Paul Boudreau Explained

Paul Boudreau
Birth Date:December 30, 1949
High School:Bordentown Military
College:Boston College
Pastcoaching:

Paul T. Boudreau (born December 30, 1949) is an American football coach who last served as offensive line coach for the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League (NFL). He has served as the offensive line coach for eight different NFL teams, one Canadian Football League (CFL) team, and four college teams. No offensive line coach in the NFL has more experience as an assistant at the professional level than Boudreau, who entered his 29th season in 2015.[1] Boudreau's offensive lines over the years have blocked for five running backs who crossed the 10,000-yard career rushing mark, including Barry Sanders, Curtis Martin, Thurman Thomas, Fred Taylor and Steven Jackson.[2] [3]

Biography

Early years

Raised in Arlington, Massachusetts,[4] Boudreau played offensive line at Arlington High School. Boudreau attended Bordentown Military Institute in Bordentown, New Jersey[5] starting in 1967, where he played offensive guard and defensive tackle. He received All-Prep honors from the Newark Star Ledger for the 1968 season, and graduated in 1969. Boudreau was widely recruited, but returned to Massachusetts and played for Boston College under coach Joe Yukica as an offensive lineman from 1971 until his graduation in 1973.[6]

Coaching career

Boudreau began his coaching career as an assistant at Oxford High School in Oxford, Massachusetts. He then joined his alma mater where he specialized as the offensive line coach from 1974–1975. He continued as the offensive line coach at other colleges including the University of Maine (1976–78), Dartmouth College (1979–81), and the United States Naval Academy (1982). He then joined the Edmonton Eskimos staff in the Canadian Football League and was the offensive line coordinator from 1983–1986.[7]

Boudreau's first position in the NFL was with the New Orleans Saints. In his seven seasons with the Saints, his offensive line placed in the top three in fewest sacks allowed on four occasions. In 1992, the Saintsallowed a league-low 15 sacks.[8] He then joined the Detroit Lions, under head coach Wayne Fontes, where his offensive line helped Barry Sanders rush for over 1,500 yards each season, and almost 5,000 yards total over three seasons.[9] [10] In the 1997 and 1998 seasons, Boudreau coached the offensive line for the New England Patriots under head coach Pete Carroll.[11]

Jimmy Johnson brought Boudreau to the Miami Dolphins for the 1999 season.[12] Johnson eventually resigned in January 2000 and was replaced by assistant head coach and defensive coordinator Dave Wannstedt, but Boudreau remained on the staff. In July, at the age of 50, Boudreau took a short medical leave of absence[13] for kidney surgery.[14] When he returned for the 2000 season, his offensive line allowed only 28 sacks, the fourth best in the NFL.

In January 2001, Boudreau joined the Carolina Panthers, whose previous offensive line coach Tony Wise coincidentally accepted Boudreau's job in Miami.[15] The Panthers had previously allowed a season high 69 sacks. For the 2001 season, Boudreau's offensive line set a club record of 31 sacks, which ranked 11th in the NFL,[8] although the Panthers still finished with a 1–15 record. In 2002, the offensive line allowed 44 sacks, and the team finished 7–9.[16]

When Panthers defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio became the head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Boudreau followed and served as the offensive line coach from 2003–2005; he also reunited with offensive coordinator and former Saints colleague Carl Smith.[17] [18] In 2003, his offensive line set a franchise record of 28 sacks allowed, ninth in the NFL, and running back Fred Taylor set a team rushing record of 1,572 yards.[8]

Scott Linehan brought Boudreau in as offensive line coach for the St. Louis Rams for the 2006 and 2007 seasons. In 2006, his offensive line allowed running back Steven Jackson to rush a career best 1,528 yards.[19]

In 2008, Boudreau became the offensive line coach for the Atlanta Falcons under head coach Mike Smith.[20] The Falcons drafted highly touted and former fellow Boston College Eagle, Matt Ryan.[21] Boudreau's line assisted running back Michael Turner in attaining a career high 1,699 rushing yards.[22] Although the Falcons had winning records of 11–5, 9–7, 13–3, and 10–6 respectively, they failed to win a playoff game during this period, and Boudreau was released.[23]

For the 2012 season, Paul Boudreau returned to St. Louis as the offensive line coach, but under a new head coach, Jeff Fisher.[24] The Rams finished the 2012 season with a record of 7–8–1, with the tie coming against the eventual NFC champions and division rival, San Francisco 49ers.[25] The 2013 season saw the Rams finish the season with a 7–9 record.[26] In 2014, the Rams used their number 2 overall pick on offensive lineman, Greg Robinson, of Auburn.[27] The Rams finished the season with a 6–10 record [28] despite losing starting quarterback Sam Bradford[29] to injury and splitting time between backups Shaun Hill and Austin Davis.[30] In 2015, the Rams allowed the fewest sacks in the league (18) and finished seventh in the NFL in rushing yards per game.[31]

