It’s official now, the reports of the Eagles extending Andy Reid’s contract have come true. The Birds have extended his deal for three years.
As you might have expected they sharing some of his impressives accomplishments and giving them as reasons for extending his deal.
Since being named head coach on January 11, 1999, Reid has compiled the best win total (115), winning percentage (.611) and playoffs victory total (10) in team history. He has captured five division titles and five trips to the NFC Championship game, while earning playoff berths in seven of his first 10 seasons. In that time span, no team has earned more divisional round playoff appearances (7) or championship game appearances (5) than Reid’s Eagles.
Reid, who earned NFL coach of the year honors following the 2000 and 2002 campaigns, was hired by the Eagles after a two-year tenure as quarterbacks coach of the Green Bay Packers. He spent his first seven NFL seasons as an assistant coach under Mike Holmgren in Green Bay after a 13-year stint as a coach in the collegiate ranks. In his 17-year NFL coaching career, his teams have made the playoffs 13 times (19-12 record). He has coached in the Super Bowl three times and in the NFC Championship game eight times.
Now in his 11th season as head coach in Philadelphia, Reid is the second-longest tenured head coach in NFL behind Tennessee’s Jeff Fisher (16 years) and the 8th longest tenured coach in professional sports behind Jerry Sloan (Utah Jazz), Bobby Cox (Atlanta Braves), Fisher, Tony LaRussa (St. Louis Cardinals), Gregg Popovich (San Antonio Spurs), Lindy Ruff (Buffalo Sabres), and Barry Trotz (Nashville Predators).
Reid is one of just four active coaches (Bill Belichick, Tom Coughlin, and Fisher) with 100 regular season victories. In addition, his winning percentage ranks 14th in NFL history among all coaches with at least 100 games under their belt, while his 115 overall wins rank 31st in NFL history.
From 2000-09, only two coaches have recorded more regular season wins than Reid‚Äôs 100 – Bill Belichick (109) and Tony Dungy (104). In fact, the Eagles became just the 4th team in NFL history to amass 100-or-more wins in a decade with just one head coach, joining Belichick‚Äôs Patriots (2000s), Tom Landry‚Äôs Cowboys (1970s), and Don Shula‚Äôs Dolphins (1970s).
Seven of Reid’s former assistant coaches are currently head coaches or coordinators with others teams: Brad Childress (head coach, Minnesota), John Harbaugh (head coach, Baltimore), Steve Spagnuolo (head coach, St. Louis), Pat Shurmur (offensive coordinator, St. Louis), Leslie Frazier (defensive coordinator, Minnesota), Dave Toub (special teams coordinator, Chicago), and Ron Rivera (defensive coordinator, San Diego).
Reid‚Äôs squads have been particulary effective down the stretch during his tenure as he owns a 70-39-1 (.641) mark in games in November and beyond (including playoffs) and a 51-34-1 (.599) regular season road record. His 10 playoff wins are tied for 11th in league history. Of the 14 coaches who have won 10 or more playoff games, only Belichick (.789), Bill Walsh (.714), Joe Gibbs (.708), Chuck Noll (.667), and George Seifert (.667) have amassed a higher winning percentage in the postseason than Reid’s .588 (10-7).