Having led the Bears to their first NFC Championship in 21 years and an appearance
in Super Bowl XLI, Smith has earned more victories over his first three seasons
than any other coach in franchise history. Smith was hired on January 15, 2004,
named NFL Coach of the Year after leading Chicago to an 11-5 record in 2005 and
became the first coach in franchise history to lead the team to the playoffs
in two of his first three seasons at the helm by guiding the Bears to a 13-3
mark and their second Super Bowl berth ever in 2006. During that time, Smith
has earned the most regular season wins (29) and postseason wins (2) of any of
the seven head coaches hired by NFL teams in 2004.
Smith and Hall of Famer Mike Ditka are the only coaches in team history to
lead the team to consecutive division titles. The 2005 NFL Coach of the Year
closed the 2006 regular season by winning four of the last five games, giving
him 29 regular season victories -- the most ever by a Bears head coach over
his first three seasons with the team. Smith's win total is one more than the
28 by team founder George Halas who produced an .819 winning percentage in
the franchise's first three years (1920-22) that still stands as the highest
in a coach's first three years in team history. In terms of winning percentage
to start a career, Smith ranks third in team annals behind the .671 mark by
Ralph Jones (1930-32).
Registering a career-high 13 wins in 2006, Smith tied predecessor Dick Jauron
for the most victories by a Bears head coach in his third season. The previous
year, Smith set a team record for wins by a second-year coach with 11 while
becoming just the third head coach in Bears history to lead the team to the
postseason in his second full-season at the helm.
Smith is third on the all-time franchise list for playoff victories with two
after gathering victories in the 2006 NFC Divisional Playoff vs. SEA (1/14/07)
and the NFC Championship Game vs. NO (1/21/07). George Halas and Mike Ditka
are tied for the club record by winning six postseason games each. The Bears
have rallied from a deficit in 17 of Lovie Smith's 31 overall career victories.
Lovie Smith set forth with three stated goals when he was hired as the 13th
head coach in Chicago Bears history on January 15, 2004: end the decade of
dominance by the Green Bay Packers over the Bears, capture the NFC North Division
for Chicago and win the Super Bowl. Heading into his third year owning a 16-16
regular season record as the team's on-field steward, Smith has accomplished
each of the first two goals through his first two seasons and will go to work
on the third objective in 2006.
Smith was named the Associated Press NFL Coach of the Year for 2005 after
becoming the fastest head coach in Bears history to lead the team to a division
title, doing so in his second campaign while setting a franchise record for
victories by a sophomore head coach with 11. The Coach of the Year Award was
the sixth all-time for a Bears head coach, more than any other team in the
NFL. Smith - who won the award with 24.5 of 50 possible votes - was the fourth
head coach in team history to win the award after team founder George S. Halas
in 1963 and 1965, Mike Ditka in 1985 and 1988 and Dick Jauron in 2001. Just
the third coach in team history to lead the organization to the playoffs in
his second season, Smith guided the Bears to their first-ever NFC North Division
title in 2005. En route to the team's second division championship in five
seasons, the Bears completed their first season sweep of Green Bay since 1991.
The Bears are 3-1 against Green Bay since Smith came to Chicago.
Winning just one of their first four games to start the 2005 campaign, Smith
rallied the Bears to an 11-5 regular season mark as Chicago became just the
twentieth NFL team to qualify for the post-season after beginning the season
1-3 since the current 12-team playoff system was instituted in 1990. The Bears
turned their season around as Smith guided the team to eight consecutive mid-season
wins, the third-longest win streak in the NFL in 2005 and the longest by Chicago
since the 1985 Super Bowl team won 12 straight to begin the season. In guiding
the team to the No. 2 seed in the NFC Playoffs, Smith led a worst-to-first
revival in the NFC North division as the Bears six-win improvement from the
previous season was tied for the biggest in the NFL in 2005. The dramatic turn-around
made Smith one of four active NFL coaches to have produced a six-game improvement
in the second season of his initial stint as a head coach after Bill Parcells
with the New York Giants in 1984, Jeff Fisher with the Houston Oilers in 1995
and Andy Reid with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2000. The Bears posted a 5-11
record in 2004 in Smith's first season as head coach as he presided over the
youngest team in the NFL while battling through a spate of injuries that robbed
the team of the services of several of its most productive players.
