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However, his reputation was affected by going winless in the NFL postseason, in addition to impassioned postgame tirades and press conferences. Mora finished his career with a winning percentage of .527, the highest of NFL coaches without a playoff win. He is the father of former NFL and current collegiate head coach Jim L. Mora.
Mora played college football with the Washington Huskies from 1980 to 1983, and began his coaching career there as a graduate assistant in 1984. He is the son of retired NFL head coach Jim E. Mora. To avoid confusion with his father, Mora is sometimes called Jim Mora Jr. [2]
Moorehead – Emery Moorehead (father), Aaron Moorehead (son) Mora – Jim E. Mora (father), Jim L. Mora (son) Moss – Eric Moss, Randy Moss (brothers), Thaddeus Moss (son of Randy, nephew of Eric) [105] Moss – Santana Moss, Sinorice Moss (brothers) Murphy – Grayson Murphy, Gabriel Murphy (twin brothers) [106] Murray – Kevin Murray ...
Jim Mora and his wife Kathy got up the hill, to the UConn football fields long before the first practice was to start Friday. ... and his father’s life. Mora once coached his way to within a ...
Jim Mora has lived a charmed football life. He’s the son of a longtime NFL coach, held marquee head coaching jobs in college and the NFL, and even worked as a football commentator for multiple ...
Jim Mora is the name of: . Jim E. Mora (born 1935), former head coach of the NFL's New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts, and the USFL's Philadelphia/Baltimore Stars; Jim L. Mora (born 1961), currently the head coach of the collegiate football program at the University of Connecticut, former head coach at UCLA, former NFL coach, and son of Jim E. Mora
UConn Huskies head football coach Jim Mora called out other schools on Monday for allegedly trying to tamper with his players after the team won the Fenway Bowl. Mora fired the message on social ...
His father, Elijah Pitts (1938–1998), was a running back for the Packers and was part of all five NFL championship teams under Lombardi, including the first two Super Bowls. Ron Pitts is mentioned briefly as one of several players' children who visited the Packers' locker room in Jerry Kramer 's diary of the 1967 season, Instant Replay .