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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 10:02 a.m., Friday, February 6, 2009

NFL: Colts fill out staff under new coach Caldwell

By MICHAEL MAROT
AP Sports Writer

INDIANAPOLIS — Colts coach Jim Caldwell finally has his new coaching staff in place.

Caldwell ended weeks of speculation Friday by hiring defensive coordinator Larry Coyer and special teams coordinator Ray Rychleski. Caldwell also promoted receivers coach Clyde Christensen to assistant head coach.

Coyer spent the past two seasons as an assistant with Tampa Bay after leading the Denver Broncos' defense. Rychleski has been a college coach throughout his career, spending last season at South Carolina.

The hiring of Coyer and Rychleski, who worked with Caldwell in the college ranks, had been expected since Caldwell informed his coaching staff of the moves. The promotion of Christensen was not a surprise, either, since all three have long ties to Caldwell.

Coyer and Caldwell spent four seasons together at Iowa, while Rychleski and Caldwell worked on the same staff at Penn State and Wake Forest. And Christensen served on former coach Tony Dungy's staff the past 13 seasons, the last eight alongside Caldwell.

"(Clyde's) coaching manner and personal style exemplify the attention to detail and demand for performance we require at all times," Caldwell said in a statement released by the team. "Larry and Ray have been successful in every stage of their careers, and their talents and input will show in our on-field performance."

Colts spokesman Craig Kelley said Caldwell and team president Bill Polian would have no additional comments Friday.

Dungy resigned Jan. 12 after seven seasons leading the Colts, and the changes mark the start of a new era for the franchise.

One day after being introduced as Dungy's successor, Caldwell decided not to renew the contract of special teams coach Russ Purnell. A week later, defensive coordinator Ron Meeks resigned. He's accepted the same job with Carolina.

Those decisions gave Caldwell a chance to solidify what have traditionally been the Colts' two weakest links — defense and return coverage.

Under Purnell, the Colts typically ranked in the bottom half of the league in opponents' starting field position, while Meeks changed the image of a defense once considered among the NFL's worst into one of the league's most opportunistic.

But Meeks' tenure was marred by inconsistency.

Caldwell hopes the new coaches provide more stability.

Coyer's 44-year coaching tenure includes four seasons at Iowa, three of those when Caldwell played for the Hawkeyes and one in which Caldwell served as a graduate assistant.

Coyer spent seven seasons — four as defensive coordinator — with the Denver Broncos before the working past two seasons as Tampa Bay's assistant head coach and overseeing the defensive line.

Rychleski's extensive resume spans nearly three decades, most in the college ranks. He worked with Caldwell in 1991 at Penn State, then followed Caldwell to Wake Forest in 1993 when Caldwell took over as head coach. Rychleski remained on Caldwell's staff through 2000.

Christensen has been the Colts' receivers coach since Dungy arrived in 2002 and has overseen the development of three-time Pro Bowl receiver Reggie Wayne and former first-round pick Anthony Gonzalez.

While working with Dungy in Tampa Bay, Christensen coached quarterbacks, tight ends and served as offensive coordinator.

The Colts have not made any other changes to their offensive staff.

"Many people know the contributions Clyde has made to the organization during the past seven years," Caldwell said. "He has helped the Colts function as one of the NFL's top offenses."