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Who Is Marc Trestman? Biggs and Pompei Give Us The Lowdown.....
Ooops missed an s in the word Is in that title. ![4 13 13[1]](/images/smilies/Smilie/4_13_13[1].gif)
By Brad Biggs and Dan Pompei, Tribune Reporters 6:12 a.m. CST, January 16, 2013
The Bears took a swing for the fences by choosing Marc Trestman to be the 14th head coach in team history, an NFL source told the Tribune early Wednesday.
The Bears made it official with a news release shortly after 4 a.m. Trestman will be introduced Thursday at a 10 a.m. news conference.
Trestman is a somewhat unconventional choice, having been out of the NFL for eight years. But he also is a proven winner, having won back-to-back Grey Cup championships as coach of the Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian Football League. Trestman has a 64-34 record in five years as a head coach.
In addition to having head coaching experience, Trestman is a quarterback guru who has spent most of his professional life coaching passers. Clearly, he is being brought to the Bears to get the most out of Jay Cutler and whoever else lines up under center during his tenure.
Trestman, 57, was Bernie Kosar’s quarterbacks coach at the University of Miami in 1983, when the Hurricanes won the national championship. In the NFL, Kosar, Steve Young, Scott Mitchell, Jake Plummer and Rich Gannon played well under Trestman’s guidance. Gannon won the 2002 Most Valuable Player award while being coached by Trestman on the Raiders.
“The skill set that Marc has, being an offensive mind, and then his great relationships that he's had with quarterbacks historically in the NFL and the work he's done with them makes him a good fit for the job,” Alouettes general manager Jim Popp said.
“A lot of guys want to be head coaches. Some leave the NFL to go to NCAA schools, and then once they've proven themselves, all of a sudden those college coaches are some of the hot commodities to be an NFL coach. It's no different. Coach Trestman has run a professional team as a head coach for five years. He's had a winning record for five years. He's proven himself as a head coach at a professional level. You can call it what you want, but on-hand training as a head coach and proof goes a long way, goes a real long way. You can't replace that.”
Trestman should know what he is getting into with Cutler. As a consultant, he worked with Cutler to prepare him for the 2006 combine. Among other players he worked with before their drafts are Jason Campbell and Tim Tebow.
Trestman’s appointment should not come as a surprise to Fox analyst Jimmy Johnson, who was Trestman’s boss at the University of Miami. Johnson tweeted Jan. 11 that it “looks like” Trestman would be getting the Bears job.
Trestman was one of 13 known candidates to be interviewed for Lovie Smith's old position. While Trestman, Colts offensive coordinator Bruce Arians and Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell received second interviews, Emery's final decision is believed to have come down to Trestman vs. Arians. Eight of the candidates had offensive backgrounds.
Trestman's final interview was Monday. Arians and Bevell met with Emery on Tuesday. None of the coaches knew Emery's decision until early Wednesday morning.
Interestingly, Smith nearly hired Trestman in 2004 when he was looking for an offensive coordinator. Instead, Smith settled on Terry Shea, and Trestman became Dave Wannstedt’s quarterbacks coach with the Dolphins. 
Trestman also interviewed for the Browns’ head coaching vacancy this month, as well as the Raiders’ offensive coordinator position. Last year, he interviewed for the Colts’ head coaching job.
Trestman is known for a cerebral, measured approach.
“One thing about him that is a strength is his ability to listen,” Gannon said. “He takes feedback. Marc has always been the type of guy who can sit down with you and talk about things. What do you like about this? What don’t you like? His feedback is excellent. And he has an ability to be honest with you. Somebody needs to be honest with Jay Cutler.”
Trestman’s plans for the defense are unknown, but there’s a good chance he will retain coordinator Rod Marinelli and some of the other defensive assistants. Quarterbacks coach Jeremy Bates also is a possibility to stay. Trestman previously worked with Bates’ father, Jim.
Trestman played quarterback at the University of Minnesota and Minnesota State-Moorhead. He was with the Vikings for two training camps as a defensive back.
Trestman also graduated from the University of Miami School of Law and has been a member of the Florida bar since 1983. He took a few years away from coaching in the early ‘90s to practice law. He is the author of the book “Perseverance: Life Lessons on Leadership and Teamwork.”
