New York Giants Official Website

Tom Coughlin

Long regarded as one of the NFL's premier head coaches, Tom Coughlin reached the pinnacle of his profession in the 2007 season when he led the Giants to a victory in Super Bowl XLII. The Giants, heavy underdogs entering the game, scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns to defeat the previously-undefeated New England Patriots, 17-14.

Coughlin and the Giants' success continued in 2008, when they won the NFC East championship with a 12-4 record, their best record since the 2000 NFC champions won 12 games. The Giants' records the last four seasons are 11-5, 8-8, 10-6 and 12-4, their first stretch of four consecutive non-losing seasons since they had 10 in a row from 1954-63. The division title was the Giants' seventh since the 1970 merger. It was the eighth time in franchise history and the sixth time since the 1970 merger that the Giants finished a season with at least 12 victories. More importantly, the Giants advanced to postseason play for the forth consecutive season, the first time they accomplished that feat in the 84-year history of the franchise. The Giants and Indianapolis Colts are the only teams to make the playoffs each of the last four years.

Coughlin also led the Jacksonville Jaguars to four consecutive postseason berths (1996-99) and is one of only three coaches in NFL history to accomplish that feat with two different teams. The others are Marty Schottenheimer (Cleveland, 1985-88 and Kansas City, 1990-95) and Mike Holmgren (Green Bay, 1993-98 and Seattle, 2003-07).

The 2008 Giants established several milestones and records. The Giants had two more victories than they finished with the previous season to become the fifth defending Super Bowl champion to win more games the season following a championship than they did on their way to winning the Lombardi Trophy (not counting the strike-shortened 1982 season). The Giants were the first defending Super Bowl champion in 10 years - and only the fourth overall - to earn a top seed in the postseason a year after winning the championship game (since seeding began in 1990).

Coughlin has always stressed the importance of limiting turnovers and the Giants set an NFL record (tied by the Miami Dolphins) by coughing up the ball only 13 times in 16 games. The Giants and Dolphins were the seventh and eighth teams to average less than one turnover a game over a 16-game season. Coughlin has coached two of the teams, the 2002 Jaguars and last season's Giants.

The Giants rushed for NFL-leading and franchise record numbers of 2,518 yards and 5.0 yards per carry. The previous records were 2,451 yards in 1985 and 4.7 yards an attempt in 2005 and 2006. The Giants finished the season with 427 points and 338 first downs, both the second-highest totals in franchise history. They scored 448 points in 1963 and had 356 first downs in 1985.

Coughlin is one of just three active coaches to lead a team to a Super Bowl victory. The others are Bill Belichick and Mike Tomlin, whose Pittsburgh Steelers succeeded the Giants as NFL champions. When the Giants won Super Bowl XLII, Coughlin became the 26th different head coach to win a Super Bowl, and the second to win one with the Giants (Bill Parcells won two). At 1-0, Coughlin is one of 18 coaches with an unblemished Super Bowl record. At 61 years and 156 days old, he was the third-oldest coach to win a Super Bowl. Only Dick Vermeil and Weeb Ewbank were older.

Coughlin is 8-7 in the postseason, including 4-3 with the Giants. The four playoff victories are the second-most in Giants history, behind Parcells' eight.

The championship season and last year's division title are successes in a Giants' revival that began when Coughlin was named the 16th head coach in franchise history on Jan. 6, 2004. The Giants won only four games in the season before his arrival. A successful head coach in the NFL and on the collegiate level, Coughlin was an assistant coach with the Giants when they won Super Bowl XXV in 1990. When he returned to the team as head coach, Coughlin quickly put the team back on a path that would ultimately lead to another Super Bowl victory.

The Giants improved from four to six to 11 victories and the NFC East title in Coughlin's first two seasons with the team. In 2006, they went 8-8 and earned an NFC Wild Card playoff berth. In 2007, they were 10-6 in the regular season and again reached postseason play as a Wild Card. Last year, they were again one of the NFL's very best teams and reached the playoffs for the first time following a Super Bowl appearance.

