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Art Rooney: Chuck Noll taught organization what it took to be a winner
Posted by Mike Florio on June 14, 2014
Getty Images
The Steelers have lost one of the greatest football coaches of all time. The men who currently own the franchise have issued statements of tribute to the late Chuck Noll, who presided over a stunning transformation of the organization and died Friday at the age of 82.
“As for the football end of it, I think he ranks with [George] Halas and [Vince] Lombardi,” Dan Rooney said. “There are many other good coaches over the history of the NFL, but I think Chuck Noll ranks up there with those other two guys right at the top. No other coach won four Super Bowls, and the way he did it was with dignity. His players were always his concern, both in treating them well and giving them what they needed to succeed on the field. . . .
“He never won Coach of the Year until 1989, but he didn’t care about those things. He did what he felt was right, and it carried over obviously to the football team. Chuck Noll was a coach who always was concerned with the basics of the sport. He always used to say, ‘This game is blocking and tackling,’ and to him that was playing the game the way it should be played.”
Dan’s son, Art Rooney II, explained that Rooney’s style made a huge impact on the team.
“When Chuck became our head coach he brought a change to the whole culture of the organization,” Art II said. “Even in his first season when we won only one game, there was a different feel to the team. He set a new standard for the Steelers that still is the foundation of what we do and who we are. From the players to the coaches to the front office down to the ball boys, he taught us all what it took to be a winner.”
Noll set an example that should be appreciated, understood, and applied throughout the sport of football, all other sports, and all industries.
Chuck Noll passes away at 82
Posted by Mike Florio on June 14, 2014
Getty Images
Legendary Steelers coach Chuck Noll, who turned around a long-suffering franchise and made it into one of the most potent dynasties in league history, has died at the age of 82, according to multiple published reports from Pittsburgh.
Noll, who according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review had been dealing with an undisclosed illness along with back problems, died in his sleep on Friday night.
Hired in 1969 at age 37, Noll coached the team through the 1991 season.
After acquiring Joe Greene and Terry Bradshaw in back-to-back drafts, Noll helped guide the Steelers toward a string of memorable moments, from the Immaculate Reception made by then-rookie Franco Harris in 1972 to the 1974 season, which started with one of the best drafts in NFL history (Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth, Mike Webster), and ended with the team’s first ever league championship, a 16-6 Super Bowl win over the Vikings.
This year, the Steelers will commemorate the 40th anniversary of a championship that was 42 years in the making.
The Steelers won the Super Bowl the next year over the Cowboys and then, after two years not playing in the title game, they won two more, another over the Cowboys and one over the Rams.
“Chuck Noll is the best thing to happen to the Rooneys since they got on the boat in Ireland,” said Art Rooney Jr., the eldest son of Steelers founder Art Rooney Sr., has said, via Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Only 59 when he left the Steelers, Noll amazingly never received serious consideration for other NFL jobs. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1993, his first year of eligibility.
We extend our condolences to Coach Noll’s family, colleagues, players, friends, and the Steelers organization.
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Chuck Noll's coaching record (LINK)
Posted by Mike Florio on June 14, 2014

The Steelers have lost one of the greatest football coaches of all time. The men who currently own the franchise have issued statements of tribute to the late Chuck Noll, who presided over a stunning transformation of the organization and died Friday at the age of 82.
“As for the football end of it, I think he ranks with [George] Halas and [Vince] Lombardi,” Dan Rooney said. “There are many other good coaches over the history of the NFL, but I think Chuck Noll ranks up there with those other two guys right at the top. No other coach won four Super Bowls, and the way he did it was with dignity. His players were always his concern, both in treating them well and giving them what they needed to succeed on the field. . . .
“He never won Coach of the Year until 1989, but he didn’t care about those things. He did what he felt was right, and it carried over obviously to the football team. Chuck Noll was a coach who always was concerned with the basics of the sport. He always used to say, ‘This game is blocking and tackling,’ and to him that was playing the game the way it should be played.”
Dan’s son, Art Rooney II, explained that Rooney’s style made a huge impact on the team.
“When Chuck became our head coach he brought a change to the whole culture of the organization,” Art II said. “Even in his first season when we won only one game, there was a different feel to the team. He set a new standard for the Steelers that still is the foundation of what we do and who we are. From the players to the coaches to the front office down to the ball boys, he taught us all what it took to be a winner.”
Noll set an example that should be appreciated, understood, and applied throughout the sport of football, all other sports, and all industries.
Chuck Noll passes away at 82
Posted by Mike Florio on June 14, 2014

Legendary Steelers coach Chuck Noll, who turned around a long-suffering franchise and made it into one of the most potent dynasties in league history, has died at the age of 82, according to multiple published reports from Pittsburgh.
Noll, who according to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review had been dealing with an undisclosed illness along with back problems, died in his sleep on Friday night.
Hired in 1969 at age 37, Noll coached the team through the 1991 season.
After acquiring Joe Greene and Terry Bradshaw in back-to-back drafts, Noll helped guide the Steelers toward a string of memorable moments, from the Immaculate Reception made by then-rookie Franco Harris in 1972 to the 1974 season, which started with one of the best drafts in NFL history (Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth, Mike Webster), and ended with the team’s first ever league championship, a 16-6 Super Bowl win over the Vikings.
This year, the Steelers will commemorate the 40th anniversary of a championship that was 42 years in the making.
The Steelers won the Super Bowl the next year over the Cowboys and then, after two years not playing in the title game, they won two more, another over the Cowboys and one over the Rams.
“Chuck Noll is the best thing to happen to the Rooneys since they got on the boat in Ireland,” said Art Rooney Jr., the eldest son of Steelers founder Art Rooney Sr., has said, via Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Only 59 when he left the Steelers, Noll amazingly never received serious consideration for other NFL jobs. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1993, his first year of eligibility.
We extend our condolences to Coach Noll’s family, colleagues, players, friends, and the Steelers organization.
-----------------------------------------------------
Chuck Noll's coaching record (LINK)