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Brian Harold Billick [1] (born February 28, 1954) is an American former football coach and commentator. He was the offensive coordinator for the Minnesota Vikings from 1994 to 1998; the team broke the NFL scoring record in the 1998 season.
Billick went on to lead the Ravens to four playoff appearances in his nine years as coach. In 2000, he led the Ravens to a 34–7 victory in Super Bowl XXXV against the New York Giants. [2] On December 31, 2007, Billick was fired by Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti after leading the Ravens to a 5–11 record in the 2007 season. Less than three ...
Therefore, ties occurring prior to 1972 do not count toward a coach's win percentage, while ties occurring 1972 or later count as half-win, half-loss. B Does not include Paul Brown's four-year AAFC record of 47–4–3. C In 2012, Bruce Arians served as acting head coach of the Indianapolis Colts for 12 games as head coach Chuck Pagano was on ...
Brian Billick can relate. A generation ago, Billick was that hot offensive coordinator when the Minnesota Vikings set a then-NFL record with 556 points in 1998.
The 2001 season was the Baltimore Ravens' sixth season in the National Football League (NFL) and the third under head coach Brian Billick. Fresh off their victory trip from Super Bowl XXXV, bad news struck the 2001 Ravens as running back Jamal Lewis suffered a knee injury in training camp and would miss the entire season. This weakened the ...
Ravens coach Brian Billick, shown on the sideline in 2007, has experienced the unhealthy stress of being an NFL coach. ... Unbeaten records on line as Chiefs face 49ers and Vikings play Lions.
Billick was the coach of the Ravens from 1999-2007 and Baltimore won the Super Bowl after the 2000 season. He hasn't coached since he was fired by Baltimore. Ex-Ravens coach Brian Billick joins ...
A Does not include Paul Brown's four-year AAFC playoff record of 5–0 or his four consecutive AAFC championships from 1946 to 1949. B Does not include Ray Flaherty's AAFC playoff record of 0–2 coaching the New York Yankees. C Does not include Buck Shaw's AAFC record of 1–1 coaching the 49ers.