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No Excuses: One Man's Incredible Rise Through the NFL to Head Coach of Notre Dame
 
 
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No Excuses: One Man's Incredible Rise Through the NFL to Head Coach of Notre Dame [Paperback]

Charlie Weis (Author), Vic Carucci (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 28, 2007

Weis was taught football by some of the best minds in the game: Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick. Parcells would give him a life-defining break in 1990 by hiring him as an assistant on the New York Giants staff. For a Jersey guy who loved sports, this was a dream come true, especially when Weis won his first championship in his debut year in the NFL. He'd always wanted to be a sports announcer—the next Marv Albert—but he'd caught the coaching bug and was now in a position to learn from the best. And he did, following Parcells to the New England Patriots and then to the New York Jets. Under enormous pressure and exacting standards, Weis flourished and later became offensive coordinator.

When Parcells stepped down as coach of the Jets, Weis joined his colleague and friend Bill Belichick, who was the newly named Patriots head coach. Together they would thrive, building a storied franchise, a rare modern-day dynasty that won three Super Bowls in four years. Through it all, Weis designed offensive schemes that would befuddle even the best defenses in the NFL, and he coached a number of players to greatness, including Pro Bowlers Ben Coates, Curtis Martin, and, of course, Tom Brady.

The chance of a lifetime arrived in December of 2004: Weis was offered the opportunity to lead one of the most prestigious football schools in the country, Notre Dame—home of coaching legends Knute Rockne, Frank Leahy, Ara Parseghian, Dan Devine, and Lou Holtz. And so began a new chapter in Weis's career. Weis took over a program in dire need of direction, and now he is in the process of building his own legacy with his unique vision.

Off the field, Weis faced his other challenges. Seeking to improve his health and lose weight, he decided to get gastric bypass surgery. What he thought would be a routine procedure turned into a nightmare as he nearly bled to death, lapsed into a coma, and was read the last rites. It was a horrifying experience, yet he battled back in inspiring fashion and still demands nothing less of himself despite the long-lasting aftereffects.

He has had his joys, too. Weis considers his wife, Maura, his best friend. They have two beautiful children: Charlie, his "best buddy," and Hannah, who he and his wife consider their "guiding angel." Hannah is developmentally delayed and has been the inspiration leading to the establishment of Hannah and Friends, a nonprofit foundation seeking to improve the quality of life for people with special needs.

No Excuses is not only illuminating and insightful, it is an extraordinary look inside one of football's greatest minds who has helped shape today's game.



Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Charlie Weis lives in Indiana with his wife and children.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: It Books (August 28, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061206741
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061206740
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,922,300 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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28 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No Excuses: Read this book, October 16, 2006
By 
Brian C. McDermott (Hanover Twp. PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Let's first be clear: I am not a Notre Dame, New England Patriot, or for that matter a Charlie Weis fan. However, after reading this book, you can cross off the Charlie Weis part, I am now quite an admirer of his. This book, in short order, chronicles Coach Weis'time from his own high school football and college days, through his coaching career from the high school to his current job as head coach of the Fighting Irish. Citing his high school coach as his first ideological hero, through South Carolina's Joe Morrison and the two Bills (Parcells and Belicheck), Coach Weis offers insight into each of their philosophies and motivation techniques and how he incorporated each of their styles into his own coaching. Lastly, he chronicles his first year at Notre Dame and how he approached changing the team's attitude to a winning formula as last season's record indicates.

With all that, the most interesting section of this book is the time he reflects on his special relationship with his family: his wife Maura, and children Charlie Jr. and daughter Hannah. His daughter Hannah is a "special needs" child, and his loving, caring attitude towards her and his whole family, is both inspiring and heart-warming. Add to that, his account of his obsession with his own weight, the risky surgery he chose to have performed, which almost cost him his life, and this story is one of the finest you may read.

Finally, if you need one other reason to purchase this book, the proceeds go to the Charlie Weis Foundation for Special Needs Children. Enough said, buy it, read it!!!
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3.0 out of 5 stars Review of No Excuses by Charlie Weis, March 20, 2009
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This review is from: No Excuses: One Man's Incredible Rise Through the NFL to Head Coach of Notre Dame (Paperback)
No Excuses details the rise of Charlie Weis from a high school football coach to a stint as an offensive coordinator and head coaching candidate in the NFL to the head coach of the storied Notre Dame football program.

Weis certainly doesn't have the resume of most prominent head football coaches in the NFL. As a Notre Dame undergrad, instead of diagramming plays and obsessing about football like so many other head coaches in his position, Weis longed for a career as a sports broadcaster. Having also gotten a degree in English, Weis found himself teaching and coaching sports in high school where he started to learn the nuances of the game. Through contacts Weis eventually wound up as an assistant coach at the University of South Carolina. While at South Carolina he did some grunt work breaking down plays for the New York Giants. Noticing his work ethic and acumen, Weis was eventually offered a job by head coach Bill Parcells. The job was low on the pecking order but it gave Weis his start in the NFL. From there, of course, he climbed through the ranks, eventually following Bill Belichick, Parcells' long time defensive coordinator, to the New England Patriots where he served as offensive coordinator.

Three Super Bowl championships later and a brush with death after gastric bypass surgery to control his weight, Weis was offered a job as head football coach at his alma mater, Notre Dame, a job he just couldn't turn down.

This book really is not about football. It's mostly about Weis's rise through the ranks and his personal work and moral ethics that are the groundwork for what he teaches players and how he tries to conduct himself in the rough and tumble world of professional and big time college football. Much of his coaching philosophy comes from his sports crazed childhood and current family life, in which he has a special needs child. He seems to have a very solid foundation for a job that requires a great deal of leadership and motivational skills.

The biggest drawback of the book is a lack of material about the biggest games Weis has been involved in as a coach and his football philosophy (the X's and O's). There's little here about the day to day activities of a coach, nor is there a chronicling of the Patriots' Super Bowl winning seasons which Weis was an integral part of. Readers looking for a book about football or the New England Patriots (or the New York Giants) will be disappointed. I know I was, a little.

There is, however, a very good chronicling of Weis' near death experience after gastric bypass surgery and how Tom Brady, the New England Patriots' quarterback, helped his wife cope with the situation. It's a rather touching story about Brady and gives insight into why he is so well liked around the league.

Overall, this is a very readable, engaging book and interesting for football fans - despite that it talks little about football specifically.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Ok read, January 9, 2007
I don't know what I thought this book would be about but I was hoping for a little more Notre Dame stories. I did learn a lot about Coach Weis and have become a bigger fan of the Irish and him after reading the book. Just not enough Irish stories to really keep me into the book.
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