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-   -   Chiefs Gunther Cunningham passed away at age of 72 (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=322915)

ping2000 05-13-2019 10:40 AM

Coaching style limited to yelling the same stuff louder. Not very effective. Still, RIP.

Oxford 05-13-2019 10:42 AM

Oh :cuss:, SCRRREEEEEEEN

RIP, Coach, one in a million

Chief Northman 05-13-2019 11:09 AM

RIP Gunther.

He will swear at St. Peter upon entering the gates....

A players' coach who loved the game and built meaningful relationships. He was entertaining for the fans and wanted the best for the Chiefs.

Deberg_1990 05-13-2019 11:11 AM

RIP Gun

Thanks for some great defenses in the 90s

SuperBowl4 05-13-2019 11:12 AM

:arrow:R.I.P.:arrow:

digger 05-13-2019 11:14 AM

RIP


http://worldonline.media.clients.ell...082bf6ded075dc

Just Passin' By 05-13-2019 11:16 AM

Condolences to his family, and may he rest in peace.

Frazod 05-13-2019 11:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chief Northman (Post 14265960)
RIP Gunther.

He will swear at St. Peter upon entering the gates....

A players' coach who loved the game and built meaningful relationships. He was entertaining for the fans and wanted the best for the Chiefs.

Lord, we send you Gunther. Try not to piss him off. :D

Mahomes15MyHomes 05-13-2019 11:18 AM

RIP to one of the greats

Randallflagg 05-13-2019 11:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Frazod (Post 14265978)
Lord, we send you Gunther. Try not to piss him off. :D



ROFL. :thumb: :clap:

FloridaMan88 05-13-2019 12:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by siberian khatru (Post 14265894)
I think Gun's signature moment was in 1997 against the Bills when he blitzed Todd Collins four straight times from the 10 at the end of the game to secure the win.

I think it was the Rams game in 2000, when the Rams were the Greatest Show on Turf, entering the game undefeated and Gunther's team physically manhandled them, knocking Kurt Warner out of the game.

Donger 05-13-2019 12:14 PM

Damn. RIP Gunther.

I didn't know that he wasn't an American until 2010.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 12:15 PM

Gunther may have been a mediocre DC and a bad head coach but...he owned Mike Shanahan. Two big sweeps of the broom.

No other coach in Chiefs history can say that.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 12:27 PM

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Sad to hear about my coach Gunther Cunningham. He was my first D coordinator for 4 years with the chiefs. Helped me create a strong foundation that lasted 10 years after coaching me. My Prayers goes out to his wife and family. ����</p>&mdash; Derrick Johnson (@superdj56) <a href="https://twitter.com/superdj56/status/1127985399069016064?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 13, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 12:28 PM

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D6dtKTJXkAE2Mzi.jpg

Graystoke 05-13-2019 12:37 PM

RIP
One of the good guys

Randallflagg 05-13-2019 12:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by siberian khatru (Post 14265894)
I think Gun's signature moment was in 1997 against the Bills when he blitzed Todd Collins four straight times from the 10 at the end of the game to secure the win.


Indeed. I remember that game well......it was a sight to see... :thumb:

TEX 05-13-2019 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Frazod (Post 14265978)
Lord, we send you Gunther. Try not to piss him off. :D

:clap: :thumb:

ChiefsCountry 05-13-2019 12:44 PM

KCJohnny probably slit his wrist hearing this news.

stevieray 05-13-2019 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hammock Parties (Post 14265779)
I always felt like he embodied in the fan base in the way he coached.

Sometimes he was a good coach, sometimes he was a shit coach, but I don't think there was ever a more dedicated or sincere coach who genuinely cared about this franchise beyond the paycheck as much as he did.

dude had the Chiefs logo on his garage door.


not talking small either.

I'll always think of him and/with DT .

...hope they are enjoying a big laugh right about now

Bump 05-13-2019 12:50 PM

That's sad, he was a good defensive mind.

TrebMaxx 05-13-2019 12:52 PM

Always liked Gunther and his passion for the game. RIP Coach.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 12:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevieray (Post 14266181)
I'll always think of him and/with DT .

...hope they are enjoying a big laugh right about now

Damn.

Gonna have to photoshop.

Wallcrawler 05-13-2019 01:02 PM

This ****ing sucks. RIP Gunther.

"I'm loud, and I swear a lot, but I'm a good man."

MMXcalibur 05-13-2019 01:16 PM

Damn, RIP.....

