NEWS
You have to talk to people different ways. You have to teach them in different ways, and luckily I’ve got the ultimate teacher in coach Reid who I can learn from. So I just try to learn as much as I can, and try to be the best dad I can all at the same time.”
The weather is bitter cold and it’s hours before many of those he works with will be at the office, but it doesn’t matter to him. There is work to do and even more importantly, there is somewhere he will soon have to be.
It’s 1992 and Andy Reid is the new tight ends coach for the Green Bay Packers. After 10 years at the collegiate level, he was given an opportunity by an old friend to reunite in the NFL.
The drive to the office is short, normally less than 10 minutes. He, his wife, Tammy, and their five children live close enough to make this work.
The 3:30 a.m. arrival wasn’t just about putting in the time at his new job or competing to get there first with his fellow assistant coaches—something that was par for the course with that group, but because of something far more important to Andrew, as only Tammy calls him.
Family.
The only thing in his life that would ever trump his love for football would be his love for family.
“He would go in at these crazy hours and then he would come home by a quarter to 7 and do breakfast with the kids,” Tammy explained. “He then would drive one group to school and I would take the others.”
It was a routine.
The early mornings at the office were a way for Reid to get some work done, but then get home to spend some quality time with his family before their day got started, even though his had already been going for four hours.