Sean Payton: The Winning Playbook of an NFL Coach | E128 - podcast episode cover

Sean Payton: The Winning Playbook of an NFL Coach | E128

Sep 10, 202429 min
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Episode description

Sean Payton is a highly respected NFL coach, celebrated for his strategic brilliance and leadership on the football field. Known for his transformative tenure as the head coach of the New Orleans Saints, Payton led the team to its first and only Super Bowl victory in 2010, solidifying his legacy as one of the most successful coaches in NFL history. With a career marked by innovative offensive strategies and an ability to develop winning teams, Payton has been a driving force behind the Saints’ rise to prominence in the league. Beyond his coaching accolades, Payton is admired for his resilience and dedication, traits that have guided him through both professional triumphs and challenges. Now heading into his second season as the head coach of the Denver Broncos, Payton’s commitment to excellence and his impact on the game continue to inspire players, fans, and aspiring coaches alike.

0:00 - Introduction: Sean on career decisions and growth through interviews.
0:32 - Sean’s Background: Overview of Sean’s coaching journey and NFL success.
1:12 - Growing Up: Sean’s childhood across California, Philadelphia, and Illinois.
3:14 - Childhood Magic: Stories of his father’s magic and basement doves.
3:54 - Early Sports Dreams: Sean’s love for sports and growing up as a jock.
6:19 - Influential Coaches: The impact of high school coach JR Bishop.
11:00 - College at Eastern Illinois: Sean’s time as a quarterback and key coaching influences.
14:42 - Costly Job Interview: Sean’s first coaching interview challenges.
18:00 - Coaching at San Diego State: Sean’s decision to join as a graduate assistant.
19:09 - The Tough Interview Question: A challenging question during a coaching interview.
20:39 - Aspiring for Excellence: Sean’s ambition to be a head coach in the NFL.
23:52 - Interview with Al Davis: A unique interview with Al Davis over cheeseburgers.
26:57 - Advice from Parcells and Jones: How advice from Bill Parcells and Jerry Jones shaped his decisions.


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Transcript

Sean Payton

When we interview, you can't help but experience like great growth. There's preparation required. I came back from that interview, and the plan was I'm gonna accept this job that following Thursday, and then I ended up turning the job down and and staying in Dallas. But that experience with Mr. Davis, those five days of interviewing with him, I know you come away from that feeling like I can interview with anyone, because the questions and his knowledge was pretty, pretty impressive.

Randall Kaplan

Welcome to a search of excellence, where we meet entrepreneurs, CEOs, entertainers, athletes, motivational speakers and trailblazers of excellence, with incredible stories from all walks of life. My name is Randall Kaplan. I'm a serial entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and the host of this Search of Excellence, which I started to motivate and inspire us to achieve excellence in all areas of our lives. My guest today is my friend Sean Payton. Sean is one of the most successful coaches in NFL

history. He's heading into a second season as the head coach of the Denver Broncos. And before that, he was the head coach of the New Orleans Saints for 16 seasons, where he led the team to the first and only Super Bowl victory in 2010

Sean Payton

The same year, he was named NFL Coach of the Year. Sean is also the author of the book home team coaching the saints in New Orleans. Back to life, John. Thanks for being here. Welcome to In Search of Excellence. Good to be on. I appreciate you asking me on. I'm honored. I started at the beginning. You grew up. You were born in Naperville. You born in San Mateo? Yeah. My parents are from the East Coast. They're both from Scranton, and my dad was in the insurance

industry. They made a move to the West Coast. My older brother and sister were already born, so I'm one of four, and then myself and younger sister were born in San Mateo, California, then back east, when I was seven for grade school, we lived outside of Philadelphia, again, a job move for him, and then where I call home is

Naperville or Chicago. That move took place, I think in 1978 79 I was going into eighth grade, so went to junior high, and then high school, and then college, like, three and a half hours down the road at Eastern Illinois. So well, we'll talk about those in Yeah. But I would say, Yeah. I would say, when I when someone asked me where I'm from, to me, it feels like Illinois, because, you know, I spent all of my high school years there, college years

there. Tell us about the doves in your basement and the birds you out. All right, so look, my father, like I mentioned, was a businessman who worked with CNA insurance company, worked with a handful of companies, but nonetheless, that's what he did for a living. But he he loved magic and and my older brother the same way. And so there would be a few different things in our house that were like, What are these

things? You know, we had rabbits in the backyard for a few years because he would use those in his show. And then, of course, we got the two doves. Now you gotta keep their I guess their wings trimmed. I was never my older brother, and he that was kind of their thing, the magic, yeah. So if you heard like these odd noises coming from a basement in the mid Midwest, you had these basements. So for a period of time, we had some doves in the basement, and fortunately, I wasn't in charge

caring for them. But they're kind of messy, but they come back. Oh, they're in, they're in kind of a larger cage, and it's like a pet. But he would use them when he did a magic show. He'd do a ton of kids shows and stuff in the neighborhood. That was kind of one of his things that he enjoyed.