Smith has successfully laid Chicago's foundation for success in just two seasons
on the job by establishing his cornerstone of aggressive defensive play. During
Smith's first two seasons at the helm, Chicago ranked second in the NFL to
the Pittsburgh Steelers having allowed 16.7 points per game and 56 total touchdowns
while leading the league during that time by allowing the lowest opponent passer
rating, opponent third-down and fourth-down conversion percentage and opponent
red zone touchdown percentage in the league. The Bears also ranked sixth in
the NFL during 2004-05 with 63 takeaways while scoring a league-high 10 touchdowns
via defensive return - including nine interception return touchdowns - with
a franchise-record six coming in 2004. Allowing the fewest points in the NFL
in 2005, Chicago led the NFL in total defense for eight weeks during the regular
season before finishing second, the team's first top-five finish in overall
defense since 1993.
Smith came to Chicago with the reputation for being proficient at instituting
positive change after he engineered a dramatic turnaround as the defensive
coordinator of the Rams from 2001 through 2003. Known for his acumen in teaching
and motivating young talent, Smith took on the added responsibility of Assistant
Head Coach with the Rams prior to the 2003 season.
In Smith's first season as an NFL defensive coordinator with St. Louis in
2001, Smith helped the Rams return to the Super Bowl after missing the playoffs
the previous season as the Smith-led defense allowed fewer point and total
yards per game than the previous year. Smith coached on playoff teams in four
of his last five campaigns as an assistant and has done so in six of his 10
NFL seasons overall. The native Texan was sought out to take over the Rams
defense after five seasons coaching linebackers at Tampa Bay from 1996-2000
under Tony Dungy.
During his three years in St. Louis, Smith molded a young defensive group
into one of the NFL's most aggressive units. The Rams ranked among the League
leaders in takeaways and sacks during his three years in St. Louis. From 2001-03,
the Rams ranked third in the NFL in takeaways and fumble recoveries, tied for
sixth in sacks, and tied for eighth in interceptions. Smith helped steward
St. Louis to shutouts in both 2001 and 2003, the first white-washings by the
Rams organization since 1994. The efforts of Smith's defense were rarely lost
in the outcome of St. Louis' games during his tenure as the team's 33 wins
ranked third behind Green Bay and Philadelphia in the NFL during that time.
He capped his stint in St. Louis by orchestrating a unit that ranked among
the League leaders in takeaways, defensive touchdowns, and sacks in 2003. In
that year, St. Louis led the NFL with 46 takeaways while tying for fourth with
24 interceptions and leading the NFL with 22 fumble recoveries. That season's
takeaway total is tied with the 1999 Eagles for the third-highest single-season
total in the NFL since 1993 (2000 Ravens, 49; 1993 Bills, 47). St. Louis ranked
fourth in the NFL by scoring five defensive touchdowns in 2003 and also posted
the fourth-most sacks in the NFL.
Smith guided St. Louis to a defensive resurgence upon taking over in 2001.
Inheriting a defense coming off a season in which it ranked 23rd in the NFL
in total defense while allowing over 29 points per game, Smith improved the
unit to third in the NFL in total defense while permitting only 17.0 points
per game. In addition to leading the NFC in total defense in 2001 after ranking
10th the previous year, the Rams led the conference in fewest first downs allowed,
fewest rushing first downs allowed, fewest first-down yards allowed, fewest
first-down plays against, and fewest first-down yards per play allowed. Specifically,
the St. Louis defense made one-year leaps to third from 13th in the NFL in
run defense and 10th from 27th in the NFL in pass defense while improving to
a conference-high 14 wins from 10 in 2000. Other highlights for the Rams defense
in 2001 were ranking second in first downs allowed and seventh in points allowed
per game while recording five defensive touchdowns. Smith and the Rams accomplished
all this with seven new defensive starters in 2001, including two rookies.
In 2002, the Rams defense finished tied for fourth in the NFC and tied for
fifth in the NFL in fewest touchdowns allowed while ranking sixth in the NFC
and eighth in the NFL in third-down efficiency. During three straight games
that November, St. Louis' defense yielded a mere 418 passing yards, the lowest
three-game total by the franchise since 1988. Smith's unit also contributed
to a five-game winning streak that season by allowing just one offensive touchdown
per game, the longest such streak for the team since 1999.
