Found February 09, 2013 on
Fox Sports Arizona:
PLAYERS:
Peyton Manning,
Ken Whisenhunt,
Dick Lebeau,
Wade Phillips,
Kevin Kolb
TEAMS: Tennessee Titans, Arizona Cardinals, Duke Blue Devils
TEAMS: Tennessee Titans, Arizona Cardinals, Duke Blue Devils
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -- A trip to Duke University a year ago to help Peyton Manning work his way back from neck surgery turned out to be just as beneficial for his longtime offensive coordinator, Tom Moore.
Knee problems had forced the highly respected coach into retirement, although he doesn't like the word. And as Moore tells it, when Duke coach David Cutcliffe saw all the pain the old coach was dealing with, he said, "We've got to do something about that."
A visit to the top specialist in the field at Duke led to surgery to replace both knees, one last April and the other in August.
"It's like a new world," Moore said on Friday. "All of a sudden you're pain-free, you've got all your energy back, you've got your quality of life back, and it's a new world for me."
Five weeks helping the Tennessee Titans convinced the 74-year-old coach he was ready to return to the work he loves.
"Don't worry about my chronological age," he said, "because I feel like I'm about 50 now. So when Bruce (Arians) gave me this opportunity, I jumped on it. I've still got a lot of coaching to do. I love coaching. You know, I've lived a dream. To be able to continue to coach, it's a privilege."
Arians, hired by the Cardinals to replace the fired Ken Whisenhunt after going 9-3 as interim head coach in Indianapolis last season while Chuck Pagano was being treated for leukemia, said he saw Moore "bouncing around" a hotel in Jacksonville last season and told him, "If I've got a job, you've got a job, no matter where that might be."
Moore and Arians worked together for three years with the Colts, tutoring the young Manning before Arians left to climb the coaching ladder, eventually becoming offensive coordinator in Pittsburgh. Arians returned to Indianapolis as offensive coordinator last season.
Moore stayed in Indy and oversaw the development of one of the game's most prolific offenses and one of its greatest quarterbacks.
Moore, now the Cardinals' assistant head coach and passing-game coordinator, will be entering his 35th year as an NFL assistant. Among active coaches, only Dick LeBeau (40) and Wade Phillips (36) have been around longer.
"I really can't put into words what it means to have this gentleman sit next to me," Arians said at Friday's news conference. "He forgot more football than most people in this league know. His knowledge of offense and the way he can simplify it -- I've been around a longtime myself, but nobody can teach it better than he can."
While Moore's knowledge base is extensive, he said he wanted to make sure he was physically able to give it his all in Arizona.
"I wanted to make sure I could do it justice, because I believe in professionalism," Moore said. "I wasn't going to take a job unless I could give it 120 percent total commitment, because people deserve it -- the players deserve it, the organization deserves it and certainly Bruce deserves it. So here I am."
The challenge is a big one. The Cardinals' offense was the worst in the NFL last season. The offensive line has struggled for several years, and there is no sure-fire starting quarterback, although Kevin Kolb showed glimpses of becoming that player early last year, starting 4-1 before having his season ended by a rib injury.
Moore, who said he learned most of what he knows about football while spending 13 years working for Chuck Knoll, said a coach should not try to force players to fit his system.
"You don't come in with preconceived ideas and say, 'Hey, I'm Tom Moore and this is what we're going to do,'" he said.
Instead, he said, coaches must build around the strengths of the players, quarterback or otherwise.
"You've got to do what your players can do," he said, "find out what they can do, what they're the best at, find out what their strengths are and then make sure you take advantage of their strengths and maximize them. As a coach, your job is to make sure you give your players a chance to be the very best they can be."
He and Arians are in the midst of identifying the Cardinals' strengths.
"Everything in the passing game starts with protection," he said. "That's the biggest thing. There's all kinds of pass patterns, millions of pass patterns and all good pass patterns. But the biggest single thing you've got to work on initially at first and get established each week is your pass protection."
To that end, Kolb was sacked 17 times in a two-week span prior to being hurt.
Moore was asked if he could fathom that stat.
"That's history," he said. "I don't deal in the past."
Original Story:
http://www.foxsportsarizona.com/02/09...
THE BACKYARD
BEST OF MAXIM
AROUND THE WEB
RELATED ARTICLES
Wyche: Broncos will be “team to beat” in 2013
The combine, free agency, and the draft are all a few weeks away. So, what else do we have to talk about besides 2013 expectations?
“Of course Denver (will be the team to beat in the AFC,” NFL.com’s Steve Wyche wrote on Friday. ”Its division is there for the taking as long as Peyton Manning is there. And frankly, the Broncos were one blown coverage away from facing...
Coach K’s letter to Michael Jordan after finding out he wasn’t going to Duke
Duke’s head coach Mike Krzyzewski and his 900+ wins is one of the classiest in the biz. After finding out Michael Jordan, a guard living in Wilmington North Carolina, wasn’t going to Duke, Coach K wrote the above letter.I’m guessing his tone may have been a little different had he known MJ decided on a school just 15 miles down the road from Durham.HT: Darren Rovell
#4 Duke 98 NC State 85 Highlights
Duke had a chance to make a serious statement in the national title picture with a win over NC State last night. And what a statement they made. Their most productive offensive half of the season came in the first twenty minutes last night as they put up 54 points on 61% shooting from the field. It was a full team effort, with Mason Plumlee putting up 30 points, Seth Curry 26 and...
#4 Duke 98 NC State 85 press conference and interviews
Duke exacted revenge on NC State last night, holding off a rally by the Wolfpack late in the second half to put up their highest point total on the year of 98 points, and topped their previous ACC-best of 80 points against Wake Forest by 18. They also recorded their highest offensive efficiency of the season, scoring 1.4 points per possession. This is the third out of the past four...
Plumlee scores 30; Duke tops State
Mason Plumlee scored 30 points on just 11 shots as Duke beat NC State by 13 in Cameron on Thursday night.
#4 Duke 98 NC State 85 Four Factors
Duke put on an offensive display last Saturday against Florida State, shooting 60% from the field and 61% from deep. Their offensive efficiency of 134 was the highest mark they’ve put up all year and showed that the team was starting to gel post-Ryan Kelly injury. Many, including myself, wondered how much of an outlier that game was, not unlike how the Miami game was an outlier...
TDDTV: Seth Curry Interview
Senior SG scored 26 points in Duke's victory over NC State on Thursday
Duke shoots lights out, holds on late over NC State
The much billed rematch looked more like a mismatch at least for three quarters of the game, before NC State used a sizzling second half shooting performance to make it a much closer contest.
Mason Plumlee scored 30 points as Duke got revenge on NC State.
In the end the Blue Devils held on to win 98-85 and get a level of revenge after the first meeting resulted in the Blue Devils’...
NFL Forum Discussions
10 replies,
1 hour ago
10 replies,
6 hours ago
5 replies,
6 hours ago
1 replies,
7 hours ago
1 replies,
7 hours ago
4 replies,
8 hours ago
12 replies,
8 hours ago
7 replies,
9 hours ago
| Latest Rumors | The Backyard | Going Viral |
|
|
Today's Best Stuff |
For BloggersJoin the Yardbarker Network for more promotion, traffic, and money. |
Company Info |
Help |
What is Yardbarker?Yardbarker is the largest network of sports blogs and pro athlete blogs on the web. This site is the hub of the Yardbarker Network, where our editors and algorithms curate the best sports content from our network and beyond. |










|
February 09, 2013




