Richard Rodgers Sr.

American football player and coach (born 1961)

American football player
Richard Rodgers Sr.
refer to caption
Rodgers in 2021
Personal information
Born: (1961-10-28) October 28, 1961 (age 62)
Career information
College:California
Career history
As a player:
  • Chicago Bruisers (1987)
  • Denver Dynamite (1987)
  • Los Angeles Cobras (1988)
  • Sacramento Attack (1992)
As a coach:
  • Diablo Valley Community College (1989–1994)
    Assistant coach
  • San Jose State (1995–1996)
    Secondary and special teams assistant
  • Portland State (1997–2000)
    Secondary and special teams coach
  • New Mexico State (2001–2004)
    Secondary coach
  • Holy Cross (2005–2011)
    Defensive coordinator & secondary coach
  • Carolina Panthers (2012)
    Assistant special teams coach
  • Carolina Panthers (2012–2014)
    Special teams coordinator
  • Carolina Panthers (2015–2017)
    Assistant defensive backs & safeties coach
  • Carolina Panthers (2018)
    Secondary coach
  • Carolina Panthers (2019)
    Safeties coach
  • Washington Football Team / Commanders (20202022)
    Assistant defensive backs coach
  • Washington Commanders (2023)
    Senior defensive assistant/safeties coach
Career highlights and awards

Richard Rodgers Sr. (born October 28, 1961) is an American football coach and former Arena Football League (AFL) player. He is the father of NFL tight end Richard Rodgers who is known for the Miracle in Motown.[1] He began coaching as soon as he retired from the AFL as a player.[2] Rodgers coached at the college level for 24 seasons before joining the NFL ranks in 2012. In 2014 he was part of the Pro Bowl staff and the following year, Rodgers coached in Super Bowl 50 with the NFC Champion Carolina Panthers. Rodgers is also known for being a part of "The Play" against Stanford, when he was a college football defensive back for the California Golden Bears and earned all-conference honors.

References

  1. ^ "Like Father, Like Son: Richard Rodgers". NFL.com. Retrieved March 28, 2020.
  2. ^ "Father vs. Son". News Observer.

External links

  • JustSportsStats.com bio
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NFL defensive back coaches
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Denver Dynamite ArenaBowl I champions