Trestman and his wife, Cindy, have two daughters, Sarahanne and Chloe.
bmbiggs@tribune.com
Twitter @BradBiggs
Last edited by soulman; 01-16-2013 at 09:25 AM.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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Well there you have it. A quick down and dirty snapshot of Marc Trestman.
One thing that I caught in here was who his two finalists were and that fits what I figured two. From Emery's standpoint he wanted not only a guy who has a track record of developing NFL QBs but also somebody with previous HC experience and Arians and Trestman where the only two that met both criteria so this hire shouldn't come as a surprise.
Another thing I'd like to point out to the naysayers is that both Cleveland and Oakland also had an interest in him this year and Indy almost hired him last year before the ultimately settled on Pagano and had Pagano health problems been known then it's entirely possible Indy would have hired Trestman instead. Jim Irsay is not fool. If he was interested in Trestman a year ago then Trestman is ready for the NFL. So let's just forget all that crap about lack of NFL experience. He has plenty.
This is something else I liked hearing out of a good QB who Trestman once turned into a great QB and a SB winner. Gannon is absolutely right. This won't be Jay running the show it will be Trestman's show and Jay running it so he needs to listen up and realize he's got away to go before he's ready to claim the title of best QB even in the NFCN let alone the NFL as Gannon once was.
“One thing about him that is a strength is his ability to listen,” Gannon said. “He takes feedback. Marc has always been the type of guy who can sit down with you and talk about things. What do you like about this? What don’t you like? His feedback is excellent. And he has an ability to be honest with you. Somebody needs to be honest with Jay Cutler.”
I also like the idea that he may decide to keep Bates around. I'm a Bates fan because I saw what he could do here in Denver and Cutler and Marshall like him. That eases the transition. I also believe that he should decide to keep Rod Marnelli and the majority of the defensive staff in place for now. I think there's a good chance he will because I think Phil Emery thinks he should too and no matter what Phil says about those decisions it's always a good idea to keep the guy who signs your checks happy.
Well there you all go. More stuff to discuss.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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Here's an old article from 2009 on Trestman that I found interesting. I thought some of you guys might like it too. It tells some of the background on Trestman's journey through his earlier career.
He won 2 championships after this article was printed. He had already led his team to the championship game his first season (The Grey Cup. It's the Super Bowl of the CFL). In his 2nd season he brought his team back to the championship game, and won. He did the exact same thing the 3rd season there.
I like the fact that this guy is a well-seasoned winner. If we had just grabbed one of the glitzy OC's that fans were raving about, then we would have gotten a green HC who would have to learn on the fly - like Lovie Smith and the small army of other coaches the Bears have hired over the years who had no experience other than having been coordinators. Trestman knows what it takes to be a head coach.
LINK to the article Offensive guru Trestman deserves ticket from Canada to NFL Oct. 21, 2009
Attention, disgruntled football fans. Looking for a new head coach? There are plenty of qualified candidates out there, sitting by the phone. Mike Holmgren is one. Mike Shanahan is another. Jon Gruden. Bill Cowher. Brian Billick. Nobody slips through the cracks, only I guarantee somebody does. And that somebody is Marc Trestman.
Yep, that Marc Trestman. He couldn't get a sniff at a head-coaching job in this country, so he went to Canada and took over the Montreal Alouettes. So what? So this: He had the Alouettes in the Grey Cup in his first season and now has them poised to return, with a CFL-best 13-2 record. This time, though, the Alouettes should win because this time they're better than everyone else.That's a credit to a lot of people, including the team's general manager Jim Popp. He had the guts to hire Trestman when others would not. But mostly it's a credit to Trestman, who proved he has what it takes to be a successful head coach. All he needed was a chance. Popp and owner Robert Wetenhall gave it to him, and the results have been so overwhelming that Montreal must wonder when the NFL lures him back across the border.
If it's smart, it will be soon. But it won't. Trestman is not on anyone's radar in the NFL because, well, because there's this idea that he's bright and innovative and pieces together a nice passing game and all that, but that he really isn't cut out to be a head coach. He's too nice or too docile or too cerebral or just not head-coaching material, whatever that means.