CoMoChief 05-13-2019 01:18 PM

RIP Gun

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wallcrawler (Post 14266207)
This ****ing sucks. RIP Gunther.

"I'm loud, and I swear a lot, but I'm a good man."

Actions speak louder than words. :clap:

Steron 05-13-2019 01:36 PM

R.I.P Coach

T-post Tom 05-13-2019 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevieray (Post 14266181)
dude had the Chiefs logo on his garage door.


not talking small either.

I'll always think of him and/with DT .

...hope they are enjoying a big laugh right about now

2nd that emotion. :toast:

Titty Meat 05-13-2019 01:47 PM

I hope him & DT are haunting Jon Baker in his dreams

Cosmos 05-13-2019 02:00 PM

Respect to Coach and his family.

Great memories of him and that defense.

RIP.

HemiEd 05-13-2019 02:11 PM

Loved him, RIP Gunther, way too young. :sad:

KCwolf 05-13-2019 02:19 PM

RIP Coach

Kman34 05-13-2019 02:22 PM

Sad to hear this.. prayers to his family...

SuperBowl4 05-13-2019 02:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HemiEd (Post 14266315)
Loved him, RIP Gunther, way too young. :sad:

Hate to break it to you but 72 is NOT young

lawrenceRaider 05-13-2019 02:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuperBowl4 (Post 14266342)
Hate to break it to you but 72 is NOT young

It's all relative isn't it. 72 isn't young, but in today's world, it isn't exactly old either.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 02:46 PM

Gunther probably packed 100 years into his 72.

Full life.

ROYC75 05-13-2019 02:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuperBowl4 (Post 14266342)
Hate to break it to you but 72 is NOT young

Gosh damn, neither is 55, 60 or whatever to the young kids. We are all old ass farts to them.

I'm 61 and see people 50, 55, up to 65 dying all the time. You don't look at this shit until it becomes you, not until it becomes you in this time frame.

Damn, as a kid growing up, we all thought 40 was "OLD". Then as we age, we see that 40 isn't, old. But once you hit 50, you see HS classmates falling to illness and death, this for whatever reasons it may be.

I think it's pretty safe to say that we all want to live as long as we can.

72 is young when people live into the their 80, even up into their 90's.


BTW, RIP Gun!

Rain Man 05-13-2019 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuperBowl4 (Post 14266342)
Hate to break it to you but 72 is NOT young

I'm 56, so whether it's young or not, 72 is not old enough.

stevieray 05-13-2019 03:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 14266403)
I'm 56, so whether it's young or not, 72 is not old enough.

I just turned 57 and my dad died when he was 47.
I used to think that was old.

I'll be 68 when my lil one graduates. So yes, I concur, 72 is not nearly old enough.

I have an 89 yo aunt who swims every day and is fit as a fiddle.

MTG#10 05-13-2019 03:07 PM

Glad I still have my homemade Hard Knocks DVD's to remember him with!

big nasty kcnut 05-13-2019 03:22 PM

Gunther was amazing his defense was always good to see. In fact no dc has me excited to watch since gunther. Hope spags rekindle my excitement.

ROYC75 05-13-2019 03:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevieray (Post 14266408)
I just turned 57 and my dad died when he was 47.
I used to think that was old.

I'll be 68 when my lil one graduates. So yes, I concur, 72 is not nearly old enough.

I have an 89 yo aunt who swims every day and is fit as a fiddle.

Agreed, it's really how young a person is that is looking at it.

People around us die all the time, our time is coming but many of good men and women have have left this earth way too early.

I might add, RIP Mrs.ROYC75, it was just 1 year ago last month, age 60.

Way Too young!

Tribal Warfare 05-13-2019 04:11 PM

I almost missed this, **** I celebrated a family friend's 70th birthday this past weekend

excessive 05-13-2019 04:15 PM

https://www.kansascity.com/sports/nf...230352449.html

Remembering Gunther, a Chiefs icon who took coaching to another level in KC

BY JOE POSNANSKI SPECIAL TO THE STAR

MAY 13, 2019 02:54 PM


Remembering former Chiefs defensive coordinator, head coach Gunther Cunningham

Looking back on the Kansas City Chiefs career of former defensive coordinator and head coach Gunther Cunningham, who died on Saturday, May 11, 2019 at the age of 72.
BY JASON BOATRIGHT

Four Lessons From The Game of Football for Your Daughter

By Gunther Cunningham

1. If you are going to play, ATTACK. There is a fine line between greatness and failure.

2. Don’t worry about mistakes. All games are full of them.

3. Remember, the winner is the one who made the adjustments at halftime.

4. Enjoy the game and always remember: The scoreboard is for the fans.

***


Gunther Cunningham grew up one mile from the Dachau concentration camp in the years after the war. Sometimes he and his friends would search through the grass for stray bullets. They would then take a hammer to the bullets and try to make them blow up.

