Carl smith triathlon

Carl Smith (American football)

American football coach (born 1948)

American football player

Carl Hamilton Smith (born April 26, 1948) is an American football coach who was the associate head coach for the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (NFL). He had previously served as quarterbacks coach of the Cleveland Browns and offensive coordinator for the NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars and New Orleans Saints.

Smith attended Wasco Union High School in Wasco, California.

College career

Smith started his college playing career at Bakersfield College, a junior college in Bakersfield, California, where he played quarterback from 1966 to 1967. He transferred to Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, where he played two seasons at defensive back from 1969 to 1970. Smith earned his bachelor's (1971) and master's (1972) degrees in physical education from Cal Poly, as well as a teaching credential.

Coaching career

From 1997 to 1999, Smith was an assistant coach for the New England Patriots, at the time led by head coach Pete Carroll.

Smith was fired from the Jaguars

You are now leaving Country Music Hall of Fame

WSM took time in developing Smith as a young artist. A year passed before his first hit, but then they came with regularity—intense love songs, for the most part, suitably framed by bandsman Johnny Sibert’s crying steel guitar. “Let’s Live A Little” in 1951 was Smith’s first; “Mr. Moon” and “If Teardrops Were Pennies” also made the charts that year.

Friends on the Grand Ole Opry were doing what they could to help Smith’s career. Hank Williams let Smith record his “Me and My Broken Heart” and “There’s Nothing as Sweet as My Baby”; Ernest Tubb, with whom Smith did some of his earliest touring, brought him Jack Henley’s “(When You Feel Like You’re in Love) Don’t Just Stand There.” This song became Smith’s second #1 hit, preceded by “Let Old Mother Nature Have Her Way,” his biggest-selling single.

For the next few years, every one of his records made the Top Twenty—sometimes both sides of a single. His rendition of the Louvin Brothers original “Are You Teasing Me” went to #1 in 1952, and its flip side, Boudleaux & Felice Bryant’s “

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