Coughlin has won four division titles and led his teams to the playoffs eight times in his 13 years as an NFL head coach. Belichick, who has coached the New England Patriots to six first place finishes in the AFC East, is the only active coach entering the 2009 season with more division titles than the Giants' coach.
 
A 35-14 victory over Dallas on Nov. 2, 2008 was Coughlin's 200th regular season game as an NFL head coach. Coughlin is 115-93 (.553) in the regular season, plus 8-7 in the postseason for an overall record of 123-100 (.552). His 115 regular season victories place him third among current NFL head coaches, behind Belichick and Jeff Fisher, both of whom have coached one more season than Coughlin, who is the only one of the three to have coached an expansion team. The 115 victories leave him in 28th place on the NFL's all-time regular season list, one behind former Rams and Redskins coach George Allen. Coughlin's 123 victories place him in a tie for 27th place with Hall of Famer Sid Gilman. A victory over the Jets on Oct. 7, 2007 was the 100th of Coughlin's career, including postseason games. Coughlin won his 100th regular season game at Detroit on Nov. 18, 2007.

Coughlin twice led the Jaguars to the AFC Championship Game prior to leading the Giants to victory in the NFC Championship Game. He is one of just six coaches to lead teams to a championship game in each conference since the 1970 merger. The others are Parcells and Dan Reeves (both former Giants coaches), as well as Chuck Knox, Tony Dungy and Jon Gruden.

The 2007 Giants set several milestone achievements on their way to the NFL championship. The Giants became the fifth Wild Card team to win the Super Bowl, the second in three years (the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XL) and the first from the NFC. They were the second team to win the Super Bowl after winning three postseason games on the road to get there (again joining the 2005 Steelers). The No. 5 Giants were the lowest-seeded NFC team to win the Super Bowl since the NFL began seeding teams in 1990. The previous low was a second-seeded team. The Giants were just the third team to win the Super Bowl after starting the season 0-2. The others were the 1993 Dallas Cowboys and the 2001 Patriots.

Perhaps the most impressive characteristic of the 2007 Giants was their ability to win on the road. The Giants won 10 consecutive games as visitors (seven regular season, three postseason), an NFL single-season record. They were the visiting team in the Super Bowl, which was their 11th consecutive triumph away from Giants Stadium. The Giants won their first 2008 road game, at St. Louis, to extend their road winning streak to 11 games, which ties them with three other teams for the second-longest such streak in NFL history. They achieved much of that success with 11 rookies on their 2007 active roster, a record for a Super Bowl winner.

In 2007, the Giants started the season 0-2 before winning six consecutive games to become just the fifth team in history and the second since 1947 to follow two opening losses with six straight triumphs. The last of those victories was over the Miami Dolphins in London's Wembley Stadium, which made them the first team to win a regular season game outside of North America. Last year, the Giants won seven consecutive games from Oct. 19 to Nov. 30. It was first time the Giants have had won six games in a row in each of two consecutive seasons since 1993 and '94.

The Giants have also made dramatic statistical improvement under Coughlin. The team averaged 376.0 points per season in his first five years. Under Coughlin's stewardship, the Giants have had three of the five highest-scoring seasons in the history of the franchise, with 427 points last year, 422 points in 2005 and 373 points in 2007. The Giants scored more than 30 points seven times in 2008 - including four in a row from Nov. 2-23 - and six times in 2007, their highest totals of 30-point games since 1963, when they had 10. The Giants averaged 285.6 points a year in the three seasons prior to Coughlin's arrival.

Last season, the Giants and Philadelphia Eagles were the only two NFL teams to be ranked in the top nine in both offense and defense in the 2008 regular season. The Giants were ranked seventh offensively (355.9 yards a game) and fifth defensively (292.0). Philadelphia's offense was ranked ninth (350.5) and its defense third (274.3). It was the first season in which the Giants were ranked in the top 10 on offense and defense since 2002, when they were sixth in offense (364.1 yards a game) and ninth in defense (309.3). The 2008 season was the first in which the Giants allowed less than 300 yards a game since 2000, when the opponents of the NFC champions gained 281.4 yards per game.