He grew up so poor that he couldn’t imagine what another life might even look like. He never knew his biological father. There was no indoor plumbing. Hunger was a constant companion. Once, many years later, I rode with him through a struggling neighborhood of boarded-up stores and ramshackle homes. a film of hopelessness seemed to cover everything. I saw tears in his eyes. He said it reminded him of his own childhood.

“Does it look like where you grew up?” I asked him.

“Nothing like it,” he said. “But all poverty looks the same.”

His mother married an Air Force Pilot named Garner Cunningham … that’s how Gunther came to America when he was 10. He couldn’t speak a word of English, and he got beat up a lot. Football saved him. That’s not an exaggeration. Football … saved … him.

“On the football team, we used to play this game,” he told me, “it was called ‘bull in the ring.’ There was this big guy in the middle, and we formed a circle around him. Well, I rushed up, and that big guy went down real hard.

“Then I went in the circle. And nobody could knock me down. All that pent-up anger inside me — I had SO much anger inside me — I finally knew what to do with it all.”

He wasn’t big enough to play football. He played just the same. The rage carried him through. He was a linebacker and kicker at Oregon. And when the rage wasn’t enough to push him to the NFL, he just refocused it on being a defensive coach. He coached with such fury that he would lose 10 pounds every game.

He coached wherever they were hiring — at Oregon, then Arkansas, then Stanford, then Cal. He went to the Canadian Football League and coached the defensive line and linebackers for Hamilton. He went to Baltimore to coach for the Colts and then went with them to Indianapolis. He coached the Chargers. He coached the Raiders.

More than anything, he became the defensive coordinator for the Kansas City Chiefs. In 1995 and 1997, he coached dominant defenses, Super Bowl-caliber defenses. But those teams didn’t go to the Super Bowl. That, alas, was part of Gunther Cunningham’s life story too. Nobody wanted to win more. And yet, he never did get to the Super Bowl.

I have never known anyone quite like him. Football coaches are, by their nature, obsessive, fanatical, pathological even. They sleep in their offices, they coach and watch film until they’re bleary and spent. We’ve all heard the stories. Gunther took it to a whole other level. In January 1998, the Chiefs played Denver in the playoffs — Gunther Cunningham designed 73 new blitzes for that game. Seventy-three.

He used to make a game of his obsession. At 3:15 some mornings, he would call over to the offices of then (and current) Raiders coach Jon Gruden, just to see if he was in. Gruden was famous for his all-consuming work ethic. But he was never there at 3:15 a.m., and as Gruden’s office line would ring and ring, Cunningham would laugh and laugh knowing full well that nobody on earth worked longer and harder than he did.

Gunther Cunningham was always the bull in the ring.

When Chiefs general manager Carl Peterson was hiring a head coach after the disastrous 1998 season, he did not intend to hire Cunningham. But so many people spoke up for Gunther — including a couple of the candidates who Peterson brought in — that there really wasn’t any other choice. He smiled broadly and shook Gunther’s hand and gave him the chance he’d been waiting for all his life. Cunningham was 53 years old.

Cunningham coached the Chiefs in 1999 and 2000. And to be blunt: The role didn’t fit. There were some wins and losses — the team went 16-16, just missing the playoffs in 1999 after a heartbreaking loss to Oakland in overtime — but all in all Cunningham’s obsession for coaching didn’t play well in the head coach’s office. He wanted to do everything, needed to do everything, and the job overwhelmed him. “You can’t build parking lots and worry about players’ wives and direct the security system,” he would say, “but that’s what I did.”

Also, not incidentally, the Chiefs didn’t have many playmakers. Gunther found out he was fired when checking out the latest news on the Internet.

He didn’t stop then. He couldn’t stop. He went to coach in Tennessee. He came back to Kansas City for a while. He went off to coach in Detroit. In all, Gunther Cunningham coached football for 12 different teams over 48 seasons, and to the end, he coached with the fury and desperation that had bubbled inside since he was a boy.

Monday, Gunther Cunningham died after a bout with cancer.