Preceding his success in St. Louis, Smith contributed to the revival of Tampa
Bay's defense as the Buccaneers linebacker coach from 1996-2000. Tampa's defense
hadn't ranked above 20th in the NFL in the four seasons prior to Smith's arrival
under head coach Tony Dungy and defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin, but had
ranks of 11th in 1996, third in 1997, second in 1998, third in 1999, and ninth
in 2000. During the five seasons with Smith on the Bucs staff, the team allowed
less than 300 points each year while permitting an average of 16.9 points and
258.8 yards per game. Tampa Bay posted only two defensive touchdowns in Smith's
first three years, but improved with two in '99 and a franchise-record six
in 2000.
Smith's tutelage has consistently brought out the best in his players. As
linebackers coach at Tampa Bay, Smith helped Derrick Brooks develop into one
of the NFL's best linebackers. Brooks had 79 tackles as a rookie in 1995 before
Smith joined the staff for the 1996 campaign. That season Brooks went over
100 tackles and was named to the Pro Bowl for the first time in his career,
a pair of streaks that were extended to 10 consecutive in 2005. Also in 1996,
Smith guided Hardy Nickerson to his second career Pro Bowl appearance after
not being named the two previous seasons. Brooks and Nickerson combined to
be named to eight Pro Bowls under Smith.
Individual success for players under Smith continued when he oversaw the defensive
operations for St. Louis in 2001. Defensive end Leonard Little received his
first career Pro Bowl berth in 2003 after his third consecutive season with
at least 12 sacks. In Smith's first year with the Rams, Little led the team
with a career-high 14.5 sacks in only 13 games played while playing primarily
on passing downs. The other starting defensive end during Smith's three years
in St. Louis was Grant Wistrom, the owner of 45 sacks in seven NFL seasons.
Wistrom ranked second on the Rams in sacks each of the three years under Smith
with three of his four career multi-sack games coming during that time. With
a career-high five sacks in 2003, safety Adam Archuleta set the St. Louis Rams
sack record for defensive backs under Smith's guidance. Little and Aeneas Williams
were named to the Pro Bowl under Smith's guidance in 2003 while Williams also
did so in 2001. Williams and Wistrom were first-team All-Pro selections in
2001 while Archuleta and Tommy Polley earned All-Rookie status that season.
Additionally, St. Louis defenders earned four NFC Defensive Player of the Week
honors under Smith in 2001 with three more being received in 2003 along with
a pair of NFC Defensive Player of the Month awards.
Overall, Smith has spent 24 years in coaching at the collegiate and professional
levels. He began his coaching career at his hometown high school, Big Sandy
High School, in 1980 before moving to Cascia Hall Prep in Tulsa the following
year. Two years later, Smith made the jump to the college ranks at his alma
mater of Tulsa as linebackers coach, where he stayed through 1986. Smith moved
on to coach linebackers at Wisconsin (1987), Arizona State (1988-91), and Kentucky
(1992). Smith was the defensive backs coach at Tennessee (1993-94) and Ohio
State (1995).
A native of Big Sandy, Texas, Smith led the Big Sandy Wildcats to three consecutive
state championships in high school and was all-state three years as an end
and linebacker. Smith was a two-time all-America and three-time all-Missouri
Conference defensive back at Tulsa.
Lovie and his wife, MaryAnne, have three sons, Mikal, Matthew, and Miles,
and twin grandsons, Malachi and Noah. Lovie is very active in the community
and gives much of his time to helping the American Diabetes Association - a
foundation near to his heart since his mother suffers from Type-2 diabetes.
He participates in ADA sponsored events such as the Tour de Cure Bike Ride,
the ADA Care to Cure Gala and their Father's Day Dinner. Smith also purchases
10 tickets for every home game as part of the Bears ticket exchange program
and donates them to children suffering from diabetes. In addition, he and his
wife have started the Lovie Smith and MaryAnne Smith Foundation which is a
scholarship program designed to aid qualified high school students who hale
from low socio-economic backgrounds and give them the ability to afford and
attend college.
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