team to its second Super Bowl championship
in 2003. Branch led the team with 57 receptions
in his second pro season, while fellow
second-year player Givens paced New
England with six receiving TDs. In the postseason,
Givens added a pair of scores, while
Branch's 10 catches in Super Bowl XXXVIII
tied for the third-most in Super Bowl history.
Givens, who played for the Irish in 1998-
2001, led the `04 Patriots in receptions with
56 for 874 yards and three TDs.
The Patriots finished 2004 with a franchise-
record 20 consecutive homefield victories
(regular-season and postseason combined)
over three seasons, the longest current
streak in the NFL at that time. Meanwhile,
Patriot running back Cory Dillon rushed for
1,635 yards and 12 TDs (ranking third in the
league and including nine 100-yard games)
in `04 - then added a 144-yard effort versus
Indianapolis in the playoffs. New England
enjoyed a 21-game unbeaten streak, including
the final 15 games in 2003 (including
three in the playoffs) and the first six in '04
and had won 32 of its last 34 games overall
through the end of the '04 season.
Weis Begins NFL Tour with Giants
Weis started his professional
coaching career
with the New York Giants
in 1990. After assisting in
the Giants pro personnel
department while also
coaching high school football
in `89, Weis a year
later was named defensive
assistant and assistant special
teams coach (under
eighth-year Giants head
coach Parcells). In his first
season on the Giants
coaching staff, the Giants
claimed the Super Bowl
title with a 16-3 overall
record. In 1991, Ray
Handley took over as
coach of the Giants and
named Weis his running
backs coach. After two
seasons on Handley's staff,
Weis began a four-year
stint in New England - all
four of those seasons under Parcells.
In Weis' first tenure with the Patriots from
1993-96, he assisted in the development of
some of New England's all-time best individual
season performances from Coates, Martin
and Terry Glenn, respectively. During his first
four seasons in New England, he coached
three different positions. In 1993 and `94,
Weis served as the Patriots' tight ends coach
and, in his second season at the position,
Coates set an NFL record for receptions by a
tight end with 96 and earned his first trip to
the Pro Bowl. In `95, Weis coached the
Patriots' running backs and was credited with
developing Martin, a third-round `95 draft
pick, into one of the premier running backs in
the NFL. That year, Martin won league rookie-
of-the-year honors and set franchise rushing
records with 1,487 yards and 14 TDs. In
`96, Weis coached the New England
receivers, with Glenn leading the team and
setting an NFL rookie reception record with
90 catches for 1,132 yards and six TDs.
From 1997 to '99 (with Parcells as head
coach and Belichick as assistant head coach),
Weis called offensive plays for the New York
Jets. In his first season, the Jets improved from
1-15 in 1996 to 9-7 in `97. The eight-game
improvement ranked as the best in franchise
history. In `98, Weis was named the offensive
coordinator/wide receivers coach. By season's
end, his offense ranked among the greatest in
franchise history and led the Jets to their first
division title. The team scored 416 points,
second-highest total in franchise history (after
419 points in `68) and averaged 357.2 yards
per game. It marked the second-best totaloffense
season average in Jets history (368.5
yards per game in `85). Both of Weis' starting
receivers, Johnson (1,131) and Wayne
Chrebet (1,083), eclipsed the 1,000-yard
receiving plateau for the first time in their
careers. It marked the first time since `86 that
two Jets receivers reached that milestone in
the same season.
In `99, Weis' offense produced the NFL's
second-leading rusher and the AFC's fourthranked
receiver. Martin rushed for 1,464
yards, falling only 90 yards shy of the rushing
title (won by Indianapolis' Edgerrin James).
Johnson led the Jets and established career
highs with 89 receptions for 1,170 yards,
earning his second consecutive Pro Bowl nod.
Begins at South Carolina and New Jersey Prep Level
Weis has enjoyed tremendous coaching
success at all levels, including high school,
college and in the NFL. The Trenton, N.J.,
native began his coaching career in 1979 at
Boonton High School in New Jersey, then
spent the next five seasons at Morristown
(N.J.) High School as a football assistant. In
`85, he was hired by head coach Joe Morrison
at the University of South Carolina, where he
served four seasons -- with the Gamecocks
finishing 8-4 and playing in the Gator and
Liberty Bowls, respectively, following the '87
and '88 seasons.
He returned to New Jersey as head coach
at Franklin Township High School in `89. That
year, he directed Franklin Township to the
New Jersey state championship while also
assisting in the Giants' pro personnel department.
In `90, he launched his professional
coaching career with the New York Giants
and celebrated the first of his four Super Bowl
championships.
Weis was born March 30, 1956, in
Trenton, N.J. After graduation from
Middlesex (N.J.) High School, he earned his
bachelor's degree in speech and drama from
Notre Dame in 1978. While coaching at
South Carolina, he earned his master's degree
in education in 1989.
In 2003, Weis and his wife Maura established
the Hannah & Friends Foundation,
dedicated to children affected by developmental
disorders. The foundation funds
Hannah's Helping Hands, which provides
quality of life grants to families in Indiana and
Rhode Island that care for children and adults
with special needs. The Weis family, through
Hannah & Friends, also has purchased 30
acres of land in the South Bend area and is in
the process of building a farm and residential
center for special needs adults age 18 and
older. President George W. Bush currently is
considering Weis for an appointment to the
President's Committee for People with
Intellectual Disabilities.
Hannah & Friends Enjoys Wide Support
In the spring of `07, the fourth annual
Hannah & Friends Celebrity Golf Classic was
held in South Bend to benefit the foundation.
Weis also joined with former Notre Dame
football coaches Ara Parseghian and Lou
Holtz in a summer '06 dinner in New York
City to benefit the three coaches' charitable
interests - and did the same in the summer of
'07 in Beverly Hills, Calif., at the second annual
Notre Dame Coaches' Kickoff for Charity.
Weis is the author of a 2006 autobiography
(written with Vic Carucci) titled "No
Excuses: One Man's Incredible Rise Through
the NFL to Head Coach of Notre Dame." His
wife, Maura, is author of a 2008 book (written
with Jessica Trobaugh Temple) titled
"Miles from the Sideline" - a journey with the
Weis' special needs daughter.
Weis is slated to travel to the Middle East
(Bahrain, Kuwait) in the spring of '08 with a
contingent of college football coaches to visit
United States military troops.
Charlie and Maura have two children,
Charles Joseph and Hannah Margaret.
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