
Steve Mariucci
Explore the best Steve Mariucci movies ranked by Movie Rankings users. Browse biography, ranked filmography, and movie detail links for Steve Mariucci.
Stephen Ray Mariucci transformed from small-town Upper Peninsula quarterback to successful NFL head coach through offensive innovation and quarterback development, establishing an NFL record for consecutive wins by a rookie head coach while mentoring nine future Pro Football Hall of Fame players. Born November 4, 1955 in Iron Mountain, Michigan, Mariucci forged a lifelong friendship with future Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo, becoming teammates and roommates at both Iron Mountain High School and Northern Michigan University. As a three-time All-America Division II quarterback, Mariucci led the Wildcats to the NCAA Division II National Championship in 1975 as a sophomore, securing three postseason victories. He briefly signed with Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League in May 1978 but was released one month later. Mariucci's coaching career began at Northern Michigan (1978-79) before positions at Cal State Fullerton, Louisville, Orlando Renegades, USC, and California, where he served as offensive coordinator (1990-91). As Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach (1992-95) under Mike Holmgren, he helped develop Brett Favre's legendary career. After a 6-6 season as Cal head coach in 1996, Mariucci succeeded George Seifert with the San Francisco 49ers. His 1997 debut season produced a spectacular 13-3 record with an 11-game winning streak, establishing an NFL mark for consecutive wins by a rookie head coach. The 49ers earned home-field advantage but lost the NFC Championship Game to Green Bay Packers 23-10 in muddy conditions at Candlestick Park. The following season delivered redemption when San Francisco faced Green Bay in the January 3, 1999 Wild Card game. After Terrell Owens suffered a disastrous performance with one fumble and four dropped passes including a sure touchdown, wide receivers coach Larry Kirksey convinced Mariucci to reinsert Owens during the final drive. With three seconds remaining and the 49ers trailing, Steve Young stumbled but recovered to fire a 25-yard touchdown pass to Owens between five defenders for a 30-27 victory—forever known as "The Catch II." Owens collapsed into Mariucci's arms while crying on the sideline. In Mariucci's final season, the 49ers engineered a miraculous Wild Card comeback from a 38-14 deficit against New York Giants, winning 39-38 in the third-biggest playoff comeback in NFL history at that time. Fired January 15, 2003 after a power struggle with general manager Terry Donahue, Mariucci compiled a 60-43 record with four playoff appearances in San Francisco. His Detroit Lions tenure (2003-2005) produced a disappointing 15-28 record, partially attributed to poor personnel decisions by general manager Matt Millen. Fired after a Thanksgiving Day blowout loss in 2005, Mariucci never returned to coaching. Since 2005, Mariucci has worked as NFL Network analyst on NFL GameDay Morning and NFL GameDay Highlights. In 2011, he founded the Mariucci Family Foundation, a 501(c)(3) supporting underserved youth and families. Living in Monte Sereno, California with four children including country music artist Stephen Ray, Mariucci remains a devoted Packers fan with family season tickets in his name.
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