Kelly Cool When Things Get Hot
Niner Report|October 2016

Chip Kelly has been putting out fires ever since he became head coach of the 49ers back in January.

Craig Massei
Kelly Cool When Things Get Hot

Some of them have been mild conflagrations, just a few flickering flames. Some have been bonfires that turn up the temperature. And some have been roaring infernos, blazes that threaten to scorch the fabric of the 49ers and burn both Kelly and what he’s trying to accomplish as he sets a foundation in his debut season with the team.

But every time he’s faced with fire, Kelly seems to always look like a guy that doesn’t feel the heat. His expression doesn’t change. You don’t hear anything different in the tone of his voice. And you don’t see the guy sweat.

Kelly knows the fire drill. He Craig Masseiwas on a hot seat that reached scalding proportions during his three seasons in Philadelphia,particularly his final season with the Eagles last year to conclude his first attempt at coaching in the NFL.

Kelly obviously got a handle on managing such situations, because he’s been a very cool customer in handling all the drama and incendiary conditions that have threatened to have this 2016 season blow up in the 49ers’ faces before it even began.

But that’s what good coaches do. It’s what Jim Tomsula didn’t — or couldn’t — do last season. It’s what even a fading Jim Harbaugh couldn’t do in the twilight of his mercurial stay with the 49ers as Harbaugh’s three-year mini-dynasty began to crash and burn and crumble around him over the second half of the 2014 season.

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