The Giants were first in rushing yardage last season after finishing fourth in 2007. They have finished seventh or better in rushing in each of the last four seasons, the first time since 1990-93 that they were in the NFL's top 10 four years in a row.

In 2005, Coughlin's second season, the Giants scored 45 touchdowns, their highest total since the 1985 team scored 48. They became only the fifth team in NFL history to have five different players score at least seven touchdowns. Tiki Barber scored 11, and Jeremy Shockey, Plaxico Burress, Amani Toomer and Brandon Jacobs scored seven apiece. Their 5,787 total yards were the third-most in team history. The Giants' 312 first downs were the fifth-most in team history. The Giants' offense ranked fourth in the NFL with an average of 361.7 yards a game. It was the team's highest ranking since 1972, when the offense also ranked fourth with an average of 320.2 yards a game

Defensively, the Giants ranked fifth in total defense in 2008, allowing 292.0 yards a game. It was their highest ranking since 2000, when they were also fifth. The 292 yards per game were the fewest allowed by the Giants since 2000, when they gave up 284.1. The Giants were ninth in the NFL in rushing defense, surrendering 95.8 yards per game. In the 2007 Super Bowl season, the Giants were eighth in rushing defense, allowing 97.7 yards a game. In addition, the Giants led the NFL with 53 quarterback sacks in 2007 and followed that up with 42 sacks last year. The 95 sacks are the league's second-highest total in the previous two seasons, topped only by Dallas' 105.

Coughlin has also overseen a significant improvement in the Giants' special teams. In 2008, three Giants special teams player played in the Pro Bowl - punter Jeff Feagles, kicker John Carney and long-snapper Zak DeOssie. Feagles, who was 42 in 2008, finished the season with a gross average of 44.0 yards and a net average of 40.2 yards on 64 punts. The net average was a career high. His previous best net average was 38.2 yards in 1995, his first Pro Bowl season. Feagles' gross average tied for the second-highest of his career and is just three-tenths of a yard less than the career best of 44.3 yards he set with Arizona in 1997.  He averaged 44.0 yards the following year. Carney scored a career-high 143 points, the second-highest figure in Giants history and just five less than Jay Feely's record of 148 in 2005. Carney kicked 35 field goals in 38 attempts, a .921 percentage that was the best in Giants history. Two of his three misses were blocked.

The year before Coughlin arrived, the Giants averaged only 19.9 yards a kickoff return. In 2004, they led the NFL in kickoff return yardage for the first time since 1953 with an average return of 25.1 yards. In 2005, their average kickoff return dropped by less than a yard, to 24.3 yards, good for fourth in the NFL. Last year, the Giants averaged 23.3 yards a return. The Giants also allowed only 140 punt return yards the entire season and a 5.8-yard average on punt returns, the third-best figure in the NFL.

Many Giants players have enjoyed outstanding seasons in the Coughlin era. In 2008, seven Giants were selected to play in the Pro Bowl, the team's largest contingent since the 1990 Super Bowl champions sent seven players to the game. The Pro Bowlers were quarterback Eli Manning, guard Chris Snee, center Shaun O'Hara, defensive end Justin Tuck and Feagles, Carney and DeOssie.

Manning, who threw two fourth-quarter touchdown passes in Super Bowl XLII, passed for 3,238 yards and 21 scores in 2007. He is the first Giants quarterback to throw for more than 3,000 yards in four consecutive seasons and the first to throw at least 20 touchdown passes four years in a row. Manning's 71 consecutive regular season starts is the second-longest active streak among NFL quarterbacks entering the 2009 season. With Brandon Jacobs (1,089 yards) and Derrick Ward (1,025), the Giants were just the fourth team in history with two running backs rushing for at least 1,000 yards apiece in the same season. Jacobs is the fourth running back in Giants history to run for at least 1,000 yards in at least two consecutive seasons. He rushed for 15 touchdowns in 2008 and is just the second player in Giants history to run for that many scores in a single season. The Giants are the only NFL team to start the same five offensive linemen in every regular season game the last two seasons (Kareem McKenzie, Snee, O'Hara, Rich Seubert and David Diehl).

