Jags Tucker clears static, clings to hard work
Former Cleveland coordinator dismisses criticism of his hiring.
By Michael C. Wright
Sunday, Feb. 8, 2009
MARK DUNCAN/Associated Press
Mel Tucker watches practice at the Cleveland Browns' football training camp on July 24, 2008, in Berea, Ohio.
Mark Duncan
PROFILE
Mel Tucker
Age: 37; Born: Cleveland.
NFL coaching career: Browns defensive coordinator in 2008; Browns defensive backs coach from 2005-07.
College coaching career: Ohio State defensive backs/co-defensive coordinator from 2001-04; LSU defensive backs coach in 2000; Miami (Ohio) defensive backs coach in 1999; Michigan State graduate assistant from 1997-98.
Family: Wife Jo-Ellyn; sons Joseph, 6, and Christian, 4.
SEASON IN REVIEW
How the Cleveland Browns fared under defensive coordinator Mel Tucker in 2008:
Yards per game 356.5 26th in NFL
Points per game 21.9 Tie-16th
Rushing defense 151 yards per game 28th
Passing defense 204.6 yards per game 14th
Sacks 17 Tie-30th
Third-down stops 46 percent 30th
Mel Tucker hadn't yet touched down to interview last month before a barrage of insults crash-landed onto the message boards of every Jaguars fan site on the Web.
"If Mel Tucker gets the [defensive coordinator] job it's because no one else worth a darn would take it," said one fan on the team's official Web site.
Another asked, "Are you bleeping kidding me?"
Less than two weeks on the job as the Jaguars' defensive coordinator, Tucker listened to all the knocks Friday - his inexperience, Cleveland's struggles during his tenure as Browns' defensive coordinator, his 3-4 background despite Jacksonville's 4-3 system, and the notion he's merely a puppet of head coach Jack Del Rio - and calmly dismissed them, choosing to focus on the task at hand.
That seemingly effortless composure in the face of criticism, in addition to a refreshingly contemplative approach might make Tucker the ideal point man to assist Del Rio in an attempt to revitalize the Jaguars' ailing defense. At least that's the sense you get from the 37-year-old Tucker, considered one of the league's up-and-coming young coaches.
"You earn the opportunities you get in this business," Tucker said at lunchtime, taking off his glasses to rub from his eyes the last remnants of film study from the night before that lasted past 1 a.m. "Nobody is trying to do anybody any favors. So I feel confident in what I can do as a coach. I just know when people choose to work with me, it tells me they have confidence in me to get the job done. So [none of the criticism] factors into my thinking."
For Tucker, Monday will mark his 14th day in Jacksonville since leaving Cleveland. Living out of a suitcase in a temporary condominium, Tucker finds his way to the club's facility every morning by using GPS navigation. Tucker reports most days before 8 a.m. and routinely leaves after dark. His wife Jo-Ellyn, an attorney, and two sons Joseph and Christian, born two years apart on Feb. 18, won't arrive in Jacksonville until March 1.