Personal life

Paul Boudreau met his wife Joan in Boston College.[32] They have two children. Paul F. Boudreau (aka Paul Boudreau, Jr.) attended Boston College, and is a former assistant special teams coach for the St. Louis Rams and current assistant coach of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.[33] Jill Boudreau is the mother of four children.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: COACHES. Los Angeles Rams. January 26, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201033030/http://www.therams.com/team/coaches/paul-boudreausr/40d859e3-8ca1-4bcd-be3f-cce2a05fdb37. December 1, 2017. dead.
  2. Web site: Coaches. Los Angeles Rams. January 26, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201033030/http://www.therams.com/team/coaches/paul-boudreausr/40d859e3-8ca1-4bcd-be3f-cce2a05fdb37. December 1, 2017. dead.
  3. Web site: 2011 Atlanta Coaches - Offensive Line - Paul Boudreau . https://web.archive.org/web/20120227145740/http://media.atlantafalcons.com/assets/Boudreau_Paul.pdf . dead. February 27, 2012 . media.atlantafalcons.com . September 6, 2012 .
  4. Web site: Falcons add Boudreau as offensive line coach . AccessNorthGa . January 31, 2008 . September 7, 2012.
  5. Web site: Bob Donnan/US Presswire. Giants vs. Falcons: Atlanta's offensive linemen, 'dirtbags' or not, face a tough task in playoff game . NJ.com . New Jersey Online, LLC . January 8, 2012. September 7, 2012.
  6. Web site: St. Louis Rams – Coaches – Assistant Coaches . September 6, 2012 . NFL.com.
  7. New Orleans Saints Media Guide – 1992
  8. Web site: 2009 Atlanta Falcons Media Guide . Scribd.com . September 22, 2011 . September 6, 2012.
  9. Web site: Barry Sanders NFL Football Statistics . Pro-Football-Reference.com . September 7, 2012.
  10. News: Sanders would consider Dolphins . January 1, 2000 . Associated Press . The Miami Herald, The Seattle Times . September 6, 2012 . Dolphin offensive line coach Paul Boudreau was also the offensive line coach of the Detroit Lions from 1994–96 when Sanders gained nearly 5,000 yards..
  11. News: Anybody's guess: Former Patriots' assistants don't know what makes Glenn tick . McGinn . Bob . March 13, 2002 . Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  12. Web site: Dolphins 1999 Roster . Phins.com . September 6, 2012.
  13. Web site: Line Coach Boudreau Taking Medical Leave . Marvez . Alex . July 18, 2000 . Sun Sentinel . September 6, 2012.
  14. Web site: Miami Assistant Back After Kidney Surgery . Marvez . Alex . Orlando Sentinel . August 8, 2000 .
  15. News: Dolphins' Boudreau joins Panthers' staff . Spartanburg Herald Journal. January 19, 2001 . September 6, 2012.
  16. Web site: 2002 Carolina Panthers. Pro-football-reference.com . September 26, 2012.
  17. Web site: Stellino . Vito . Line forms behind coach . Jacksonville.com . The Florida Times-Union . August 19, 2005 . September 7, 2012 .
  18. Web site: Jaguars, Panthers switch offensive line coaches . Pasquarelli . Len . January 22, 2005 . ESPN.com.
  19. Web site: Steven Jackson NFL Football Statistics . Pro-Football-Reference.com . September 7, 2012 .
  20. Web site: Falcons hire Boudreau to coach offensive line – NFL – ESPN . Pasquarelli . Len . . January 31, 2008 . September 7, 2012.
  21. Web site: Matt Ryan, QB for the Atlanta Falcons at . NFL.com . September 7, 2012 .
  22. Web site: Michael Turner NFL Football Statistics . Pro-Football-Reference.com . February 13, 1982 . September 7, 2012.
  23. Web site: Falcons' O-line coach Boudreau is out . January 17, 2012 . Yasinskas . Pat . ESPN.com. September 7, 2012.
  24. Web site: Thomas . Jim . Rams move closer to hiring their GM . Stltoday . February 3, 2012 . September 7, 2012.
  25. Web site: NFL Standings: Division. .
  26. Web site: NFL Standings: Division. .
  27. Web site: St. Louis Rams: Complete 2014 NFL Draft Wrap-Up and Analysis. Steven Gerwel. Bleacher Report.
  28. Web site: NFL Standings: Division. .
  29. Web site: Sam Bradford of St. Louis Rams out for season with torn ACL. August 24, 2014 . ESPN.
  30. Web site: St. Louis Rams Stats at NFL.com. .
  31. Web site: Wagoner. Nick. Rams finish 28th in PFF's offensive line rankings. ESPN. January 21, 2016 .
  32. Web site: It's a great life . jacksonville.com . Hubbuch . Bart . The Florida Times-Union . November 21, 2004 . September 7, 2012.
  33. Web site: Paul F. Boudreau . St. Louis Rams . September 7, 2012.