Callahan is gone!!

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Apr 25, 2002
3,413
0
0
#1
Callahan's time with Raiders apparently short


Dec. 30, 2003
SportsLine.com wire reports



ALAMEDA, Calif. -- The Oakland Raiders held off making an official announcement on the job status of coach Bill Callahan on Tuesday, but some players said he'd been fired.
Advertisement


"Coach Callahan requested that for personal and family reasons the club make no announcement today, and we will honor his request," Raiders chief executive Amy Trask told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

The Raiders finished a 4-12 season that was the team's worst since 1997 only a year after Callahan led them to the Super Bowl in his rookie season as coach.

Callahan was in a meeting at the team's headquarters Tuesday afternoon, but his office later said he left for the day. A call to his agent, Gary O'Hagen, was not immediately returned Tuesday evening.

Callahan's son, Brian, is a freshman backup quarterback for UCLA and was playing in the Silicon Valley Classic in San Jose on Tuesday night.

"I'm just sad about how everything happened," Oakland center Barret Robbins told the AP on Tuesday evening. "It was hard not to (support him), because he gave me an opportunity to come back."

The Contra Costa Times, quoting sources, reported on its web site Tuesday afternoon Callahan had been fired.

The Raiders would become the sixth NFL team without a coach. Steve Spurrier resigned as coach of the Washington Redskins on Tuesday. A day earlier, Dick Jauron of the Chicago Bears, Gregg Williams of the Buffalo Bills and Dave McGinnis of the Arizona Cardinals all were fired.

Earlier, the New York Giants fired Jim Fassel and the Atlanta Falcons released Dan Reeves.

The Raiders tied with San Diego, Arizona and the New York Giants for the worst record in the NFL. They ended their season with a 21-14 loss Sunday at San Diego.

There has been speculation for weeks Callahan would be fired. Several players said they expected and welcomed the ouster of Callahan, who last month called his squad "the dumbest team in America" and suspended key players Charles Woodson and Charlie Garner for the season finale for missing curfew.

Woodson, a four-time Pro Bowl cornerback, has been outspoken in his criticism of Callahan. He has called Callahan stubborn and said the coach lost the respect of his team.

"He's really made this thing personal. When things get personal, it's not a good situation to be around people that it's personal with," Woodson said Monday. "I won't play for him.

"He's not the type of person you want to be around. He's just really brought a really negative vibe to this team over the course of the season."

Raiders owner Al Davis, whose team was not able to live up to his "Just Win, Baby!" motto this season, is not known for his patience with coaches.

MVP quarterback Rich Gannon said Tuesday sweeping change was necessary.

"It's gotten to the point it's inevitable there's got to be change," Gannon said.

The Raiders made costly mistakes in all phases of the game throughout the season, and often beat themselves with penalties. After Oakland's 22-8 loss to the Denver Broncos late last month, Callahan erupted.

"We've got to be the dumbest team in America in terms of playing the game," Callahan shouted to reporters after the home loss. "I'm highly critical because of the way we give games away -- we give 'em away! Period. It's embarrassing, and I represent that. And I apologize for that. If that's the best we can do, it's a sad product."

The Raiders had 12 players on injured reserve this season, including Gannon and his backup, Marques Tuiasosopo. And four players face suspensions from the NFL after testing positive for the newly discovered steroid THG, a story first reported by SportsLine.com's Jay Glazer.

Several Raiders expressed support for Callahan, saying he deserved another chance to win with his own team rather than players he inherited from former coach Jon Gruden, who bolted for Tampa Bay following the 2001 season.

Callahan, a seven-year NFL assistant who had no head coaching experience, was promoted from offensive coordinator to replace Gruden.


AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2003, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
Apr 25, 2002
3,413
0
0
#2
everyone knew it was coming...it's deff time for some changes and this is a step in the right direction...with the 2nd and 15th pick in the draft, and cwood a FA we can make some big moves toward the rebuilding process and get some youth in there...where's art shell at let's get someone in there who will go back to that old school smashmouth raider football and utilize our hogs in the backfield...fuck the haters, fuck everyone who's bout to come in this thread jus to talk shit, and fuck you!!

RAIDERS BITCH!!!!
 
Aug 6, 2002
1,143
0
0
46
#12
this is from espn.com

It's official: Callahan fired


Bill Callahan was fired by the Raiders just one year after taking them to the Super Bowl as a rookie coach. The team announced the move Dec. 31, a day after telling Callahan, 15-17 overall. He asked the Raiders to delay the official word because his son Brian's college team, UCLA, played in a bowl game Dec. 30. Openly criticized by his players, Callahan went 4-12 this season, the Raiders' worst record since 1997. The year before Callahan, as Jon Gruden's replacement, he led the Raiders to a Super Bowl berth.
 
Jun 4, 2002
616
0
0
42
#13
raiders are the sorest losers in the nfl

sabotage.......lol

Brown did not suggest this was accidental sabotage, either. He suggested that Callahan had it in for someone in the front office, and just about everything he did from the first day of training camp until Sunday's loss to the Chargers was done with blatant disregard for wins and losses.


Callahan changed the team's offense for no reason other than sabotage. Callahan injected a negative attitude onto the team for no reason other than sabotage. Callahan deactivated Charles Woodson and Charlie Garner before Sunday's loss to the Chargers for no reason other than spite and sabotage.


I was driving as I listened to this, and my jaw was resting on the steering wheel. A Hall of Fame receiver, one who spent his whole career with Team Dysfunction, suggested repeatedly over the course of an hour that his head coach intentionally put his team in a position to lose games.


Have we ever heard anything close to this damning? We always knew the Raiders were the most unusual franchise in professional sports, but could it have deteriorated to this point? Commitment to Sabotage? Just lose intentionally, baby.


Brown said Callahan would spend time during practice telling the team they had no chance of winning that week's game.


He said Callahan repeatedly belittled his players to the point where nobody wanted to play for the coach.


He said Callahan came in at halftime of a game in which the Raiders were leading the Broncos and said, "Well, we haven't turned the ball over yet." The Raiders, evidently swayed by the power of suggestion, had three turnovers in the second half and lost.


"He coached to get fired," Brown said.


Brown also provided a history lesson, saying Callahan -- then an assistant -- twice walked out on the team in the final games of the 1998 and 1999 season. Just took his headset off and left the field, saying he didn't want to be associated with such folk as the Raiders.


An obviously fawning caller made a joking reference to Brown, saying he should have let the fans know about this weeks ago so the fans could have taken care of it in the parking lot.


Brown laughed, but the caller hit on something important: If the Raiders believed their coach was actively sabotaging their chances -- deliberately, no less -- didn't they have an obligation to themselves and their fans to make it public before the season ended?


Judging by his read-the-speech, leave-the-podium routine of the past two days, Callahan is not likely to respond to Brown's allegations.


One thing is clear, though: This was either the most vigorous plea for a coach's firing in history, or the most phenomenal shredding of a coach's character ever heard in public.


Just goes to show: There's a whole weird world out there, and then there are the Raiders.