sport.wikisort.org - AthleteStanley James Brock (born June 8, 1958) is a former American football player and coach. He played as a tackle at the University of Colorado at Boulder and in the National Football League for the New Orleans Saints and the San Diego Chargers. Brock served as the head football coach at United States Military Academy from 2007 to 2008. He was fired on December 12, 2008, after compiling a 6–18 record in two years as head coach.[1]
American football player and coach (born 1958)
For the philanthropist, see Stan Brock (philanthropist).
American football player
Stan Brock Brock in 2007. |
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Position: | Offensive tackle |
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Born: | (1958-06-08) June 8, 1958 (age 64) Portland, Oregon |
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Height: | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) |
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Weight: | 295 lb (134 kg) |
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High school: | Jesuit (Beaverton, Oregon) |
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College: | Colorado |
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NFL Draft: | 1980 / Round: 1 / Pick: 12 |
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- New Orleans Saints (1980–1992)
- San Diego Chargers (1993–1995)
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- Portland Forest Dragons (1997–1999)
- Los Angeles Avengers (2000–2001)
- Army (OL, 2004–2006)
- Army (2007–2008)
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- PFWA All-Rookie Team (1980)
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Player stats at NFL.com |
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Playing career
College
Brock played football at Jesuit High School in his hometown of Portland before attending the University of Colorado at Boulder where he played under coaches Bill Mallory and Chuck Fairbanks. He was selected to the first team All-American by The Sporting News. as a senior in 1979.[2] He was also selected as first team all Big Eight Conference and the John Mack Award winner, Colorado's award for offensive MVP.[2]
NFL
Brock played for the New Orleans Saints from 1980 to 1992. He finished his career with the San Diego Chargers from 1993 to 1995. He played in Super Bowl XXIX for the Chargers. Stan's older brother Pete also played in the NFL for the Patriots, starting at center in Super Bowl XX, which coincidentally was played in New Orleans.
Brock was inducted into the New Orleans Saints Hall of Fame in 1997.
Coaching career
After his playing career, Brock became a coach in the Arena Football League (AFL), where he served as the head coach of the Portland Forest Dragons (1997–1999) and the Los Angeles Avengers (2000–2001). He also was a color analyst for radio broadcasts of Saints games for several seasons, succeeding Archie Manning, who resigned position when son Peyton entered the NFL with the Indianapolis Colts.
On January 29, 2007, he was named the head coach at Army after the resignation of Bobby Ross. During his time as head coach, the Black Knights posted a 6–18 record and lost twice to Navy by a combined score of 72–3.[3] On December 8, 2008,[4] Brock was fired by the USMA on December 12, 2008, after two years as head coach, and six days after the Black Knights completed their 2008 season with a 34–0 loss to archrival Navy.[1]
Development and implementation of the "Brock Bone" offense
Following a 3–9 record in his first season as Army's head coach, Brock and his staff decided to change his offensive system from the pro set to something more similar to Navy's triple option, something Brock had once described as "a stupid idea."[5] During spring training for the 2008 season, Brock elected to close spring practices to implement his new offense.[6] The offense Brock developed was dubbed "the Brock Bone" by ESPN commentator Shaun King.[7] The Brock Bone seems to employ a higher percentage of fullback dives than are ordinarily seen in a triple option offense. Coach Brock has commented, "People think that we're just calling fullback dive, but when that’s what they give you, that’s what they give you."[8] Army ran the Brock Bone during the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season and finished the season ranked 110th out of 119 NCAA Division I FBS teams in total offense.[9]
Broadcasting career
On January 14, 2015, Portland, Oregon television station KOIN hired Brock as sports anchor.[10]
Family
Brock and his wife, Lori, have four daughters: Sarah, Jessica, Rachel and Emily.
Head coaching record
College
Year |
Team |
Overall |
Conference | Standing |
Bowl/playoffs |
Army Black Knights (NCAA Division I FBS independent) (2007–2008) |
2007 |
Army |
3–9 | | | |
2008 |
Army |
3–9 | | | |
Army: |
6–18 | | |
Total: | 6–18 | |
References
- Army fires Brock, Associated Press, December 12, 2008, Accessed December 12, 2008.
- "Former Buff Stan Brock Named Head Coach At Army". CUBuffs.com. January 29, 2007. Retrieved February 1, 2007.[permanent dead link]
- "College Football Data Warehouse". Archived from the original on May 3, 2008.
- Washington Post(English) retrieved December 10, 2008]
- Washington Post (English) Retrieved 12/10/2008
- Times Herald-Record Online (English) Retrieved October 12, 2008
- "Inside Army Football". Archived from the original on August 22, 2009. Retrieved May 22, 2009. Times Herald-Record Online (English) Retrieved October 12, 2008
- "A Strong Rush, GoArmySports.com --The Official Web site of Army Athletics (English) (retrieved 12/10/2008)".
