Swampscott

Dick Jauron, Swampscott grad who went on to long NFL career, dies at 74

The Swampscott High School graduate still holds the Big Blue record for career yards

Dick Jauron in Swampscott, Massachusetts, on Nov. 18, 2015.
Mark Garfinkel

Longtime NFL player and coach Dick Jauron, a Massachusetts product who led the Chicago Bears to the playoffs and was voted AP coach of the year in 2001, died Saturday. He was 74.

The Bears confirmed his death, which came one day before Philadelphia — where Jauron briefly served as an assistant to current Chiefs coach Andy Reid — played Kansas City in the Super Bowl in New Orleans.

WATCH ANYTIME FOR FREE

icon

Stream NBC10 Boston news for free, 24/7, wherever you are.

The Swampscott High School graduate — he still holds the Big Blue record for career yards, with 3,283 — was a two-sport star at Yale in the early 1970s, and Jauron was drafted by both the Detroit Lions in the NFL draft and the St. Louis Cardinals in the Major League Baseball amateur draft. He ultimately made football his lifelong pursuit, beginning with five seasons as a defensive back in Detroit and three more with Cincinnati before his retirement in 1980.

The well-liked Jauron moved into coaching and five years later was hired by the Bills as a defensive backs coach. He went on to coach defensive backs in Green Bay and became friends with Reid, who was an assistant offensive line and tight ends coach.

In 1995, Jauron was hired by Tom Coughlin as the defensive coordinator for the expansion Jacksonville Jaguars, and he parlayed success there into the head coaching job in Chicago. Jauron had just one winning record in five seasons with the Bears, winning the NFC North in 2001 before losing to the Eagles — then coached by Reid — in the divisional round of the playoffs.

Jauron was fired in 2003 and became the defensive coordinator in Detroit, where he served as the interim coach for five games in 2005. He spent the next four seasons as the head coach in Buffalo but never had a winning record.

He finished with a 60-82 record and one playoff berth over parts of 10 seasons as a head coach.

After his time in the NFL, Jauron moved back to Swampscott, The Boston Globe reported.

"He was among the finest students I ever had," his 11th grade history teacher, Charles F. Kimball, told the newspaper. "We knew he was an athlete, but what really set him apart was that he was a scholar too. He was a 'scholar-athlete' when the phrase meant something."

The Associated Press/NBC
Contact Us