Dick Rehbein

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Dick Rehbein
Date of birth November 22, 1955 (1955-11-22)
Place of birth Flag of the United States Green Bay, Wisconsin
Date of death August 6, 2001 (aged 45)
College Ripon College
Team(s) as a coach/administrator

1979-83

1984


1984
1985-1988
1989-1991


1992
1993-1996
1997
1998-1999

2000-2001
Green Bay Packers
Special Teams Coach
Los Angeles Express (USFL)
Special Teams Coach
Assistant Offensive Line Coach
Minnesota Vikings
Special Assistant
Wide Receivers Coach
Assistant Offensive Coordinator
Passing Game Coach
New York Giants
Tight Ends Coach
Wide Receivers Coach
Tight Ends Coach
Offensive Line Coach
New England Patriots
Quarterbacks Coach

Dick Rehbein (November 22, 1955August 6, 2001) was a former American football coach in the National Football League.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Rehbein attended Ripon College, where he was a Division II All-American center. He was part of the Green Bay Packers' 1977 training camp but did not make their final roster[1].

[edit] Coaching career

Starting in 1979, Rehbein served as the Packers' special teams coach before moving to the USFL's Los Angeles Express and then the NFL's Minnesota Vikings in 1984. In Minnesota, Rehbein served in multiple offensive coaching capacities and in 1992, joined the New York Giants' coaching staff as a tight ends coach. After also coaching the Giants' wide receivers and offensive line, Rehbein left the Giants to be the quarterbacks coach of the New England Patriots in 2000[1].

[edit] Death

Given a few days off by Patriots head coach Bill Belichick in the middle of his second training camp with the team, Rehbein used the time to exercise at a gym with his 12-year old daughter Sarabeth on August 5, 2001. While running on a treadmill, Rehbein blacked out but regained consciousness enough to enter an ambulance under his own power. He was transferred to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston Massachusetts, where tests later that day concluded his loss of consciousness was due to a heart condition he had been diagnosed with in 1988, cardiomyopathy. That night, Rehbein contacted then-Patriots offensive coordinator Charlie Weis and told him he would be back with the Patriots in time for their 7 PM EDT coaches meeting the next day[2].

On the following morning, August 6, Rehbein underwent a stress test on his heart. During the recovery period directly following the test, Rehbein lost consciousness again but did not regain it as he had the day before. He was declared dead shortly thereafter, with cardiomyopathy declared his cause of death[2].

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ a b Rehbein joins Patriots, Haluchak joins Rams New York Giants press release. Assessed 26 September 2007.
  2. ^ a b Glory tinged with sorrow The Boston Globe. Accessed 26 September 2007.