Marc Trestman recalled how he left a lucrative business job in Miami in 1995 after being out of football for four seasons when then-49ers head coach George Seifert offered him the offensive coordinator position and the chance to coach Hall of Fame quarterback Steve Young.
Trestman has been coaching almost every year since, and said that his being named the Chicago Bears head coach this month made him believe that, "It must have been meant to be that I'm back in football."
Did Trestman ever dream that, after being an assistant in the NFL (including two stints as a Vikings assistant) and college ranks for 11 years and then becoming the head coach of the CFL's Montreal Alouettes for five years, some day he'd be a head coach in the NFL?
"I was excited but I was also cautiously optimistic," he said about interviewing with the Bears. "I felt very, very comfortable with the general manager [Phil Emery]."
Getting out of his contract with Montreal was no issue, according to Trestman, so negotiating with the Bears was no problem. But he got the news that he had the job in a telephone call that came at an unusual hour, sometime between 1:30 a.m. and 3 a.m.
"They had done another interview later in the day and they were just going through the process of re-evaluating, I guess," he said. "You'd have to ask them [why they called so late]."
Trestman called the job an unbelievable challenge, but one he feels he can successfully handle.
"Fortunately we have great ownership, a general manager who is highly supportive and the locker room has a great culture in it," Trestman said. "There's really good players in the locker room. They're coming off a [10-6] season. They could have won 12 maybe, but they won 10.