Randall Kaplan

We're gonna talk about your football interest in a minute in high school, and your progression there. But what were you like as a kid, and what were your dreams when you were 10? So

Sean Payton

I, I can't speak for my older brother. My older brother was in the high school band, and my older sister also, I had taken a music lesson. I think it lasted two days. I enjoyed sports. So for me, I was classic, you know, Lily, baseball, basketball, football, youth sports, and actually youth hockey, because it was during the time when the Philadelphia Flyers won back to back Stanley Cups. And when that happens to a

community at that time. It wasn't necessarily a rich hockey community, but it became one very quickly because of their success. And so we played a ton of street hockey, then a ton of ice hockey and and so the those are the I mean, I was. I was the kid that played in the fall. It was football in the wintertime, it was basketball. In the spring, it was baseball, the conflict with hockey and football, a lot of times they were the same. Season I played when we moved to Illinois, all

four of those sports. And then by the time I went to high school, I had to stop playing ice hockey, so I was a little bit of the kind of jock, you know, just enjoyed sports. And I think that was different than certainly, my older brother and I had a younger sister, and, you know, in our household, because of the gap nine years, when we lived in Chicago, my older brother, you know, stayed in Philly, you know, he was through with his education. My older sister moved, but she was out of

the house. So my younger sister and I, it felt like, really, you know, there were two kids in our household because of the gap, age wise and and so, yeah, I think sports really were big part of my life, especially, you know, as a kid, you know, even when you weren't playing formally or organized sports, you know, we would be playing pickup games. You know, outside in the neighborhood, we

Randall Kaplan

all have teachers and our lines that are very influential. You had one. I have Jared Jared Bishop, tell us about your English paper. What happened? Yeah, what was the lesson you learned from that?

Sean Payton

So it's funny. You bring that up. You know, we're sitting here in Broncos headquarters. Yesterday was high school coaches day here. So we had a ton of high school coaches in the Denver area, Colorado, and I always bring his name up. I always bring Jr Bishop's name up. So I want to say my freshman year in high school, there was a coaching change. I went to Naperville Central, which was the the older school in town, if you will. It was central, then north. Since then, there's some

newer schools. But our school had hired Jr Bishop from Indianapolis, Indiana, and he coached at one of the Lawrence northern Lawrence central schools, and he came kind of pretty accomplished. Now, Naperville was a big it was a six a school, and when that hire took place, you know, this is 1979 he kind of was ahead of the curve, a little relative to throwing the football. And so what he brought to our high school program was this excitement of a new offense, of

a passing game. He had a camp in the off season, and we would go to that camp. And our school was six A and so generally speaking, we had a freshman team. We had a sophomore team, and it wasn't until you were a junior or senior did you play on the varsity team. So I was the starting quarterback on our sophomore team, and I had Jr he taught English, and so I had him for English, so I wasn't I was actually playing for our sophomore team, he oversaw the whole program, and was the head

varsity coach. And, long story short, I got a D on a paper, and he grabbed me after class, and he said, You know, I just this is unacceptable. And, and I listen, he he had, there was a way about him, you know, you wanted to please him. And he said, I'm going to, I'm not going to start yet tomorrow night. I think it was a Thursday because we were playing Friday night. And I was like, I was

kind of surprised. And he said, you know, you're going to, you're going to sit for the first half, and, holy cow, When? When? So when something like that happens, it's not the fact that you miss or don't start a game, it's that when everyone asks you, Hey, are you alright? Were you sick? And you're like, No, I got a D on an English

paper. It was that. So it was a, it was just a small lesson for a sophomore in high school, in a sophomore football game, but it resonated with me that, like I got it, and I think the year after we won the Super Bowl, you know, I think the Greatest Gift a parent can get from somebody is a counselor, a music teacher, somebody a sports coach, somebody that loves their child for a period of time as much as you do as a parent. You know, in other words, and you, you might

have. Of your child go through all their formal schooling, and there might be one, maybe two, if you're lucky, of these, like, difference makers, you know, and he was one of those guys, so after we won the Super Bowl, you know, I look back on like, the

impact he had. And then my college coach and a few others, and I remember getting replica Lombardi trophies and sending them this trophy, but more importantly, a note saying, hey, I really appreciate you being a playlist, and without that spot, you know, with each of these individuals. I don't know that

it's possible. And so he was one of those guys for me as a high school, you know, when you're in high school and you're young, we're all looking we're all kind of, you know, flowing down the river, and now all of a sudden, there's someone that points you in a direction and gives you a little bit more purpose. And he did that, all