Coughlin previously coached the Jacksonville Jaguars, taking charge of the expansion franchise more than 18 months prior to its first game and guiding the team for its first eight seasons. Under Coughlin, the Jaguars were the most successful expansion team in NFL history. Coughlin compiled a 68-60 regular season record (.531), plus a 4-4 mark in the playoffs, and twice took Jacksonville to the AFC Championship Game. The Jaguars made the playoffs every year from 1996-99, the only expansion team in history to earn four postseason berths in its first five seasons.

Under Coughlin, the Jaguars compiled several impressive statistical records. Jacksonville was 55-12 in games in which it owned a lead entering the fourth period. The Jaguars were 40-28 in games against division opponents, 21-3 in games in which they scored a touchdown on their initial offensive possession and 51-30 in games in which they rushed for at least 100 yards.

Coughlin was out of football in 2003 but has been in the coaching profession for 40 years. He has always emphasized ball security and his teams have been among the very best in the NFL at taking care of the football. His career turnover differential is plus-50 in the regular season and plus-two in the postseason. In the 128 regular season games they played under Coughlin, the Jaguars committed fewer than three turnovers in 104 of them, including 32 in which they had no giveaways. In those 128 games, Jacksonville had 187 giveaways, giving Coughlin a 1.46 turnovers-per-game average. In 2002, Jacksonville's differential was plus-12 and the Jaguars had only 15 giveaways to become just the third team in history with fewer turnovers than games played (the others were the 1990 Giants, a team which had Coughlin as its wide receivers coach, and the 2002 Kansas City Chiefs).

Coughlin's Giants teams have been equally careful with the ball, turning it over only 114 times in 80 regular season games (1.43 a game). The Giants had fewer than three turnovers in 63 of those 80 games. The Jaguars' turnover differential during Coughlin's eight-year tenure was plus-34. In four seasons under Coughlin, the Giants are plus-16, including an NFC-best plus-nine in 2008, when the Giants lost only three fumbles all year.

Coughlin became the first head coach of the expansion Jaguars on Feb. 21, 1994, 559 days before the franchise played its first regular season game. In 1995, Jacksonville won four games, more than any previous expansion team in NFL history. The following year, Coughlin was named NFL Coach of the Year by United Press International as the Jaguars made the playoffs in just their second season and advanced all the way to the AFC Championship Game, where they lost to the New England Patriots.

That began a streak of four consecutive playoff seasons for the Jaguars. In both 1997 and '98 Jacksonville won 11 games, winning their first division title in 1998. The following season, the Jaguars had an NFL-best record of 14-2 and again advanced to the conference title game.

Coughlin earned a reputation as one of the NFL's finest offensive coaches. During his tenure, the Jaguars led the NFL in both passing yards (4,367 in 1996) and rushing yards (2,091 in 1999). In addition to having the most rushing yards in the NFL in 1999, Jacksonville boasted the league's leading receiver in Jimmy Smith (116 receptions). The only other team in history to accomplish that double was the 1954 San Francisco 49ers.

Coughlin arrived in Jacksonville following three years as the head coach at Boston College, where he turned a struggling program into a Top 20 team. He was 21-13-1 in three seasons (1991-93) with the Eagles, including 9-3 in 1993, when Boston College won eight consecutive games, defeated top-ranked Notre Dame, 41-39, and beat Virginia in the Carquest Bowl. Coughlin's last Boston College team was ranked 12th in the USA Today/CNN coaches poll and 13th by the Associated Press, despite starting the season 0-2. The Eagles were 8-2-1 in 1992 and 4-7 in his first season in 1991.

Coughlin and Miami Dolphins coach Tony Sparano are the only current NFL head coaches with experience as college head coaches. Sparano was once the coach at the University of New Haven.

