Bill Shuey
Bill Shuey is an American football coach and former defensive back who is the outside linebackers coach for the Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League. He previously served as an assistant coach for the Chicago Bears, Widener Pride, West Chester Golden Rams, and Philadelphia Eagles.
Shuey played college football at Slippery Rock and spent four seasons in minor leagues with the Pittsburgh Colts and Lehigh Valley Panthers.
Early life and education
Shuey was born on October 5, 1974, in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and attended Liberty High School. In high school, he was a wrestler, weighing 103 pounds as a junior and 130 pounds as a senior. Due to his size, Shuey was turned away from football while at Liberty. Following high school he attended West Virginia University for one year, before going to Slippery Rock University. He briefly played football at Slippery Rock, and shifted to semi-pro ball after graduating with a degree in sports management.Playing career
From 1996 to 1999, Shuey played semi-pro football. He spent 1996 with a Pittsburgh team before they folded. Afterwards he returned to Bethlehem but later joined the newly formed Pittsburgh Colts. He spent two seasons with them, and two with the Lehigh Valley Panthers.Coaching career
Philadelphia Eagles
Following the 1999 season with the Lehigh Valley Panthers, Shuey was given a position with the National Football League Philadelphia Eagles as a marketing intern. He returned the following season as an assistant to the training camp coordinator. He would often leave Eagles practice to join the Lehigh Valley Panthers and played with them when the Eagles had preseason scrimmages. In 2001, the Eagles head coach Andy Reid called Shuey and offered him a job. At the time he was a teacher for Pennridge. He spent the to seasons as training camp coordinator and assistant to the head coach.Shuey was promoted in 2003 to quality control coach and offensive assistant, where his duties were to compile the playbook, present play diagrams, analyze videotape, and help coach running back reps. His offensive coordinator Brad Childress described him as someone who, "caught everybody's attention with his aptitude for football," and, "an extremely hard worker and a very quick study. Once you tell him something, he gets it." He spent five years in the position, and helped them make the playoffs in three of those years, including one trip to the Super Bowl in 2004. He became a position coach in, and served as their linebackers coach until. In 2009, he was coach of the Pro Bowl linebackers. He was one of three coaches fired following the 2010 season.