Randall Kaplan

right, so talking about college, Eastern Illinois, known as Eastern Airlines, you're a pretty good quarterback. You threw for 509 yards, one game over 10,000 yards total. When you were there was a dream to make it and the pros and then explain the bears, and then high end up. And, yeah,

Sean Payton

I take you through it. So look, in high school, I didn't start until my senior year, and so now, being said, we had a real good season. I got recruited. I had a number of opportunities to play for a scholarship, and chose East Illinois, and I was just on that campus with Mike Shanahan, Jimmy

Garoppolo and Tony Romo. We all went to the same school, but we had a snowstorm on our recruiting trip, and we were there an extra day and a half, two days, and most of us that were there during that extended recruiting trip ended up signing there because it was a long usual al moldy. Then came in was our coach. He too was one of those guys that was real important in my development. I was a better college player, I think, than high school player.

I mean, I started, and we had success in high school, but it was for a year, and at Eastern, you know, I had a chance to start for three years, 10,000 yards, 20 yards, we and well, and it wasn't just the passing yards to credit. Al, moldy again, JR Bishop brings a passing game in the late 70s, when everyone else is running the football, and then al moldy comes in and begins to experiment with some one back

offense in the early 80s. Again, that that's kind of if you look back then what people were doing. It wasn't that so I was lucky to be a part of two really smart football guys, and obviously we had really good team success. We threw for a lot of yards. And I think, to answer your question, I think people always said, Did you know you wanted to play? And I just knew I didn't want to leave. Like, in other words, I don't know what

plan B was. So when I finished college, 1987 was the the year of like, all right, I try out with the Chiefs one day with a workout and come back, sign up for the arena League. My contract gets picked up by the Canadian League. This is all happening in the early summer of 87 I'm up with the Ottawa Rough Riders as a backup, so I'm not playing one. I get cut from

Ottawa. Come back. Then there's a player strike during the 87 season, I've got three games where I'm with the bears, which is where, where I'm from, and then, yeah, and then there's a period where I'm painting condominiums, I've got my degree, and this is the time where my mom begins to say, Hey, your friends are getting married, and everyone has health insurance, but you what's the

plan? And I, I think I knew in the back of my head, going back to high school with Jr used to always say to me, you're going to be a good coach when you finish playing. So it's pretty powerful when a teacher, or someone like a coach Bishop, tells you what he thinks you're going to be. It can kind of move you that way, like if you think

that, then I think that. So I finished in 87 and it was 98 I drove a Chevy Cavalier from Chicago to San Diego State to become a graduate assistant, and then the coaching, the coaching quest, or career, begins.

Randall Kaplan

Let's talk about the 800 pound plane ticket from Lancaster and then your interview for the UNLV job. What was we always prepare for job interview? But yeah, I think this one may have caught you by surprise a little bit. Yeah. So

Sean Payton

I'm, I'm playing over in London. In, in a small league. And I now know, hey, this It's time, is like the fourth league, and we're still in the same, you know, we're in the same year. So in my mind, I wanted to be a college coach. And in the avenue to be a college coach is to find a graduate assistant position, which is, you know, almost like an intern position. And I begin making some calls from London as

the 88 seasons beginning. So this is going to be the spring of 87 early summer of 87 because I know our season's going to end over there mid summer. And I have a call back from UNLV coach. Nunnally was the head coach at UNLV and Dino Babers. There were a few, there's always a few contacts that you know or or people you've met. But I, I have to find a flight to get there. They're like, hey, we'd love to visit with you. And it's a graduate assistant position. So they're like, tell us when

you can be here. And I'm like, well, give me two days, I'll be there. And so I remember going, going into a travel agency in Leicester, England, and Lady reads me, here's the cost. It's going to be 810, pounds. And I'm like, Ah, you know that's like, All right, so I have enough money to afford it. I go to Vegas, connect in St Louis, have quick interview, and I know that they've got to be thinking, I'm just like, man, if this guy came from London, he told us he'd be here in two days, and he's in

