The Bergen Record

Morristown’s Quinn takes helm

Commanders introduce new coach who led Falcons to brink of Super Bowl title

- Jane Havsy NorthJerse­y.com USA TODAY NETWORK – NEW JERSEY

Dan Quinn has looked good in maroon for a long time. He wore the color growing up in the Morristown, N.J., youth system and for Morristown High School.

Now, Quinn will go back to his maroon roots as the head coach of the Washington Commanders.

“Spoiler alert: You’ll hear me say often, ‘Be where your feet are,” Quinn said at his introducto­ry press conference on Monday afternoon.

“Actually, I try not to say it. I do try to live it, and I’m pretty good at it, too, with one exception. Over the past few years, there’s five words that have probably tested my feet and my head: ‘If I get another shot.’ ... I’m a little older, maybe a little more chrome, and hopefully a little bit wiser. But I’m also incredibly grateful for all of that that has led to my feet being here.”

NFC East instilled love of game in young Quinn

A two-way tackle and occasional center in high school, Quinn noted to the Commanders media how he “grew up a Jersey kid, watching the NFC East for a long time.”

“That’s what football was to me, and that’s where my first love of it came,” he said during his news conference.

New Commanders general manager Adam Peters and his wife Jennifer greeted Quinn and his wife Stacey at the airport on Sunday night. His first entrance to the Commanders’ suburban Virginia training facility on Monday morning was met with a standing ovation of coaches, team and facility staff.

Cowboys secondary/defensive passing game coordinato­r Joe Whitt Jr. followed Quinn from Dallas to be Washington’s defensive coordinato­r. Former

Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury was named the Commanders’ offensive coordinato­r on Monday.

Most recently the Cowboys’ defensive coordinato­r, Quinn reportedly also interviewe­d with Seattle and Tennessee. He joked about checking to make sure his phone was working during the process, anxiously waiting for a positive call.

“I so wanted this moment,” said Quinn, 53, wearing a maroon tie and a Washington W lapel pin which could almost have been a Morristown “M” turned upside down.

Lessons learned

Known as a players’ coach, Quinn has decades of NFL experience with San Francisco, Miami, the New York Jets, Seattle and Atlanta since 2001.

With Quinn as defensive coordinato­r, the Seahawks’ “Legion of Boom” defense finished first in both yards and points allowed in 2013 and 2014, winning Super Bowl 48 at the Meadowland­s after the first campaign. Quinn got his first NFL head coaching job with the Falcons in 2015.

He led Atlanta to Super Bowl 51 in February 2017, though his Falcons couldn’t hold on to a 28-3 third-quarter lead and eventually lost to the New England Patriots, 34-28, in overtime. The Falcons had a 43-42 record during Quinn’s tenure, making the postseason just once since the Super Bowl appearance.

Quinn turned around the Dallas defense, which ranked fifth in points allowed and total yards allowed and tied for 12th in turnovers in 2023.

“Q’s like a big uncle to me,” Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons said in an NFL Network interview. “They’re getting a real outstandin­g guy, man. I hope those players buy in and play extremely hard for him, understand ain’t no one going to love ’em and care more about ’em more than Dan Quinn. Please appreciate his presence, appreciate his greatness and take care of my guy.”

Deep roots

The youngest of Sue and Jim Quinn’s six kids, Dan Quinn grew up playing youth football here — a level higher than his age group because he was so much bigger than the other boys. He played for David Flynn Sr., grandfathe­r of current Morristown High School football coach Casey Flynn, and was also part of Morristown National Little League, ice hockey, and later, track and field.

“All through that time, coming up through youth football and high school football, there were so many coaches that impacted me. Names that you wouldn’t be familiar with today but that left a long impression on my life,” Quinn said at a Super Bowl media event while he was Falcons head coach.

“It was probably at that point, growing up there, that my first love of football began,” Quinn continued. “It’s absolutely been a huge impact on my life, growing up there and all the people that when you’re coming up that have an influence on you, encourage you, support you, challenge you, for sure, it’s made a big difference.”

An elementary education major at Salisbury (Md.) University, Quinn wanted to become a teacher and a coach back home, but he couldn’t get a teaching job at Morristown. Instead, Quinn took a job working with the defensive line at William & Mary — an inauspicio­us beginning to a career which led him to three Super Bowls in four seasons.

Quinn remains connected to Morristown High’s Colonials, occasional­ly watching livestream­s of games last fall.

“He saw the grit our team had. He was proud of how our team fought throughout the season,” said Casey Flynn, who coached some of Quinn’s nephews in youth baseball. “I think there’s some additional motivation. In any time of downtime for the NFL, we try and coordinate an opportunit­y to meet our players. He’s just a down-toearth guy. He loves the game, and he loves where he came from.”

 ?? JESS RAPFOGEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? From left, Managing partner Josh Harris of the Commanders introduces head coach Dan Quinn as general manager Adam Peters looks on during Monday’s press conference.
JESS RAPFOGEL/GETTY IMAGES From left, Managing partner Josh Harris of the Commanders introduces head coach Dan Quinn as general manager Adam Peters looks on during Monday’s press conference.

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