Former Bills coach, Hall of Famer Marv Levy, turns 100 this weekend

Former Bills coach, Hall of Famer Marv Levy, turns 100 this weekend
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Happy Birthday, Coach!

Marv Levy is more than just the winningest head coach in Buffalo Bills history. He is a prime example of a life well lived. Levy, who coached the Bills from midway through the 1986 season to the end of the 1997 season, is set to turn 100 years old this weekend, as he will celebrate his birthday on August 3.

While Levy is best remembered publicly for his tenure with the Bills, a stretch that saw him win a franchise-record 112 games when combining regular-season and playoff games that includes four consecutive trips to the Super Bowl, Levy is more than a football coach. He was stationed at Apalachicola Airfield in Franklin County, FL, during World War II. His unit never deployed to active combat, but Levy served as a meteorologist during his time in the service. Levy advocated tirelessly for recognition of military veterans through sports for the remainder of his career, pushing to recognize those who served before Super Bowl LIV to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Allied victory.

Levy holds a Master’s Degree in English History from Harvard. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in English from Coe College. Prior to enrolling at Coe, he was recruited to play football for the Wyoming Cowboys. Given coach Levy’s connection to all of these football programs that aren’t known as power houses, I suppose we should have seen Ryan Fitzpatrick, Fred Jackson, and Josh Allen coming.

Levy’s football coaching career began over 30 years before his stint with Buffalo. He began as a high school coach, leading the St. Louis Country Day School football and basketball teams in 1951 and 1952. He coached the basketball team to a state championship. He left that job to return to his alma mater, Coe, as an assistant for the 1953 and 1954 seasons before being hired at New Mexico as an assistant. He became New Mexico’s head coach in 1958, leading the team to back-to-back 7-3 seasons in 1958 and 1959.

Levy left to take the head coaching job at Cal in 1960, and he gave a familiar name — Bill Walsh, the future Hall of Fame coach of the San Francisco 49ers — his first college job, hiring him as a wide receivers coach. Levy spent four seasons at Cal, going just 8-29-3 over the course of those seasons. He then took the head coaching position at William and Mary — current Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott’s future alma mater — and held that job for five seasons, going 23-25-2 overall and winning a conference title in 1966.

Levy’s first pro coaching gig came in 1969, when he became the kicking coach for the Philadelphia Eagles. He parlayed that into a job as the special teams coach with the Los Angeles Rams the following season, working under famed head coach George Allen (and with future Bills offensive coordinator Ted Marchibroda, who was the offensive backfield coach on that same team). Levy went with Allen to Washington in 1971, and...