Anyway, nobody is talking about him as a head-coaching prospect in the NFL, and that's a mistake. Because in two seasons Trestman has proven that they should be; that his critics were wrong and that he does, indeed, have what it takes to be a head coach.
OK, so it's the CFL. Isn't that the league that gave us Bud Grant and Marv Levy? Didn't Warren Moon and Doug Flutie and Joe Theismann and Jeff Garcia make the jump from there? Don't tell me it doesn't matter because it does, and what matters now is that Marc Trestman and the Montreal Alouettes are setting the league on its toboggan.
"People evolve," said Popp. "I know he's seen as a good guy and a nice guy, but he has that voice to get someone's attention. And he can grab you real quick. He can serve as a 'father figure' to some of these guys, but at the same time he's able to discipline you real quick. Like 'Don't cross me.' Marc really knows his stuff."
No one ever questioned that. A few years ago New Orleans coach Sean Payton wanted to hire him as his offensive coordinator, but Trestman turned him down and moved his family to North Carolina, where he worked at N.C. State. Then Popp offered him the chance to go to Canada. Popp’s father, Joe, and Trestman worked together in Cleveland on the Browns staff, and Popp got to know his future head coach then. Two decades later he invited him to attend Alouettes practices and to speak to the team. Trestman didn’t know it then, but he was auditioning for his future job.
"The guy," said Popp, "is a great communicator."
Trestman always wanted to be a head coach somewhere, and he hoped that somewhere would be the NFL or a major-college program. But that wasn't going to happen, and Trestman got the message after the 2002 season when the Raiders went to the Super Bowl, thanks largely to their passing game. Rich Gannon was the league MVP. The Raiders were the best offense anywhere, setting franchise passing records galore. And Trestman would parlay their success ... his success ... into something bigger and better.
Only it never happened, and it looked as if he might fade from the scene until Popp came to the rescue. Now Trestman has one of the best jobs on the planet. He gets to coach in Montreal. He gets to run things his way. He gets to coach another league MVP, quarterback Anthony Cavillo. He gets to spend the offseason with his family. And he gets what he deserves -- which is credit for doing a job right.
When Wetenhall hired Trestman in January, 2008, he conceded he was taking a chance on someone who never coached in the CFL and who had never been a head coach at any level of football. But he also said, "I would bet my reputation on Marc Trestman." He knew what he was doing.
"The inspired hiring of Marc Trestman is still paying dividends," Jack Todd wrote this week in the Montreal Gazette. "One of these days [and we fear it may be sooner rather than later] some NFL team is going to figure out that Trestman has one of the best football minds on the continent, and he's going to be lured away. He's the only coach we've ever seen to rival Marv Levy in intensity, preparation, detail and inspiration. It's a pleasure to watch."
But that was true when Trestman was the offensive coordinator in Oakland. I remember him opening a 2002 game with Pittsburgh by doing the unthinkable -- passing on the first ten snaps and 17 of the first 18. When it was over Gannon had thrown a club-record 64 times for 405 yards, and the Raiders had themselves a 30-17 victory. Oakland went on to lead the league in offense, lead it in passing and finish second only to Kansas City in points.
Better, it wound up in the Super Bowl -- the last time it won more than five games in any season.
"You know who's going to be the next head coach of the Raiders?" a general manager asked me recently.
I shook my head.
"Marc Trestman," he said. "Because Al [Davis] liked him and because he's willing to go back there."
He might be right. I hope not. Because Marc Trestman deserves to be somewhere he can run the show, choose the players, call the plays and put down the foundation for success. Sorry, but that's not Oakland. But it is Montreal. The Alouettes love the guy, he and Popp mesh perfectly and Trestman is happier than I've heard him in years. What's more, he's under contract, with no assurances the Alouettes would let him out of the deal.
And why would they? They're back to winning a zillion games with a head coach who seems, as Popp put it, "a perfect fit" for their club and their players. I remember one NFL general manager years ago telling Trestman that he made a good assistant but would never be a head coach. Trestman never forgot it, and look who's talking now: Trestman worked his way to the top of the CFL; our GM worked his way out of football.