Las Vegas. Certainly they knew I was interested in the job, but they had a couple other guys they had to visit with and and then I kept thinking, Did I answer a question wrong? Why didn't I get offered a graduate assistant's job, a GA's position, when I just spent an $820 or pounds to get there? So I fly back and and I'm going to hear from them in about four or

five days. Meanwhile, the same, the same gentleman that helped me secure that interview knew someone at San Diego State, Steve Devine is the coach he knew at San Diego State, Jim walkenheim was, was my close friend, and I get a call from San Diego State. It's Steve Devine. Same thing. Graduate assistant positions open in San Diego State was, man, a little stronger program than UNLV, but I'm just interested in any and all right, I don't have one and and he talked about coming out

there. And I said, Coach, I gotta be honest with you, I said, I just got back from Las Vegas, and I don't have another 800 pounds to spend to apply to the states. And he made a couple calls. He said, I'll call you back. And he says, Look, if you can be here by July 28 you've got this job. And I said, I want that job.

Randall Kaplan

Let's go back. I

Sean Payton

want that job. I haven't heard anything from Vegas yet, okay, because I want to talk about what happened with the Vegas Yeah, I'm taking the bird in the hand rather than the one in the bush. Okay, I've not heard from Vegas, and so he essentially offers me the job over the phone. I said, I'll be there. I'll be there two days early. We're going to finish the season here. I'm going to fly back to Chicago, and I'm going to drive my car. And, you know, you I wanted him to know that

spots filled. I've got it. It was great, you know, and had a follow up call from their head coach, and so then two days later, Las Vegas calls and they'd got a position, and I'm like, Hey, I really appreciate it, but I accepted another position because I hadn't heard back. And that in our industry is pretty common when it comes to graduate assistants. I don't know that there's any head coach losing any sleep over the fact that I did come or not, you know, but wasn't

Randall Kaplan

there a question that? Wayne? Wayne, let's go to that question, yeah. So I'll go back to that question. Yeah. So

Sean Payton

my first interview with Vegas, and again, I'm as grad, grad assistant. I get there, I finally get to meet with the head coach, and he's like, you know, I've heard a lot of good things about you. I I just have one question, Sean, if you know, if one of my assistants asked you to do something, would you follow through with it, even if you felt like maybe it was something that that you knew in your heart of hearts wasn't the right thing

to do. And I thought, Ah, my first thought was, these guys are cheating here, like and so I wanted him to hear from me that I was going to be loyal to whoever I worked for. And I said, Look, you know, whatever you guys ask of me, I'll do. And then Wayne looked at me. He's like, Well, it's wrong answer. And then he explained why, but I felt like I had, yeah, why is that? Well, I mean, he just, he said, Look, if some. One's asking you to do something that

you know maybe is wrong. I want you to come to me, and so it's a tough question to ask someone on their first day. No way that's right. But I felt like there were a few guys there that that knew me and and I felt like Coach nunley, we laughed about this for years after, because he eventually ended up in the NFL. I NFL, and we just reflected back on that time, but I thought I'd made a really good impression with him and and come to find out, I did, they just had a couple more candidates to

visit with. And in the meantime, this other opportunity came up.

Randall Kaplan

So I think at some point you always want to be the best at what you're doing, right? So you want to be the coach. So at some point you got an opportunity to meet Al Davis, and I want you to talk about the interview there, and the McDonald's and the Cathy and the craziness of that. Well,

Sean Payton

you know, initially we, I think we set goals. And someone asked me this question over the weekend at Eastern, you know, did you always have certain goals? And I think the true answer to it is we're constantly adjusting, you know, because things take place. And my goal was to coach college football and man my like deep down in my belly, goal was to be a head coach in the Big 10 in the Midwest and Michigan. I hope, yep, Michigan was, it was certainly one of them, and I'll

circle back to Michigan. So anyway, I wanted to be a big 10 head coach and and so that path began Indiana, state, Miami of Ohio, San Diego State, and then finally, University of Illinois as an assistant, and nonetheless, getting the chance to call plays. And I'm getting ready to take a job at Maryland, and I get that call from the Eagles. And so the NFL begins. And then there's that climb. And so I'm going to take you to the Al Davis portion of that climb.