I won’t lie: The loss hits me hard. As a sportswriter, you meet a lot of people, you talk with a lot of people, you write about a lot of people. But you don’t get to know many people. I got to know Gunther Cunningham. On the field, he was maniacal, a screamer, a whirlwind, but away from it all, his gruff voice went soft and he spoke sweetly about so many things.

We seemed to talk about everything — family, faith, fatherhood, food ... those are just the Fs. He loved to tell the story about seeing René leaning up against a wall when they were both in high school — her right leg, he used to say, was lifted off the ground just so — and he knew she was the one. They were married 50 years ago this June. He talked about how much he came to love America; he became a naturalized citizen in 2010. He talked a lot about his kids, Adam and Natalie, and how sad he felt that he spend so much time away from them. But he couldn’t help who he was.

“You know what bothers me,” he said to me once when he was coaching the Chiefs.

“What’s that?”

“I don’t like when people bring me drinks on the field. It makes me feel bad. They shouldn’t bring me drinks like I’m some kind of king or something. I should be bringing them drinks. I’m just a coach. I’m nobody.”

“You’re not nobody, Gun.”

“I just don’t like when people treat me like I’m special,” he said.

He was special, though. When the Chiefs fired him from the only head coaching job he’d ever have, Gunther Cunningham broke a little. For a time, he could not even get out of bed. Friends called; he wouldn’t answer the phone. People would ask to see him; he refused to go outside. Teams offered him jobs, he turned them all down without even a second thought.

And then, he started to piece his life back together. His family got him there. René, the kids, they reminded him that he was somebody. He started taking calls from friends, and they made him feel better. His friend Jim Schwartz, defensive coordinator for the Titans then, called and asked Gunther to come help out. He took the job. He moved to Nashville. He even got a Porsche.

I went to see him a couple of weeks before our daughter was born. We talked about many things.

“Hey, listen,” he said in that gravel driveway of a voice and he leaned in real close, “you’re about to have your first kid, right?”

“Yes,” I said.

“Don’t make the mistakes I’ve made,” he said. “Don’t put anything in front of your family. You love that boy or girl with everything you’ve got.”

And then he took out a piece of paper, and he wrote down the four lessons that are at the top of this column. I love them all, but I especially love the last one.

Enjoy the game. And always remember: The scoreboard is for the fans.

Easy 6 05-13-2019 04:24 PM

That was a DAMN good read, rep

jimidollar 05-13-2019 04:33 PM

Out of all the coaches I've seen for KC, I wanted him to succeed the most. You could tell that losing bothered him. He will always be a Chief to me.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 05:01 PM

Only Posnanski would come out of retirement to write that for the Star.

So glorious.

FlaChief58 05-13-2019 05:36 PM

Rip Gunther

Coach 05-13-2019 05:56 PM

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">He didn&#39;t take lip.<br><br>R.I.P Gunther Cunningham<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ChiefsKingdom?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ChiefsKingdom</a> <a href="https://t.co/PlSsH7FeYW">pic.twitter.com/PlSsH7FeYW</a></p>&mdash; BBQ Sports (@RealBBQSports) <a href="https://twitter.com/RealBBQSports/status/1128002902260318208?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 13, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 06:14 PM

Gunther's words, nothing else.

Man this guy loved the Chiefs and loved football.

chagrin 05-13-2019 06:36 PM

Godspeed Gunther, you were a beast as our D-coordinator and I'll never forget when as HC when you went for it on 3rd and very long (against the steelers) and converted. Love ya man, rest in peace

MTG#10 05-13-2019 06:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chagrin (Post 14266756)
I'll never forget when as HC when you went for it on 3rd and very long (against the steelers) and converted. Love ya man, rest in peace

I'm hoping you meant 4th and very long.

Titty Meat 05-13-2019 06:53 PM

Wish Gun could have been our DC that final drive vs the Pat's the guy waant very good his second go around but atleast he wasnt affraid to blitz the ****ing QB

Otter 05-13-2019 07:30 PM

Well, that's sad as shit to read. He's had one hell of a run. RIP Gun!

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 07:34 PM

This makes the AFCCG a little sadder now.

You know Gun was watching and hoping he'd see us win it all.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 07:46 PM

"Been waitin' for ya, Gun. They don't call enough blitzes up here."

https://i.imgur.com/O6w4c0B.jpg

chuxtrux 05-13-2019 07:53 PM

Damn, three of his starters from the '98 defense are on the other side with him(DT, Wayne Simmons, and Chester McGlockton)

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 07:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chuxtrux (Post 14266854)
Damn, three of his starters from the '98 defense are on the other side with him(DT, Wayne Simmons, and Chester McGlockton)

Good thing Elway is going to hell, he wouldn't get a pass off in heaven.