"The man is extremely well-organized," Popp said of his head coach, "and he has a routine he stands by and lives. On the sidelines, he's a very calm person. I've never seen him stress or show a lot of emotion. If something doesn't go well offensively, you don't see him react in a negative way. And it carries over to the players. Our sidelines are very calm. I've seen little panic if we're losing, and I've never seen anyone goofing off if we're winning."
The bottom line, of course, is can he be successful -- and I'd say we have our answer. But I know what you're thinking. It's the CFL. What makes you think he can do it in the NFL? I don't know. But what I do know is that he should at least be given a chance ... and I don't see that happening anytime soon. Too bad, too, because NFL owners are always looking for the next Marv Levy, and maybe, just maybe, the next Marv Levy is back in Montreal.
"He's well deserving of everything he's gotten," said Popp. "A lot of people have a lot of respect for him. But you know what it's going to come down to: Someone has to have the [guts] to give him a chance."
Popp did, and look where it has the Alouettes. Montreal dared to be different, and the gamble paid off. Someone in the NFL should stop, look and listen to what's happening north of here. There's a head coach making a name for himself, and his name is Marc Trestman.
"Be honest now," I said to Popp. "From what you know of him do you think Marc Trestman could be successful as a head coach in the NFL?"
"I don't even question it," he said. "He's too strong of a man. He reminds me of that 15-year veteran who stayed in the game because he was so smart he knew what to do to be successful. If you put him in a situation where he has people around him to give him a chance for success he's going to have success. There is no doubt in my mind about it."
Last edited by JustAnotherBearsFan99; 01-16-2013 at 09:27 AM.
Trestman - Kromer - Tucker - DeCamillis
I'm looking forward to seeing these guys coach. Hope they're good.
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High Fives / Like - 2 BEAR DOWN!, 0 Dislikes
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Hey, this means we still have an on-staff guru.
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Originally Posted by
bearsinhouston
Hey, this means we still have an on-staff guru.
Aw thanks but I'm not all that! 
Seriously though when JJ said this was the guy I started looking up every thing I could find on him and you know he's exactly who you'd expect Emery to find that others may have passed over. He may not be a fit for other NFL teams but for the Bears he's a perfect fit.
We needed an offense minded HC who could build up Cutler and build an offense around him and that is exactly what we got. We also needed a guy who wouldn't need an extended learning curve as a HC and that's what we got. We needed a guy who could assemble a strong staff with heavy emphasis on rebuilding the OLine and that's what we're getting. And we needed a guy who would in all likelihood keep some of the existing staff on to ease the transition and although the jury is still out I think eventually we'll have that too.
The fact that he just announced two offensive coaches and not a word yet about a defensive hire sounds to me lie he intends to keep those who share in his philosophy enough to work for him. I think he's smart enough to realize that you don't come in and dismantle a defense and a staff like that without serious thought as to who you would replace them with and right now that would be tough to do. Should be interesting to see what direction things take over these next few days.
I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.
Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.
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High Fives / Like - 1 BEAR DOWN!, 0 Dislikes
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Junior Member

Originally Posted by
soulman
Aw thanks but I'm not all that!
<snip good stuff>
The fact that he just announced two offensive coaches and not a word yet about a defensive hire sounds to me lie he intends to keep those who share in his philosophy enough to work for him. I think he's smart enough to realize that you don't come in and dismantle a defense and a staff like that without serious thought as to who you would replace them with and right now that would be tough to do. Should be interesting to see what direction things take over these next few days.
I hope. I hope. Your indicator is an interesting one. 1 ST and 2 Off coach hires and 0 Def side hires. It is hard to see the point of changing a great defense.
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No one ever questioned that. A few years ago New Orleans coach Sean Payton wanted to hire him as his offensive coordinator, but Trestman turned him down and moved his family to North Carolina, where he worked at N.C. State Well hell...if Payton wanted him as an OC...that right there should tell you what an offensive guru Trestman is.
I'm trying//to let go//of maybe//but maybe's just so//very interesting//Oh, what a thing.