National Football League
Eagles to interview Lovie Smith
National Football League

Eagles to interview Lovie Smith

Published Jan. 8, 2013 12:00 a.m. ET

Sticking with their plan for an exhaustive search to replace Andy Reid, the Philadelphia Eagles added Lovie Smith to their list of candidates.

The Eagles will interview Smith for their coaching vacancy on Thursday, making him just the second former head coach to be considered for the job.

Smith was fired last Monday after going 81-63 in nine seasons with Chicago. He led the Bears to three division titles, two trips to the NFC championship game and a loss to Indianapolis in the Super Bowl following the 2006 season. Despite winning 10 games this season, Smith lost his job after the team went 3-5 following a 7-1 start and missed the playoffs.

The Eagles, who fired Andy Reid after 14 seasons, also plan to interview Indianapolis offensive coordinator Bruce Arians and Seattle defensive coordinator Gus Bradley this week. They've also received permission to interview Cincinnati offensive coordinator Jay Gruden.

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Owner Jeffrey Lurie, general manager Howie Roseman and president Don Smolenski already have interviewed Atlanta assistants Mike Nolan and Keith Armstrong, Denver offensive coordinator Mike McCoy and Penn State's Bill O'Brien and Oregon's Chip Kelly. O'Brien and Kelly chose to remain at their schools.

Nolan is the only one among the coordinators with previous head coaching experience. He was 18-37 in 3 1/2 seasons with San Francisco.

The Eagles went 4-12 this season and finished in last place in the NFC East. Reid, dismissed last Monday, was hired as coach in Kansas City.

The 54-year-old Smith interviewed last week with the Buffalo Bills, who hired Doug Marrone to replace Chan Gailey.

Smith was a defensive coordinator in St. Louis before taking over in Chicago in 2004. He helped the Rams improve from allowing an NFL-worst 29.4 points per game in 2000 to just 17.1 in 2001 when they reached the Super Bowl and lost to New England.

In Chicago, Smith's defenses finished in the top four in points allowed and yards allowed four times, including this season. But the Bears finished in the top 10 in points just once and never placed higher than 15th in total yards. They were second in scoring in 2006 when Smith guided the Bears to an NFC championship victory with Rex Grossman at quarterback.

Smith's teams had double-digit wins four times and only three losing seasons out of nine. But the Bears reached the postseason just three times and didn't earn a playoff berth in five of Smith's last six years.

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