Fassel played briefly with The Hawaiians of the WFL in 1974, and became an assistant coach during the 1974 WFL season. He left the WFL after the '74 season, but briefly returned when the Hawaiians needed a quarterback late in the 1975 season. He played in the final game of the WFL for the Hawaiians, throwing the last pass in the league's history as the WFL folded three days later on October 22, 1975.
Fassel originally coached with the Giants as an assistant in 1991 and 1992. Three weeks after the Giants won Super Bowl XXV, he was hired by Bill Parcells as their quarterback coach.[9] In 1992, he was promoted to offensive coordinator.[10]
The departure of Dan Reeves as coach after the 1996 season led to close consideration between bringing back Parcells or promoting Fassel. Young hired Fassel, narrowly avoiding a call to bring back Parcells.[11] Fassel was hired as the head coach of the New York Giants, starting with the 1997 season, and remained in that position for seven years. He finished his Giants - and NFL - head coaching career with a won-loss record of 58–53–1.[12][13]
During Fassel's tenure as head coach of the Giants, his teams were known for numerous strong runs in December and for winning big games, such as handing the Denver Broncos their first loss of the 1998 season after a 13–0 start.
In his first year, 1997, Fassel turned around a team which had finished a cumulative 11–21 the prior two seasons, finishing 10–5–1 and being named NFL coach of the year. While with the team, he resurrected the career of quarterback Kerry Collins. In his fourth year as head coach, the 2000 season, he received acclaim for his "playoff guarantee" during which he led the Giants to an improbable NFC Championship. With the team having lost consecutive games and falling to 7–4, Fassel made a public guarantee that they would make the playoffs. The team then won their next five games to finish off the regular season, and cruised through the playoffs, defeating the heavily favored Minnesota Vikings by a blowout score of 41–0 in the NFC Championship game, before losing to the Ray Lewis-led Baltimore Ravens in Super Bowl XXXV.[12][13]
Fassel's legacy as head coach for the Giants is mixed, as his Giants teams were also known for their disappointments against inferior teams in the regular season, as well as in the playoffs. The most notable loss was a 39–38 loss to the San Francisco 49ers in the 2002 postseason, in which they lost a 38–14 third quarter lead. Fassel's last season with the team was the 2003 season, a year in which injuries decimated the Giants. With two games left in the season and knowing that the team was nearly certain to let him go at its conclusion, Fassel announced his resignation as head coach, effective at season's end. The team finished that year with a 4–12 record.[14]
In 2000, the Giants started off well but fell to 7–4. Under heavy criticism from the New York media and Giants' upper management, Fassel ad hoc'ed a famous speech that predicted a playoff berth that proved to be the impetus for a run at Super Bowl XXXV:
"This is a poker game, and I'm shoving my chips to the middle of the table, I'm raising the ante, and anybody who wants to get in, get in. Anybody who wants out can get out. This team is going to the playoffs, OK? This team is going to the playoffs."[16]
Involvement in 9-11 recovery
Fassel and the Giants, on the way home from a regular season Monday Night Football loss on the road the previous night to the Denver Broncos, landed in New York mere hours before the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. According to former kicker Morten Andersen, their plane landed beside doomed Flight 93, which was about to take off and would ultimately crash in Pennsylvania. With the NFL games that week suspended, Fassel was called by Mayor Rudy Giuliani to help morale at the Trade Center site. Fassel agreed and insisted that the team use its goodwill to help the recovery effort and provide assistance to the FDNY, NYPD and the City of New York. Under pressure from recovery crews to win the next game in Kansas City, the Giants went on to win an emotional game in front of the Chiefs' respectful fans on the road at Arrowhead Stadium.[17][18]
Baltimore Ravens
Fassel joined the Ravens as an offensive consultant in 2004 to help with development of Kyle Boller. He became the Ravens offensive coordinator in 2005. Critics of Fassel pointed to his lack of success as offensive coordinator after two seasons with the Ravens, in 2005 and part of 2006. During that time, the Ravens ranked near the bottom of the league in offense.
On October 17, 2006, Fassel was fired by the Ravens.[19]
Fassel returned to the Locos in 2010 and helped lead the team to repeat as champions, again defeating the Tuskers in the 2010 UFL Championship Game. The Locos tried to three-peat in 2011, but this time fell to the Tuskers (who had since been relocated and renamed the Virginia Destroyers) in the 2011 UFL Championship Game.[21] Fassel was the only current UFL head coach who was active in the league since its inauguration and was the Locos' head coach when the league suspended play in 2012.
Broadcasting career
Fassel entered broadcasting following his firing as offensive coordinator for the Ravens, joining Westwood One radio as a color commentator for its Sunday NFL action. He stayed with the network for two seasons, calling Sunday afternoon games with Harry Kalas in 2007 and Sunday Night Football with Dave Sims. Fassel was also part of Westwood One's playoff coverage those two years, calling various games, and worked the 2007 and 2008 NFC Championship Games with Bill Rosinski (2007) and Marv Albert (2008).
Personal life
Fassel met his wife Kitty when they were 17-year-old college freshmen in 1967. Fassel was at Fullerton Community College, while Kitty was a student at Cal-State Fullerton. Two years later, in April 1969, Kitty gave birth to a son, the product of an unplanned pregnancy. The young parents were both 19 years old and unmarried. They considered marrying due to the pregnancy, but did not want to make a decision under pressure. They had never considered abortion during the pregnancy. Instead, when the child was three days old, they gave him up for adoption, and subsequently lost touch with him.[22][23]
Two years later, in 1971, Jim and Kitty married.[22][13]
In 2003, after years of searching, the Fassels found the child whom they had placed for adoption. They had a family reunion, which included the Fassels and their other four adult children, together with their now 34-year-old adopted son, John Mathieson, who brought along his own wife and their four young daughters.[24][22]
Three years later, in 2006, Jim and Kitty Fassel divorced after years of counseling.[25] They later reconciled and remarried.[13] Besides the son they had as teens, the Fassels had four more children after marrying, three sons and a daughter. One son is football coach John Fassel.[26]
Fassel was good friends with fellow coach Mike Holmgren, dating to their days as USC quarterbacks.[27]
^Anderson, Dave (March 2, 2001). "Sports of The Times: Fassel's Finished Basement". The New York Times. Retrieved November 2, 2007. Maybe that explains how the Fassels celebrated when he returned to their Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J., home on Tuesday with a four-year, $10.75 million contract — a guarantee that they will be living at the same address for at least eight years, their longest consecutive residence.