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 07:58 PM

Raider scum chimes in

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">So sad to hear of the passing of one of the best coaches in the game, Gunther Cunningham. I went against him &amp; his defense in practice everyday for 4yrs with the KC &amp; it definitely made me a better player. He was intense &amp; took it personally if you had any success vs his unit!</p>&mdash; Rich Gannon (@RichGannon12) <a href="https://twitter.com/RichGannon12/status/1127955150717509633?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 13, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Megatron96 05-13-2019 08:11 PM

Good night, Coach.

Frazod 05-13-2019 08:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hammock Parties (Post 14266832)
This makes the AFCCG a little sadder now.

You know Gun was watching and hoping he'd see us win it all.

Yeah, and he probably wanted to straight up murder Sutton and everybody on the defense, too.

eDave 05-13-2019 08:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ROYC75 (Post 14266458)
Agreed, it's really how young a person is that is looking at it.

People around us die all the time, our time is coming but many of good men and women have have left this earth way too early.

I might add, RIP Mrs.ROYC75, it was just 1 year ago last month, age 60.

Way Too young!

I keep myself at a cool 35 years old mentally. Makes a difference, IMO.

eDave 05-13-2019 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hammock Parties (Post 14266868)
Raider scum chimes in

Gannon is not Raider scum.

rabblerouser 05-13-2019 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KCChiefsFan88 (Post 14266082)
I think it was the Rams game in 2000, when the Rams were the Greatest Show on Turf, entering the game undefeated and Gunther's team physically manhandled them, knocking Kurt Warner out of the game.

I remember.

James Hasty...

RIP Gunnie.

eDave 05-13-2019 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rabblerouser (Post 14266942)
I remember.

James Hasty...

RIP Gunnie.

Hames Jasty. Now there's a guy. Loved him. Lived in the same town home complex off 119th and Metcalf back then. Swam with his kids a few times, met and talked to his wife quite a bit. Said hi to him a few times at the community mailbox. Treated him like just some dude and he seemed to appreciate that.

Same year I met Neil Smith, when his leg was ****ed. He invited me and my lover (F) over to this table filled with Lemon Drops. He was very cordial, cool, and down to earth. And all the chicks wanted him.

That was a great, great era.

RealSNR 05-13-2019 09:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eDave (Post 14266900)
Gannon is not Raider scum.

Yeah he is. That's where he had the most success of his career.

If he got into the HOF, he'd go in as a Raider.

cdcox 05-13-2019 09:43 PM

On hearing the news Jon Baker rent his garment.

Chief Northman 05-13-2019 10:18 PM

This will sound insensitive, but I wonder if Marty Schottenheimer knows/remembers Gunther?

Hammock Parties 05-13-2019 11:34 PM

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">RIP Gunther Cunningham <br><br>Gunther once walked back to the bench on the first day of the Senior Bowl years ago and launched into a 3-minute, profanity-laced tirade about Gatorade flavors<br><br>There was not another like him</p>&mdash; Eric Edholm (@Eric_Edholm) <a href="https://twitter.com/Eric_Edholm/status/1127945180961804288?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 13, 2019</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Rausch 05-14-2019 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Frazod (Post 14266892)
Yeah, and he probably wanted to straight up murder Sutton and everybody on the defense, too.

Gun was the perfect example of the hero living long enough to become the villain. When the game moves past you it does so overnight.

Gun was about stopping the run and rushing the passer. When the game shifted to more of a passing game it became about coverage and rushing the passer. Stuffing the run was no longer important and it took a number of years for some coordinators to catch on.

A defense has to prevent being predictable. It doesn't matter what you run - if an offense knows where you'll be they can beat you. And while working harder, wanting it more, and sticking to it might be the right way to attack life it's not the cure-all in the NFL like it use to be.

I loved Gun's personality and that personality made me cheer for him despite out dated philosophies as a coordinator.

I'll miss him. And in a world of kinder-gentler everything I think the world will miss guys like him...