Coughlin was the Giants wide receivers coach under Parcells from 1988-90. Under his tutelage, receivers such as Mark Ingram, Lionel Manuel, Odessa Turner and Stephen Baker all improved and helped the Giants win their second Super Bowl.

Coughlin began his coaching career in 1969 as a graduate assistant at Syracuse, his alma mater. He was the head coach at the Rochester Institute of Technology from 1970-73, compiling a record of 16-15-2. Coughlin returned to Syracuse in 1974, first serving as quarterbacks and offensive backfield coach for three seasons before being promoted to offensive coordinator for four years. He directed an offense that led the Orangemen to victory in the 1979 Independence Bowl, their first postseason triumph in 13 years.

In 1981, Coughlin went to Boston College for the first time, as quarterbacks coach under Jack Bicknell. He helped the Eagles win their first bowl game and coached Doug Flutie, who would win the Heisman Trophy in 1984, one season after Coughlin's departure. In 1983, Boston College won the Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy as Eastern Champion, its first in 42 years.

Coughlin entered the NFL as the Philadelphia Eagles' wide receivers coach in 1984 and '85. He held the same position with the Green Bay Packers in 1986 and '87 before moving to the Giants for a three-year stint.

Coughlin was a standout scholastic star at Waterloo (N.Y.) Central High School, where the football stadium now bears his name. He was a three-year letterman for legendary coach Ben Schwartzwalder from 1965-67. A wingback, Coughlin played in a backfield with All-America backs Larry Csonka and Floyd Little. As a senior in 1967, Coughlin broke Syracuse's single-season pass receiving record. That year, he won Syracuse's Orange Key Award as the university's outstanding scholar-athlete. He graduated in 1968 with a bachelor's degree in education and received a master's degree in education the following year.

Thomas Richard Coughlin was born on Aug. 31, 1946 in Waterloo. He is the oldest of seven children. Coughlin and his wife Judy, have two daughters, Keli and Kate, two son-in-laws named Chris, two sons, Brian and Tim, two daughters-in-law, Andrea (Tim's wife) and Susie (Brian's wife), and six grandchildren: Emma Rose, Dylan, Shea, Cooper, Caroline May and Marin Elizabeth.

The Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation

 

The Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation was created in honor of Jay McGillis.  Jay was a very special young man who was a member of Coughlin's team at Boston College and developed leukemia.  The courage, compassion and faith he demonstrated during the course of his illness were an inspiration to many people.

The mission of the Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation is to assist children with leukemia and other cancers and their families by providing emotional and financial support to help reduce the stress associated with treatment and improve their quality of life.

TOM COUGHLIN JAY FUND FOUNDATION

GRANT DISTRIBUTION GUIDELINES:

            Support is provided in the following ways:

    1. a.       Providing direct financial assistance for household expenses and illness related expenses that families incur during the course of treatment for childhood cancer.  Assistance can be continued up until 6 months after treatment ends.
    2. b.      Providing opportunities to improve the quality of life and long term outlook of these patients and their families through support of special projects and programming
    3. c.       Providing assistance with funding for umbilical cord blood transplants

Since its inception in Jacksonville in 1996, the Jay Fund Foundation has donated more than $2.5 million in support to help children and their families. Upon joining the Giants organization in 2004, Coughlin expanded the Jay Fund to the New York/New Jersey metropolitan area. The foundation hosts several annual fundraising events, including a Wine Tasting Gala and Celebrity Golf Classic Tournament in Jacksonville and Champions for Children Gala in Manhattan.  Coach Coughlin also regularly hosts special parties and events for pediatric oncology patients and other ill children in partnership with the Make a Wish Foundation.