And I'm going to take you because I interviewed with Al Davis, the late Al Davis, as an assistant coach under Jon Gruden, to be a part of his staff. But I think you're referencing 2003 I'm now at the Cowboys. We just complete our first season in the program, and that's, you know, Coach Parcells is the head coach. He put together a new staff. I was on that staff, and at the end of the year, he says to me, Mr. Davis, you know, wants to visit with you. And he said, but it's,

it's a tough job. Now you gotta understand salary cap, veteran team. He explained some of the challenges. But when you're young, and one of 32 are interested in you, you know, you tend to drive, like, 100 miles an hour and you ignore these road signs. Al was, and always was, kind of a night owl, so he'd be up to two in the morning, but then maybe get in at 930 just that's the way his

clock was. And I can recall the first time I went west, you know, you're going to gain time, but I think it's, you know, 1030 at night. And I know it's like 1130 my time, and I haven't eaten dinner. And he said, Hey, are you hungry? And I'm like, yeah, absolutely. He said, Well, let's, let's get some cheeseburgers. And his assistant comes running in. He goes, let's get some cheeseburgers in coleslaw and and I thought to myself, because I knew he was

talking about McDonald's. And I'm like, McDonald's doesn't sell the coleslaw. You know, you get that at KFC. So I don't say a word, but his assistant knew, and he came back with, he came back with a bag of, like, 10 cheeseburgers from McDonald's, but the real small ones that you're you know, our kids eat

Randall Kaplan

Happy Meal. Well, not the happy meal, but it's

Sean Payton

the hamburger that's in the Happy Meal, right? All right. So he's got 10 regular cheeseburgers, and then he's got a pint of coleslaw from Kentucky Fried Chicken. And I just remember sitting there in that interview thinking, I'm having Happy Meal cheeseburgers with coleslaw with Al Davis. And he was an interesting guy. He's extremely smart. He was the only owner that was a general manager of a team. He was the head coach of a team, the Commissioner of a

league. So his background in football was certainly well versed. He could, he could talk to you about a lot of different topics, and very intimidating and so, yeah, cheeseburgers with Al, and so I know the interview goes well, and I know I'm going to get offered that job, and I have a family vacation to Florida, and I'm down at Disney World. That was end of Season plan. You're at the Glan Floridian, and every night Al's calling because he's wanting to

put a staff together. Or he's interviewing other candidates. But I'm like, I know he's offering me the job. I bought a black suit with a silver tie from Joseph a bank, and so I'm going 100 miles an hour. And I get a call, and it's his assistant, their GM saying, hey, look, Al wants to speed this up. He wants to bring you in at the end of the week. And I'm like, Hey, I'm still on this vacation that I he's like, Well, you got

to call Al. So I call Mr. Davis up, and we talked for a while and said, you know, Mr. Davis, I'm going to be finished on Sunday with this vacation. I committed to my family for this I can easily drop them off in Dallas and fly out there to Oakland. And so I do that. And the odd part about that day for me, you know, I'm young, with two young children, the morning Sunday and Disney started with breakfast with Winnie the Pooh. You know, you sign up for those breakfasts, the character

breakfasts. And anyway, the breakfast ends. We pack up, we fly back to Dallas. I got to go home, repack, get a coat and tie, get a flight, fly to Oakland. And once again, here I find myself late night, you know, having one of these crazy dinners with Al Davis. And I'm thinking this has been one of these, like, 18 hour days, and it was breakfast with winter Winnie, dinner with Al, that would be the title of the book I'd write if I was going to write something on the Raiders.

But no, I it was, it was, I feel like, when we interview and we go through some of these processes, you can't help but experience like, great growth, like as you there's preparation required, there's there's things you learn when you go through the interview process. And I came back from that interview, and the plan was, I'm gonna accept this job that following Thursday. And then, long story short, Bill Parcells calls me the morning I get back, and he says, Can I talk to you like a

father, you know? And he prefaced it because our prior conversations, he's my boss, he's when, so when we have a conversation, he's like talking to me as the head coach. He said, I really want to talk to you like a father and give you some advice on this job. And he was against it, and he explained

why he had good reasons. I hung up with him, and then, like, 30 seconds later, Jerry Jones calls, and Jerry was at his house in Highland Park, and he and I got to talk, and he said he wanted me to come over to the house. And generally speaking, if Jerry's the last guy you see, and his knowledge was was

Randall Kaplan

pretty, pretty impressive. You're listening to part one of my awesome interview with Sean Payton, one of the best coaches of the history of the NFL, and the current head coach in the Denver Broncos. Be sure to tune in next week to part two of my awesome interview with Sean you.

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