- National Collegiate Athletic Association (English) Retrieved 12/20/2008
- "Stan Brock joins KOIN 6 Sports". KOIN. January 14, 2015. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
1980 NFL Draft first-round selections |
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New Orleans Saints first-round draft picks |
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- Kelley
- Hardy
- Shinners
- Burrough
- Manning
- R. Smith
- Middleton
- Burton
- Schumacher
- Muncie
- Campbell
- Chandler
- Erxleben
- Brock
- Rogers
- Scott
- Toles
- Dombrowski
- Knight
- Heyward
- Martin
- Turnbull
- Dunbar
- Roaf
- I. Smith
- Johnson
- Fields
- Molden
- Naeole
- Turley
- Williams
- McAllister
- Stallworth
- Grant
- Sullivan
- W. Smith
- Brown
- Bush
- Meachem
- Ellis
- Jenkins
- Robinson
- Jordan
- Ingram
- Vaccaro
- Cooks
- Peat
- Anthony
- Rankins
- Lattimore
- Ramczyk
- Davenport
- Ruiz
- Turner
- Olave
- Penning
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New Orleans Saints 1980 NFL draft selections |
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- Stan Brock
- Dave Waymer
- Mike Jolly
- Lester Boyd
- Mike Morucci
- Chuck Evans
- Frank Mordica
- Tanya Webb
- George Woodard
- Kiser Lewis
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New Orleans Saints Hall of Fame |
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- 1988
- Danny Abramowicz
- Archie Manning
- 1989
- Tom Dempsey
- Tommy Myers
- 1990
- Billy Kilmer
- 1991
- Tony Galbreath
- Derland Moore
- 1992
- John Hill
- Jake Kupp
- George Rogers
- 1993
- Joe Federspiel
- 1994
- Henry Childs
- Jim Finks
- 1995
- Doug Atkins
- Bob Pollard
- 1996
- Dave Waymer
- Dave Whitsell
- 1997
- Stan Brock
- Rickey Jackson
- 1998
- Dalton Hilliard
- Sam Mills
- 1999
- Bobby Hebert
- Eric Martin
- 2000
- Vaughan Johnson
- Pat Swilling
- 2001
- Hoby Brenner
- Jim Wilks
- 2002
- Jim Mora
- Frank Warren
- 2003
- Jim Dombrowski
- Wayne Martin
- 2004
- Rueben Mayes
- Steve Sidwell
- 2006
- Joel Hilgenberg
- 2007
- Joe Johnson
- 2008
- Willie Roaf
- 2009
- Morten Andersen
- 2009
- Joe Horn
- 2011
- Sammy Knight
- 2012
- Deuce McAllister
- Tom Benson
- 2013
- La'Roi Glover
- 2014
- Aaron Brooks
- John Carney
- 2015
- Michael Lewis
- Tyrone Hughes
- 2016
- Will Smith
- 2017
- Jonathan Vilma
- 2018
- Lance Moore
- Carl Nicks
- Pierre Thomas
- 2019
- Reggie Bush
- Marques Colston
- 2020
- Jahri Evans
- Roman Harper
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Oklahoma Wranglers |
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Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
- History of the Arena Football League in Oklahoma City
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches | |
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Playoff appearances (2) | |
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Hall of Fame members | |
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Los Angeles Avengers |
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Franchise |
- Franchise
- Seasons
- Players
- History of the Arena Football League in Los Angeles
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches |
- Brock
- Lyles
- Hodgkiss
- O'Hara
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Playoff appearances (5) | |
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Division championships (1) | |
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Hall of Fame members | |
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Seasons (9) |
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2000s |
- 2000
- 2001
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007
- 2008
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- Dennis Michie (1890)
- Henry L. Williams (1891)
- Dennis Michie (1892)
- Laurie Bliss (1893)
- Harmon S. Graves (1894–1895)
- George P. Dyer (1896)
- Herman Koehler (1897–1900)
- Leon Kromer (1901)
- Dennis E. Nolan (1902)
- Edward Leonard King (1903)
- Robert Boyers (1904–1905)
- Ernest Graves Sr. (1906)
- Henry Smither (1906–1907)
- Harry Nelly (1908–1910)
- Joseph Beacham (1911)
- Ernest Graves Sr. (1912)
- Charles Dudley Daly (1913–1916)
- Geoffrey Keyes (1917)
- Hugh Mitchell (1918)
- Charles Dudley Daly (1919–1922)
- John McEwan (1923–1925)
- Biff Jones (1926–1929)
- Ralph Sasse (1930–1932)
- Garrison H. Davidson (1933–1937)
- William H. Wood (1938–1940)
- Earl Blaik (1941–1958)
- Dale Hall (1959–1961)
- Paul Dietzel (1962–1965)
- Tom Cahill (1966–1973)
- Homer Smith (1974–1978)
- Lou Saban (1979)
- Ed Cavanaugh (1980–1982)
- Jim Young (1983–1990)
- Bob Sutton (1991–1999)
- Todd Berry (2000–2003)
- John Mumford # (2003)
- Bobby Ross (2004–2006)
- Stan Brock (2007–2008)
- Rich Ellerson (2009–2013)
- Jeff Monken (2014– )
# denotes interim head coach
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