 

                                    Tom Coughlin at a Glance

Year                School/Team                                      Position
1969                Syracuse                                              Graduate assistant
1970                Rochester Institute of Technology         Head coach (Record: 4-3)
1971                Rochester Institute of Technology         Head coach (Record: 5-2-1)
1972                Rochester Institute of Technology         Head coach (Record: 4-5)
1973                Rochester Institute of Technology         Head coach (Record: 3-5-1)
1974                Syracuse                                              QBs/offensive backfield coach
1975                Syracuse                                              QBs/offensive backfield coach
1976                Syracuse                                              QBs/offensive backfield coach
1977                Syracuse                                              Offensive coordinator
1978                Syracuse                                              Offensive coordinator
1979                Syracuse                                              Offensive coordinator
1980                Syracuse                                              Offensive coordinator
1981                Boston College                                    Quarterbacks coach
1982                Boston College                                    Quarterbacks coach
1983                Boston College                                    Quarterbacks coach
1984                Philadelphia Eagles                              Wide receivers coach
1985                Philadelphia Eagles                              Wide receivers coach
1986                Green Bay Packers                             Wide receivers coach
1987                Green Bay Packers                             Wide receivers coach
1988                New York Giants                                Wide receivers coach
1989                New York Giants                                Wide receivers coach
1990                New York Giants                                Wide receivers coach
1991                Boston College                                    Head coach (Record: 4-7)
1992                Boston College                                    Head coach (Record: 8-3-1)
1993                Boston College                                    Head coach (Record: 9-3)
1994                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach
1995                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 4-12)
1996                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 9-7, 2-1)
1997                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 11-5, 0-1)
1998                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 11-5, 1-1)
1999                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 14-2, 1-1)
2000                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 7-9)
2001                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 6-10)
2002                Jacksonville Jaguars                             Head coach (Record: 6-10)
2004                New York Giants                                Head coach (Record: 6-10)
2005                New York Giants                                Head coach (Record 11-5, 0-1)
2006                New York Giants                                Head coach (Record 8-8, 0-1)
2007                New York Giants                                Head coach (Record 10-6, 4-0)*
2008                New York Giants                                Head coach (Record 12-4, 0-1)
*Won Super Bowl
 

During Tom Coughlin's 13 seasons as an NFL head coach, he has coached against 74 different coaches in the National Football League (including postseason games). Coughlin has at least one victory against 62 of the coaches he has faced. In addition, Coughlin either leads or is tied in the lifetime series with 54 of those 74 coaches.

Regular Season (115-93)

Bill Belichick 2-1
Brian Billick 2-6
Rich Brooks 0-1
Joe Bugel 1-0
Cam Cameron 1-0
Dave Campo 1-1
Dom Capers 2-1
Pete Carroll 0-1
Brad Childress 0-2
Bruce Coslet 7-2
Bill Cowher 8-8
Romeo Crennel 0-1
Butch Davis 2-2
Jack Del Rio 0-1
Mike Ditka 1-0
Tony Dungy 1-3
Herman Edwards 1-0
Dennis Erickson 1-1
Jim Fassel 1-2
Jeff Fisher 7-10
Wayne Fontes 0-1
John Fox 2-0
Joe Gibbs 5-3
Dennis Green 2-2
Jon Gruden 1-0
John Harbaugh 1-0
Jim Haslett 1-0
Mike Holmgren 1-5
Dick Jauron 1-1
Jimmy Johnson 1-0
June Jones 1-0
Rich Kotite 1-1
Gary Kubiak 1-0
Dick LeBeau 3-1
Marv Levy 1-0
Marvin Lewis 1-1
Scott Linehan 1-0
Eric Mangini 1-0

Ted Marchibroda 6-1
Rod Marinelli 1-0
Steve Mariucci 1-1
Mike Martz 1-0
Mike McCarthy 0-1
Dave McGinnis 1-0
Jim Mora 0-2
Jim Mora, Jr. 1-1
Mike Nolan  3-0
Chris Palmer 4-0
Bill Parcells 5-3
Sean Payton 0-1
Bobby Petrino 1-0
Wade Phillips 1-4
Dan Reeves 1-0
Andy Reid 7-4
Ray Rhodes 1-0
Bobby Ross 1-0
Marty Schottenheimer 2-1
George Seifert 1-0
Mike Shanahan 2-2
Mike Sherman 1-1
Dave Shula 0-2
Lovie Smith 1-2
Steve Spurrier 1-0
Barry Switzer 0-1
Mike Tice 1-1
Mike Tomlin 1-0
Norv Turner 1-2
Dick Vermeil 2-1
Dave Wannstedt 1-1
Ken Whisenhunt 1-0
Mike White 0-1
Gregg Williams 0-1
Sam Wyche 0-1
Jim Zorn 2-0

