Sunday, January 21
Capers agrees to five-year deal



HOUSTON -- Jacksonville Jaguars defensive coordinator Dom Capers has agreed in principle to a five-year contract to become the first coach of the expansion Houston Texans.

Dom Capers
Former Panthers head coach Dom Capers agreed Friday to coach his second NFL expansion team.
"Discussions are progressing very well," Texans owner Bob McNair said. "We have reached agreement on the financial terms but there are other terms still being negotiated."

Capers' deal will average $1.8 million per year, report ESPN.com's John Clayton and Chris Mortensen.

McNair said he was so convinced the hiring would become official that the team already scheduled a 1 p.m. CST news conference for Sunday to announce the signing of Capers as the Texans' coach.

"I'm extremely excited about the opportunity," Capers said by telephone at a news conference called by McNair late Friday.

The Houston job will be Capers' second shot at directing an NFL team from scratch.

He was the first coach in Carolina Panthers' history and led them to the NFC title game in 1996, only the team's second year. The performance, including a 13-5 record, earned him NFL Coach of the Year honors.

In Carolina's first year, his team won seven games, the most ever for an expansion team.

Capers, 50, was fired after the 1998 season when the Panthers slipped to 4-12, then was hired by the Jaguars to coach the defense.

Bob McNair
Texans owner Bob McNair, left, and general manager Charley Casserly prepare for a conference call with Capers.
He also had been a candidate for the vacant coaching job in Buffalo, where Wade Phillips was fired last week. Phillips was among the seven men interviewed by the Texans but Capers was the only one to make two visits.

McNair previously had said he wasn't interested in hiring a coach until next year, but apparently had a change of heart after two weeks of interviewing Capers and other NFL coaches.

The Texans begin play in 2002.

Capers was in Houston this week for a second round of discussions and had returned to Florida earlier Friday to take care of previously scheduled obligations. His agent, however, had remained behind to continue negotiations.

The Texans paid a $700 million expansion fee and now are spending millions more on scouting and other areas with little incoming revenue to offset costs, such as a coach's high salary.

The Houston Chronicle reported this week that Capers, who signed a 10-year contrct extension with Carolina in 1996, will be paid about $9 million by the Panthers through the 2006 season and could be a relative bargain this year for Houston before having his salary elevated when the Texans begin play.

Capers withdrew from consideration for the New York Jets job before the Jets hired Herman Edwards, Tampa Bay's assistant head coach, on Thursday.

Art Shell, who resigned earlier this month after four years as offensive line coach of the Atlanta Falcons, interviewed with Houston earlier this week.

Other candidates who have interviewed with the team were Phillips; Denver Broncos offensive coordinator Gary Kubiak; Ted Cottrell, Phillips' defensive coordinator at Buffalo; University of Miami coach Butch Davis; and St. Louis assistant head coach Al Saunders.

Capers began his coaching career in 1972 at Kent State, where he was a graduate assistant for three seasons while earning a masters degree in administration. He had assistant collegiate coaching jobs at Washington, Hawaii, San Jose State, California, Tennessee and Ohio State.

In 1984, he moved into pro football, joining Jim Mora's staff with the Philadelphia and Baltimore of the USFL. In 1986, he followed Mora to the NFL with New Orleans.

In 1992, he went to the Steelers as defensive coordinator, then to Carolina in 1995.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.






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