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All but one of the above coaches won at least three NFL or Super Bowl Championships. While Landry and Shula won two Super Bowls-Shula won more NFL games than any coach. If there were ten spots I would have added Tom Landry and Curley Lambeau.
My pick is clearly Bill Walsh, as he completely revolutionized the NFL offense and had legions of his assistant coaches become head coaches and win Super Bowls:
The first Walsh disciple to participate in a Super Bowl was Sam Wyche with the Cincinnati Bengals, who coached under Walsh from 1979 to 1982.
Next came George Seifert, who coached under Walsh from 1980-88 and proceeded to win two Super Bowls as the head coach of the 49ers after Walsh departed.
Mike Holmgren (Green Bay Packers), who coached under both Walsh and Seifert won one championship, but lost a second one winning to fellow 49er alumni Mike Shanahan (Denver Broncos). Shanahan, who spent 1992-94 under George Seifert, would go on to win a second Super Bowl with the Denver Broncos.
In 1999, Jeff Fisher took the Tennessee Titans to the Super Bowl. His brief stint with the 49ers under George Seifert from 1992-93 led him to the coaching position in Houston where he became the head coach in 1994. Houston then moved to Tennessee.
Brian Billick (Baltimore Ravens) and Jim Fassel (New York Giants) followed the next season in the Super Bowl. Billick had spent his entire pro-coaching career in Minnesota under Dennis Green, who spent 1979 and 1986-88 under Bill Walsh, while Fassel was some what of a nomad, spending 1995 under Mike White in Oakland. White, meanwhile, was a coach under Walsh in 1979. In addition, Fassel also coached under Walsh at Stanford.
In 2002, John Gruden (Tampa Bay) and Bill Callahan (Oakland Raiders) were added to the Walsh Super Bowl parade. Gruden coached under Seifert in 1990, Holmgren 1992-94 and Ray Rhodes (1981-88 with Walsh, 1989-91, 1994 with Seifert, 1992-93 with Holmgren) from 1995-97, while Callahan spent the same time with Gruden under Rhodes in Philadelphia and was an assistant under Gruden in Oakland from 1998-2001 until ascending to the head coach position in 2002 when Gruden left for Tampa Bay.
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