 

Postseason 8-7

Bill Belichick 1-0
Pete Carroll 1-0
Jeff Fisher 0-1
John Fox  0-1
Jon Gruden 1-0
Jimmy Johnson 1-0

Marv Levy 1-0
Mike McCarthy: 1-0
Bill Parcells 0-2
Wade Phillips: 1-0
Andy Reid 0-2
Mike Shanahan 1-1

 

Tom Coughlin ranks third in victories among current NFL head coaches

Name                           Seasons           Regular Season           Postseason                   Total
                                                                    Wins                         Wins
Bill Belichick                14                            138                            15                        153
Jeff Fisher                    14                            128                              5                        133
Tom Coughlin            13                            115                              8                        123

*Coughlin was 61 years 156 days old on Feb. 3 and became the third-oldest head coach to win a Super Bowl:
Name                           Team               Super Bowl     Years   Days
Dick Vermeil               St. Louis          XXXIV            63        92
Weeb Ewbank             Jets                   III                  61        251
Tom Coughlin           Giants             XLII                61        156
Barry Switzer              Dallas              XXX                58        115
Bill Walsh                   San Francisco  XXIII               57        53

NFC East


Dallas
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia
Washington

Regular Season

W       L       T
6       7       0
1       2      0
8      4      0
8      5      0
23    18     0

Playoffs

W       L
1       0
0       0
0       2
0       0
1       2

Total

W       L       T
7       7       0
1       2      0
7       6      0
9       5      0
24     20     0

NFC South

Atlanta
Carolina
New Orleans
Tampa Bay



W       L       T

4       1      0
4       0       0
2       2       0
2       1       0
        12      4       0         



W       L

0       0
0       1
0       0
1       0
1       1



W       L       T

4       1       0
4       1       0
2       2       0
3       1       0
13     5       0

NFC North

Chicago
Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota



W       L       T

2       4       0
2       2       0
1       3       0
2       4       0
         7      13      0          



W       L

0       0
0       0
1       0
0       0
1       0



W       L       T

2       4       0
2       2       0
2       3       0
2       4       0
8       13     0

NFC West

Arizona
St. Louis
San Francisco
Seattle



W       L       T

3       1       0
2       1       0
4       0       0
2       5       0
11      7       0



W       L

0       0
0       0
0       0
0       0
0       0



W       L       T

3       1       0
2       1       0
4       0       0
2       5       0
11      7       0

AFC East

Buffalo
Miami
New England
N.Y. Jets



W       L       T

2       2       0
2       0       0
0       3       0
4       1       0
8       6       0



W       L

1       0
1       0
2       1
0       1
4      2



W       L       T

3       2       0
3       0       0
2       4       0
4       2       0
12      8       0

AFC South

Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Tennessee*



W       L       T

2       1       0
0       5       0
0       1       0
7      10       0
9      17       0



W       L

0       0
0       0
0       0
0       1
0       1



W       L       T

2       1       0
0       5       0
0       1       0
7      11       0
9      18       0

AFC North

Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland**
Pittsburgh



W       L       T
9       6        0
11      6        0
8      3        0
9      8        0
37     23      0



W       L

0       0
0       0
0       0
0       0
0       0



W       L       T

9       6       0
11     6       0
8      3       0
9      8       0
37    23      0

AFC West

Denver
Kansas City
Oakland
San Diego



W       L       T

2       2       0
4       1       0
2       1       0
0       1       0
8       5       0



W       L

1       1
0       0
0       0
0       0
1       1



W       L       T

3       3        0
4       1        0
2       1       0
0       1       0
9       6       0

Overall Totals

     115    93       0

8       7

123  100     0

*2-2 against Houston Oilers
**2-0 against 1995 Cleveland Browns