Tim Lewis Explained

Tim Lewis
Current Title:Defensive coordinator
Current Team:Boston College
Current Conference:ACC
Birth Date:December 18, 1961
Birth Place:Quakertown, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Alma Mater:University of Pittsburgh
Player Years1:1979–1982
Player Team1:Pittsburgh
Player Years2:1983–1986
Player Team2:Green Bay Packers
Player Positions:Cornerback
Coach Years1:1987–1988
Coach Team1:Texas A&M (GA)
Coach Years2:1989–1992
Coach Team2:SMU (DB)
Coach Years3:1993–1994
Coach Team3:Pittsburgh (DB)
Coach Years4:1995–1999
Coach Team4:Pittsburgh Steelers (DB)
Coach Years5:2000–2003
Coach Team5:Pittsburgh Steelers (DC)
Coach Years6:2004–2006
Coach Team6:New York Giants (DC)
Coach Years7:2007–2008
Coach Team7:Carolina Panthers (DB)
Coach Years8:2009
Coach Team8:Seattle Seahawks (DB)
Coach Years9:2010–2014
Coach Team9:Atlanta Falcons (DB)
Coach Years10:2015
Coach Team10:San Francisco 49ers (DB)
Coach Years11:2018
Coach Team11:Pinecrest (DC)
Coach Years12:2019
Coach Team12:Birmingham Iron
Coach Years13:2020
Coach Team13:St. Louis BattleHawks (DB)
Coach Years14:2022
Coach Team14:Houston Gamblers (DC)
Coach Years15:2023
Coach Team15:Arlington Renegades (co-DC)
Coach Years16:2024–present
Coach Team16:Boston College (DC)
Overall Record:5–3
Championships:
As a coach
As a player

Tim Lewis (born December 18, 1961) is an American football coach and former player who is the defensive coordinator for the Boston College Eagles. He played college football as a cornerback for the Pittsburgh Panthers and was selected by the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League (NFL) in the first round of the 1983 NFL draft. Following a neck injury that cut his playing career short after four seasons, Lewis began serving as a coach in the collegiate and professional levels and obtained his first head coaching position with the Birmingham Iron of the Alliance of American Football (AAF) in 2019. He also served as the defensive backs coach for the St. Louis BattleHawks and co-defensive coordinator for the Arlington Renegades of the XFL.

Lewis is the younger brother of former Memphis Express General Manager Will Lewis. Louis Riddick, former NFL safety and current ESPN broadcaster, is his cousin. Robb Riddick, another of his cousins, was a running back for the Buffalo Bills for eight seasons.

College career

Lewis joined the Pittsburgh Panthers in 1979, playing his freshman season on a team that included eight other future NFL players: Dan Marino, Mark May, Dwight Collins, Rickey Jackson, Russ Grimm, Jimbo Covert, Bill Maas and Hugh Green, three of whom would eventually be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In his three seasons at Pitt, Collins intercepted four passes and returned 26 kickoffs for 679 yards.[1]

Playing career

Lewis was a first round pick (eleventh player chosen overall) out of the University of Pittsburgh by the Green Bay Packers in the 1983 NFL draft. A standout cornerback, he was one of the more successful players on what was a relatively weak Packers team. He led or shared the team in interceptions in 1983 and 1985, finishing with a career total of 16. Lewis' 99-yard interception return for a touchdown against the Los Angeles Rams on November 18, 1984, remains the Packer team record.[2] His career was cut short by a severe neck injury suffered in a Monday Night game against the Chicago Bears in the third week of the 1986 season.[3]

Coaching career

Beginning his coaching career in 1987 at Texas A&M, Lewis served under his former college coach at Pittsburgh, Jackie Sherrill.[4] He would later spend time at defensive coordinator for the Pittsburgh Steelers[5] and the New York Giants.[6] The 2013 season marked his third year as the secondary coach for the Atlanta Falcons. In 2015, Lewis became the defensive backs coach of the San Francisco 49ers, but was let go once the season ended as part of a complete coaching overhaul.[7] He was named the head coach of the Birmingham Iron of the Alliance of American Football on June 6, 2018.[8] With two games remaining in the 10-week inaugural AAF season, Lewis and the Iron clinched a playoff berth, though due to the AAF's overall underfunding and ownership disputes, the playoffs were never played.[9]

