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Wednesday, January 19
Old coach learns new tricks


I like Dick Vermeil. I like Dick Vermeil because he's old. I like him because he is old and he once quit football. I like him because he quit football and then came back.

I like Vermeil because he figured out how to come back without going insane.

 Dick Vermeil
The Vermeil of '99 is a far cry from the one we saw even last season.
Did I mention the part about old?

And that is a lie, of course. Dick Vermeil, the coach of a St. Louis Rams football team that has gone from 4-12 a season ago to hosting the NFC championship on Sunday in the Airline Dome, is only 63 years old. In America these days, that's barely middle age.

Vermeil looks great, acts healthy and still has the constitution to be a full-time head coach, which is a great job as long as you're fond of 168-hour work weeks. He has the enthusiasm of a kid and the ability to cry on demand of a Jennifer Love Hewitt, and he very basically knows what the heck he's doing out there.

But in the NFL, 63 is either the number of a fat offensive lineman or an age to which almost no one in any actual employee capacity can relate. Put it this way: Dick Vermeil has socks older than some of his players. I'm not saying they're fundamentally immoral socks, I'm saying 63 is 63.

And that is why I like Vermeil.

They talk in football about players turning their careers around, but not even Jeff George can match what Dick Vermeil has done over the past couple of seasons. This is a man, remember, who retired from coaching nearly two decades ago because he was so insistently intense -- because he was a Roman Candle firing out of both ends -- that he developed one of the first modern cases of sports burnout.

And this is a man, remember, whose own players as recently as last season were threatening a team-wide mutiny over Vermeil's over-the-top practice schedule, the long, drawn-out and pointlessly physical sessions that some of the best Rams believed were draining the life out of them before Sunday ever arrived.

So it was that Vermeil hit this season as an old-guy coaching suspect, right there alongside such veteran recyclables as the Lions' Bobby Ross, the Colts' Jim Mora and the Saints' Mike Ditka. It was Vermeil's third season in St. Louis, with just nothing to show for Seasons 1 and 2. The word on the street was that the Rams had made a significant miscalculation in their judgment that Vermeil still had something to offer the modern player.

Ever so wrong, as it turns out. The Rams love Vermeil; they have thrived upon his emotion and his stout belief in them; and they have rallied around a heretofore unproven quarterback to push to within a victory of the Super Bowl.

But before the Rams could switch over to the Vermeil side of the fence, the coach himself had some changing to do -- and this is the part of his story that Vermeil is the most reluctant to acknowledge. He'll say that he is basically the same person he always was, wearing his heart on his sleeve and all that -- and you couldn't disprove it if you tried.

But Vermeil changed in other ways. At 63, with a veritable lifetime of coaching behind him, he had to find new ways to get across his established ideas. He had to listen to his players and trust them, and regardless of age, that is one of the most difficult leaps of faith for any coach to make.

The Rams wanted shorter practices; Vermeil gave in. They wanted less full-pad contact during the week; Vermeil gave in. He incorporated more player ideas than he ever has before, and when Trent Green went down with injury, the coach threw untested quarterback Kurt Warner out there and told him that he would be the QB to stay -- never seriously considered making a move outside the organization.

It sounds like basic stuff, the normal you-scratch-my-back, I'll-scratch-yours currency of the NFL. It wasn't basic in the least. It required Dick Vermeil to switch things up, and that is why it's all the more encouraging that it played out the way it did.

Bobby Ross in Detroit, the same. You can knock the Lions for their dismal flame-out at season's end, but the fact is, they got to 8-4 at one point in the season without Barry Sanders carrying the ball once; and they did so, in large measure, because Ross took a hard look at himself last off-season and decided he was going to have to change as a coach, become less negative, more accessible, more willing to incorporate player feedback and the like.

It was asking an old dog to learn new tricks. Ross learned. Dick Vermeil learned. It's an encouraging thing almost any way you look at it. And even if it's the thing Vermeil would least like to discuss, it is what makes the man so completely appealing as a story just now. You don't have to be 63 to see that.

Scouting around

  • Inevitable that John Rocker's rehab tour should already be getting under way, a scant period of time removed from the national spleen-venting that revealed him to be a hopeless hobo when it comes to ideology. Not only did Rocker attempt to defend himself to ESPN's Peter Gammons, but he fulfilled a longstanding charity commitment over the weekend, showing up at the Dennis Martinez Foundation game at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fla. , where he signed autographs and made nice.

    Two questions: One, why should anyone care what John Rocker says in the first place?, and two, how long before he stops saying it? Of all the problems facing Major League Baseball in this arena -- and let's go with the lack of diversity in front offices, the Tomahawk Chop and Chief Wahoo, just to start the list -- John Rocker is the least of them. He can't hire, fire, promote or punish. And he's a closer, which means he'll be out of the game in a couple of years. The man doesn't rate. Simple as that.

  • All those waiting for Steve Young to come to his senses, realize that by returning to the NFL he jeopardizes the wonderful future that appears to be waiting for him, and announce his retirement from the game: Hope you packed a lunch. Young's agent, Leigh Steinberg, says he expects the QB to receive medical clearance soon, and the only objective reading of Young's comments over the past month leads to the conclusion that he will be playing in the league next season. Even the 49ers have accepted that reality, and now they're engaged in discussions to modify Young's contract so as to make it workable under their salary constraints. The thing about Young being too smart to risk another serious concussion? It made all the sense in the world, assuming you were talking about someone other than a professional athlete. Pros play. Young won't be the exception that proves the rule.

  • Thank goodness they've had the Chicago Bulls around, so nobody'd notice: The Golden State Warriors, 6-30 after a Saturday night loss to Sacramento, are a decent bet to slip beneath the Bulls into the basement of the NBA. Asked what his team could do in the face of a losing streak that hit 12 games over the weekend, hard-working forward Jason Caffey replied disgustedly, "Look forward to the offseason." Keep that perspective, babe; it's critical.

  • Absolutely shocking that Goose Gossage received votes on only 166 of the 499 ballots cast for the Baseball Hall of Fame. Gossage may be paying a price for the way his career ended, with a kind of slow fade from relevancy rather than a big bang. But for a significant chunk of the 1970s and '80s, Gossage was the most feared closer in baseball and easily one of the most entertaining, with his leave-everything-out-there style earning him a well-deserved reputation as an all-time gamer.

    Gossage also arrived on the scene before the advent of the Dennis Eckersley type of save, where the closer might work only one or two batters to earn the statistic. But don't let the numbers deceive: For years and years, the Goose was It. It took Tony Perez nine tries to get to Cooperstown; if sheer dominance is a criterion, perhaps we'll see Gossage yet.

  • Dennis Rodman really, really wants back into the NBA. Of course, he told Craig Sager on TNT that he can't report to any team until after the Super Bowl and Pro Bowl, because he already has parties planned for those weekends. Other than that, put me in, coach.

    Mark Kreidler is a columnist for the Sacramento Bee, which has a web site at http://www.sacbee.com/.


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