Sweet Daddy Hate 05-14-2019 05:49 AM

After a decade-plus of some of the most pathetic and pussified defense I've ever seen, I don't give a damn that Gunther Cunningham wasn't the smartest DC in the league.
what I do care about, is that he was the very embodiment of what an NFL defense was supposed to be about; toughness, aggression, and absolutely refusing to quit. Gun took pride in beating the shit out of our opponents and that is something we desperately need to get back. I can think of no greater tribute or honor than for the Kansas City Chiefs defense to come out swinging in 2019, and tearing the heads off of our opponents from start to finish. That would be acceptable.
RIP.

redfan 05-14-2019 08:26 AM

Leave it to JoPo to write a fantastic article about a guy not a lot of folks outside of the KC/Det area would know. I really wish Gun was still around the org to see what happens in the near future. I never thought he was given the proper tools to succeed in KC, but 'thems the breaks' in this league. Really loved his fire on the sidelines.

gblowfish 05-14-2019 08:57 AM

JoPoz took a lot of shit for writing his book about Paterno, but there's no denying he's a great writer.I saw Gun a lot in his days with KC. He coached some in the booth, and some on the sidelines. When he was DC he chewed smokeless and was spitting all the time. When he became HC they made him give up chew (he was on camera too much) and he started chewing sunflower seeds. He could cuss a blue streak to make a longshoreman blush. It was obvious he loved his players. DT's death really affected him deeply. He was one of my favorite all time Chiefs coaches, not head coach, but staff coach. He was genuine, passionate, a maniac. The kind of guy you want on your staff. I think the Chiefs should do a patch for him on the jerseys this season.

Rausch 05-14-2019 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sweet Daddy Hate (Post 14267167)
After a decade-plus of some of the most pathetic and pussified defense I've ever seen, I don't give a damn that Gunther Cunningham wasn't the smartest DC in the league.
what I do care about, is that he was the very embodiment of what an NFL defense was supposed to be about; toughness, aggression, and absolutely refusing to quit. Gun took pride in beating the shit out of our opponents and that is something we desperately need to get back. I can think of no greater tribute or honor than for the Kansas City Chiefs defense to come out swinging in 2019, and tearing the heads off of our opponents from start to finish. That would be acceptable.
RIP.

My favorite was after we lost the No-Punt game to the Colts in the playoffs they re-hired Gun. I believe his quote was "the sonofabitch will punt this time" or something very close. We physically beat their ass when we played them the following season...

Sweet Daddy Hate 05-14-2019 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rausch (Post 14267550)
My favorite was after we lost the No-Punt game to the Colts in the playoffs they re-hired Gun. I believe his quote was "the sonofabitch will punt this time" or something very close. We physically beat their ass when we played them the following season...

As we should. Coaches that carry competitive grudges and seek to destroy their opponents are exactly the kind of coaches that you need on a defense.

Jimkcchief88 05-14-2019 11:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkshock (Post 14265627)
A good man. Had a no BS approach he would not have allowed the disgraceful defense we witnessed last season.

Exactly RIP guns!!

Jimkcchief88 05-14-2019 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sweet Daddy Hate (Post 14267167)
After a decade-plus of some of the most pathetic and pussified defense I've ever seen, I don't give a damn that Gunther Cunningham wasn't the smartest DC in the league.
what I do care about, is that he was the very embodiment of what an NFL defense was supposed to be about; toughness, aggression, and absolutely refusing to quit. Gun took pride in beating the shit out of our opponents and that is something we desperately need to get back. I can think of no greater tribute or honor than for the Kansas City Chiefs defense to come out swinging in 2019, and tearing the heads off of our opponents from start to finish. That would be acceptable.
RIP.

This.

Jimkcchief88 05-14-2019 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rausch (Post 14267100)
Gun was the perfect example of the hero living long enough to become the villain. When the game moves past you it does so overnight.

Gun was about stopping the run and rushing the passer. When the game shifted to more of a passing game it became about coverage and rushing the passer. Stuffing the run was no longer important and it took a number of years for some coordinators to catch on.

A defense has to prevent being predictable. It doesn't matter what you run - if an offense knows where you'll be they can beat you. And while working harder, wanting it more, and sticking to it might be the right way to attack life it's not the cure-all in the NFL like it use to be.

I loved Gun's personality and that personality made me cheer for him despite out dated philosophies as a coordinator.

I'll miss him. And in a world of kinder-gentler everything I think the world will miss guys like him...

Funny part is the game hasn’t really changed all that much. If we would stopped the run and rushed the passer we would have beaten TB12 in the AFC Championship game.

FlorentinePogen 05-14-2019 11:16 AM

Tim Grunhard had a good interview about Gunther on 810 about an hour ago:
<iframe src="https://omny.fm/shows/the-program/h2-tim-grunhard-6/embed" width="100%" height="180px" frameborder="0"></iframe>


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