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Marv Levy
Marv Levy is a former Buffalo Bills Head Coach. Known as a motivational coach and motivational speaker who has a Master's degree from Harvard, he best known as an intelligent and analytical football coach. Perhaps better suited for the political field rather than the football field, Coach Levy led the Buffalo Bills to an unprecedented four straight Super Bowls. He used his Harvard education to motivate and shape the careers and lives of many pro football athletes.
Coach Levy was born in Chicago, Illinois. He went to Coe College in Iowa where he earned 3 varsity letters in football, 4 in track and 1 in basketball. After graduating college, Marv entered law school. About three weeks later, he made the decision to become a football coach.
Levy's first coaching job was as an assistant atCoe College. He went on to serve as the head coach at the Country Day School in St. Louis, the University of New Mexico (1958-59), University of California (1960-63) and William and Mary (1964-68). Marv got his first NFL coaching job in 1969 as a special teams coach for the Philadelphia Eagles. In the next few years, he would serve as a special teams coach for the Rams and the Redskins. He also coached the Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian Football League for five years and led them to two Grey Cup championships.
Marv's first head coaching job would be with the Kansas City Chiefs from 1978-1982. His next head coaching position came in 1986 when he was hired to be the head football coach of the Buffalo Bills. Levy went on to become the most successful coach in Buffalo Bills history with a 112-70 record (123-78 including post season play). It took Levy only two years to lead the Bills to the AFC Championship game in which they lost to the Cincinnati Bengals. The Bills would win the eastern division six out of the next eight seasons and make the playoffs in eight out of the next nine years. During that run, Levy and the Bills would become the only team in NFL history to go to four straight Super Bowls (from 1991-1994).
After 47 years of coaching, Marv retired on December 31, 1997. He will be remembered not only as the winningest coach in Buffalo Bills history and a Hall of Fame football coach, but also as one of the NFL's most prominent leaders. Levy not only molded football players, but he also molded men character, class and pride.
In August of 2001, Marv was rewarded for all of his hard work when he was bestowed pro-football highest honor. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, in Canton, Ohio in his very first year of eligibility. In his NFL coaching career, Levy ranked 10th
all-time with a 154-120 record, had a .634 winning percentage, won six division championships and four straight AFC Championships and led the Bills to four straight Super Bowl appearances. He is one of only 14 coaches to win 100 games with one NFL team. Equally as impressive, Coach Levy compiled a 17-5 record against the winningest coach in NFL history, Don Shula and the Miami Dolphins.
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