Early yields on the cowboys are Raves about how younger Schottenheimer has raised spirit and loved himself for players.
It’s very like a father like a son in his eyes.
200 winnings by Marty Schottenheimer are seventh all the time, but he fell under the Super Bowl dock was a stigma that followed him. In the eyes of his son, the influence he left behind is his players and reverence they have for him inheritance.
“A legacy for me, you know I think it will start with people,” said Schottenheimer. “To this day I go out on the field in the game and I will let two or three different individuals come to me and say,” Sorry, coach, you have a second? ” And I know exactly where they are going and of course I let go of what I am doing because I want to hear it.
From 1975 to 2006, Marty Schottenheimer was a firm equipment on the sidelines NFL, with 26 as a head coach. After a battle with Alzheimer, he died at the age of 77. Over the years, he had Bill Cowher, Tony Dungy, Herm Edwards, Art Shell and Bruce Arians among his assistants. Mike McCarthy, the predecessor of Brian in Dallas, was also an assistant. And now his son Brian adds a long list of head coaches NFL who spent time as a member of Marty Schottenheimer’s employees at one or the other.
To this day, Brian trusts his father’s wisdom and his father’s friends to help him through his NFL Odyssey, who enters Uncharted Seas in 2025.
“I’m actually leaning on some of his friends now, you know kids like Bill Cowher he trained with,” said Brian. “But Dagur’s father will be a special day. I am obviously the father of two incredible kids and I talk to my mom and I know he looks down at me.”