Randy Fichtner
Personal information | |
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Born: | (1963-11-07) November 7, 1963 (age 60) Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
Career information | |
High school: | Meadville (PA) Area Senior |
College: | Purdue |
Undrafted: | 1986 |
Career history | |
As a coach: | |
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Career highlights and awards | |
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Coaching stats at PFR | |
Randy Fichtner (born November 7, 1963) is an American football coach. He spent 14 seasons as part of the Pittsburgh Steelers' coaching staff from 2007 to 2020. He most recently served as their offensive coordinator, a position he held for three seasons.[1][2]
Early years
Fichtner, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, was a standout football player at Meadville Area Senior High School in Meadville, Pennsylvania.[3] He chose to attend Purdue University, playing defensive back for the Boilermakers. His father is Ross Fichtner, who played quarterback for Purdue, and then played defensive back for the Cleveland Browns.
Coaching career
College
Fichtner began his coaching career as a graduate assistant, serving with Michigan, USC, UNLV, and Memphis from 1986–1987, 1988, 1989, and 1990–1993 respectively. He earned the position of wide receivers coach and recruiting director at Purdue in 1994, serving for two years before moving to Arkansas State to become the offensive coordinator from 1997–2001. Under Fichtner's tutelage, quarterback Cleo Lemon flourished, setting numerous school records for passing and total offense. Fichtner returned to Memphis in 2001 to serve as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, instituting a new, highly effective spread offense that set school records for total offense. The new system allowed the teams to amass prolific offensive statistics, totalling over 5,000 yards in both 2003 and 2004 to rank in the top ten for both yardage and scoring, as well as supporting the development of quarterback Danny Wimprine and running back DeAngelo Williams.[1]
Pittsburgh Steelers
In 2007, Fichtner was hired by the Pittsburgh Steelers as their wide receivers coach under head coach Mike Tomlin, replacing the promoted Bruce Arians.[4] He was instrumental in the development of the Steelers young wide receiver corps, mentoring Santonio Holmes to multiple 1000-yard seasons and a Super Bowl MVP award as well as supporting the growth of emerging wideouts Mike Wallace, Emmanuel Sanders, and Antonio Brown. In 2010, Fichtner was promoted to quarterbacks coach, replacing Ken Anderson after Anderson's retirement. On January 18, 2018, Fichtner was promoted to offensive coordinator while retaining his role as quarterbacks coach following the non-renewal of Todd Haley's contract with the team, announced by Mike Tomlin the previous day.[1] Following the Steelers' hiring of Matt Canada as quarterbacks coach on January 15, 2020, Fichtner dropped his title of QBs coach while remaining in place as offensive coordinator. Fitchner's contract was not renewed after the end of the 2020 season following a playoff loss to the Cleveland Browns.[5]
References
- ^ a b c "Randy Fichtner Bio". Steelers.com. Pittsburgh Steelers. Retrieved June 8, 2011.
- ^ "Pittsburgh Steelers Assistant Coaches". National Football League. Retrieved May 21, 2011.
- ^ Turrisi, T.J. (February 18, 2009). "Fichtner speaks of work ethics at sports banquet". The Meadville Tribune. Retrieved June 28, 2011.
- ^ Dulac, Gerry (January 30, 2007). "Tomlin's coaching staff is complete". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved June 28, 2011.
- ^ Patra, Kevin (January 14, 2021). "Steelers part ways with OC Randy Fichtner, two more assistants". NFL.com. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
- v
- t
- e
- 2 Dennis Dixon
- 3 Jeff Reed
- 4 Byron Leftwich
- 7 Ben Roethlisberger
- 9 Daniel Sepulveda
- 10 Santonio Holmes (MVP)
- 13 Marvin Allen
- 14 Limas Sweed
- 15 Martin Nance
- 16 Charlie Batch
- 17 Mitch Berger
- 20 Bryant McFadden
- 21 Mewelde Moore
- 22 William Gay
- 23 Tyrone Carter
- 24 Ike Taylor
- 25 Ryan Clark
- 26 Deshea Townsend
- 27 Anthony Smith
- 28 Justin Vincent
- 29 Ryan Mundy
- 30 Roy Lewis
- 31 Fernando Bryant
- 33 Gary Russell
- 34 Rashard Mendenhall
- 37 Anthony Madison
- 38 Carey Davis
- 39 Willie Parker
- 43 Troy Polamalu
- 49 Sean McHugh
- 50 Larry Foote
- 51 James Farrior
- 53 Bruce Davis
- 54 Andre Frazier
- 55 Patrick Bailey
- 55 Mike Humpal
- 56 LaMarr Woodley
- 57 Keyaron Fox
- 60 Greg Warren
- 61 Jared Retkofsky
- 62 Justin Hartwig
- 64 Doug Legursky
- 65 Jeremy Parquet
- 66 Tony Hills
- 67 Kyle Clement
- 68 Chris Kemoeatu
- 69 Jason Capizzi
- 71 Scott Paxson
- 72 Darnell Stapleton
- 73 Kendall Simmons
- 74 Willie Colon
- 76 Chris Hoke
- 77 Marvel Smith
- 78 Max Starks
- 79 Trai Essex
- 81 Dallas Baker
- 83 Heath Miller
- 84 Dezmond Sherrod
- 85 Nate Washington
- 86 Hines Ward
- 88 Jonathan Dekker
- 89 Matt Spaeth
- 90 Travis Kirschke
- 91 Aaron Smith
- 92 James Harrison
- 93 Nick Eason
- 94 Lawrence Timmons
- 95 Donovan Woods
- 96 Orpheus Roye
- 97 Arnold Harrison
- 98 Casey Hampton
- 99 Brett Keisel
- Head coach: Mike Tomlin
- Coaches: Ken Anderson
- Bruce Arians
- Keith Butler
- James Daniel
- Randy Fichtner
- Garrett Giemont
- Harold Goodwin
- Ray Horton
- Amos Jones
- Dick LeBeau
- Bob Ligashesky
- John Mitchell
- Lou Spanos
- Kirby Wilson
- Larry Zierlein