Ron Erhardt, Super Bowl-Winning Offensive Coach, Dies at 81
He was not on the list.
A native of Mandan, North Dakota, Erhardt graduated from Jamestown College in 1953, then spent the next two years serving in the military. After leaving the service, he was hired in 1956 as an assistant coach at Williston High School in Williston, North Dakota. The following year, he began a six-year run as a head coach at two North Dakota Catholic high schools: from 1957 to 1959, his teams at St. Mary's (New England, ND) compiled a mark of 25–3–1, followed by another three-year run at Bishop Ryan High School in Minot, where he was 20–6–1 from 1960 to 1962.
Erhardt's successes elevated him to the collegiate level,
where he served as an assistant at North Dakota State University for three
years beginning in 1963. On February 10, 1966, he became head coach at the
school, setting the stage for another strong tenure, in which he put together a
record of 61–7–1 in his seven years. Erhardt also served as the Bison athletic
director, winning a pair of college national championships. In 1970, he was
awarded Blue Key National Honor Society's Distinguished Educator award for his
dedication to the University.
On March 14, 1973, Erhardt moved on to become backfield
coach of the New England Patriots, a post he served in for four years before
being promoted to offensive coordinator on February 1, 1977, following the
departure of Red Miller. After missing the playoffs that year, the Patriots
seemed ready to challenge for a Super Bowl berth in 1978. However, prior to the
last regular season game on December 18, head coach Chuck Fairbanks announced
he was leaving the team to accept a contract offer from the University of
Colorado. In response, the team suspended Fairbanks and made Erhardt and fellow
assistant Hank Bullough co-coaches for the final game. The Patriots dropped
that contest, then lost their opening round matchup to the Houston Oilers.
Fairbanks was allowed to leave for Colorado, with Erhardt
officially taking the reins of the team on April 6, 1979. Noting his .890
winning percentage at North Dakota State upon taking the position, Erhardt
said, "I've never been a loser in football and I don't intend to start
now." The Patriots underachieved to a 19–13 record in the 1979 and 1980
seasons, missing the playoffs by one game each year; the 441 points scored in
1980 was a club record not broken until 2007. But then the Patriots finished
with a 2–14 record in 1981. Citing the fact that Erhardt "was just too
nice a guy", owner Billy Sullivan dismissed him on December 22, two days
after the conclusion of the season.
ust over a month later, in January 1982, Erhardt was hired
as offensive coordinator of the New York Giants by head coach, and former
fellow Patriots assistant Ray Perkins, the first since Joe Walton filled the
position under head coach Alex Webster in 1973. During the latter portion of
that first season, Perkins announced he was leaving to become head coach at the
University of Alabama, with Bill Parcells replacing him. Parcells had been
Erhardt's linebackers coach with the Patriots in 1980, and kept his former boss
in the same position.
That decision would prove to be the right one as the Giants
went on to win two Super Bowls, with Erhardt working around a key injury during
the run toward Super Bowl XXV. Quarterback Phil Simms had suffered a
season-ending injury late in the season, but his replacement, Jeff Hostetler,
navigated the team to the title.
Parcells retired after that game, with Ray Handley being
promoted to head coach.
Handley then demoted Erhardt, which resulted in the latter's
departure for a similar position with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1992.
Emphasizing the run, Erhardt ran the offense for four years, helping the team
reach Super Bowl XXX in 1996. However, after the season, the conflict over the
offensive philosophy between Erhardt and Steelers' head coach Bill Cowher
resulted in Erhardt's resignation.
Erhardt then became offensive coordinator of the New York
Jets under Rich Kotite. A disastrous 1–15 mark marked the end of Kotite's brief
era, with Parcells replacing Kotite. Erhardt announced his retirement on
January 12, 1998.
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