Andrew Walter "Andy" Reid (born March 19, 1958) is the head coach of the
Philadelphia Eagles of the
NFL, a post he has held since
1999. Since
2001, he has also been the team's executive vice president of football operations. He led the Eagles to five
NFC championship games, including four consecutive appearances from
2001-
2004, and to
Super Bowl XXXIX in 2004.
Early years
Born in
Los Angeles, California, Reid attended
John Marshall High School and worked as a vendor at
Dodger Stadium as a teenager. He also played youth sports in Los Angeles, and among his coaches were
Pete Arbogast, who is the radio announcer for the
USC football team, and formerly the radio play-by-play man for the Cincinnati Bengals. In 1971, at age 13, Reid appeared live on
Monday Night Football during the
Punt, Pass, and Kick competition. Reid played offensive guard and tackle at
Brigham Young University for head coach
LaVell Edwards.
Early coaching career
After graduating from BYU in 1981, he spent one year employed as a graduate assistant on the school's football coaching staff. He spent the next nine years as an offensive line coach with four different colleges, including in 1986 with
Northern Arizona University when he coached
Frank Pollack, who went on to play for six seasons with the
San Francisco 49ers. He was hired as an assistant coach by the
Green Bay Packers in 1992, the same year
quarterback Brett Favre...
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