Lewis then signed on as defensive backs coach for the St. Louis BattleHawks of the XFL, a position he held until the league folded in 2020.[10]

Following 2021 out of football, Lewis was named defensive coordinator for the Houston Gamblers of the relaunched USFL.[11] Although Houston struggled in 2022 with a 3-7 record, all three levels of Lewis's defense had a player named to the All-USFL Team; defensive back William Likely, linebacker Donald Payne, and Defensive Player of the Year pass rusher Chris Odom.

Lewis was officially hired by the Arlington Renegades on September 13, 2022[12] Lewis served as co-defensive coordinator with Jay Hayes, both who among numerous St. Louis Battlehawks assistant coaches during the 2020 XFL season. Numerous Renegades defensive players had been coached by Lewis previously in the AAF, XFL, or USFL such as Aaron Adeoye, Joe Powell, Will Hill, and Donald Payne, as well as passer Luis Perez, Lewis' quarterback for the Birmingham Iron, who was acquired via trade mid-season.[13] The Renegades only won 4 games out of 10 in the regular season, although the defense was consistently praised compared to the Renegades offense.[14] [15] [16] [17] Despite a losing regular season record, the Renegades made it into the playoffs and recorded two upset victories to win the 2023 XFL championship. On February 14, 2024, Lewis was hired by Boston College as the defensive coordinator.[18]

Head coaching record

Alliance of American Football

Team Year Regular season Postseason
Won Lost Ties Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
20195 3 0
BIR Total 5 3 0
Total 5 3 0

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tim Lewis College Stats.
  2. Web site: Reed rumbles 108 yards for NFL record Longest interception returns by team. Pro Football Hall of Fame. November 24, 2008. June 2, 2014.
  3. Web site: Pierson . Don . Collision Ends Lewis' Career . tribunedigital-chicagotribune . September 25, 1986 . September 5, 2018 . en.
  4. Web site: Huebner . Bradley A. . Challenges Continue For Tim Lewis . tribunedigital-mcall . September 5, 2018 . en.
  5. Web site: Tim Lewis - Pro Football History.com . pro-football-history.com . September 5, 2018 . en.
  6. Web site: Rush . Doug . Ex-Giants coordinator Tim Lewis hired as AAF's Birmingham head coach . Giants Wire . September 5, 2018 . June 6, 2018.
  7. Web site: 49ers quietly clean house in coaching staff. January 19, 2016. Pro Football Talk. January 19, 2016.
  8. News: Long-time NFL defensive coach to be inaugural head coach of Birmingham's AAF team. Lewis. Tim. June 4, 2018. AL.com. June 4, 2018. Advanced Local Media.
  9. Web site: Iron clinches playoff berth with win. March 31, 2019.
  10. News: Reid. Alvin. Hakim catches XFL coaching gig here as football returns to STL on Saturday. The St. Louis American. July 10, 2019. October 14, 2019.
  11. Web site: Tim Lewis Tapped as Defensive Coordinator for Houston Gamblers . March 12, 2022 .
  12. Web site: XFL Finalizes Coaching and Football Operations Staffs for All Eight Teams . 2022-12-30 . www.xfl.com . en.
  13. Web site: Arlington Renegades land QB Luis Perez in trade with Vegas Vipers . March 29, 2023 .
  14. News: Big defensive plays lead Arlington Renegades to season-opening XFL win . . October 31, 2023 . Dow . Lawrence . February 19, 2023 . subscription .
  15. Web site: XFL's Arlington Renegades unable to ignite offense in first loss to Roughnecks . February 27, 2023 .
  16. Web site: Arlington Renegades ride defensive dominance to XFL win over San Antonio Brahmas . March 20, 2023 .
  17. Web site: XFL's Arlington Renegades dominate defensively in win over Orlando Guardians . April 9, 2023 .
  18. Web site: Tim Lewis to be Hired as Next Boston College Defensive Coordinator. bcinterruption.com . February 14, 2024.