Grimm with thePittsburgh Steelers in 2006 | |||||||||
| No. 68 | |||||||||
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| Position | Guard | ||||||||
| Personal information | |||||||||
| Born | (1959-05-02)May 2, 1959 (age 66) Scottdale, Pennsylvania, U.S. | ||||||||
| Height | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) | ||||||||
| Weight | 273 lb (124 kg) | ||||||||
| Career information | |||||||||
| High school | Southmoreland (PA) | ||||||||
| College | Pittsburgh | ||||||||
| NFL draft | 1981: 3rd round, 69th overall pick | ||||||||
| Career history | |||||||||
Playing | |||||||||
Coaching | |||||||||
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| Awards and highlights | |||||||||
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| Career NFL statistics | |||||||||
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Russell Scott Grimm (born May 2, 1959) is an American former professionalfootball player who was aguard for theWashington Redskins of theNational Football League (NFL). He has also served as an assistant coach for the Redskins,Pittsburgh Steelers,Arizona Cardinals, andTennessee Titans. As a professional, Grimm had multiple selections to both theAll-Pro andPro Bowl teams, and was inducted into thePro Football Hall of Fame in 2010. Grimm played 11 seasons for the Redskins and was a first-team selection to theNFL 1980s All-Decade Team.
Grimm attendedSouthmoreland High School, playing bothquarterback andlinebacker there, while also serving as the team's punter. After high school, Grimm accepted a scholarship to playcollege football at theUniversity of Pittsburgh as a linebacker. However, he found the team already had several linebackers on their roster. Despite never playing on the offensive line before, Grimm decided to convert tocenter because the team was lacking sufficient players at that position. "I wanted to play," he explained when asked why he made the change. "We needed depth at center." Over the span of his four years in college, Grimm would go from 205 to 270 pounds.[1]
Grimm was the center for Pitt from 1977 to 1980. He was part of an elite team that included future Hall of Fame linebackerRickey Jackson, future Pro Bowl guardMark May, and future Pro Bowl linebackerHugh Green, who all joined the team in the same year, as well as future Hall of Fame quarterbackDan Marino, who joined the Panthers in Grimm's final two seasons. In 1980, the team added future five-time pro bowl defensive linemanBill Maas, future NFL receiverDwight Collins, and future NFL defensive backTim Lewis. Those two years of 1979 and 1980 were among the best in school history, as the team posted a 22–2 record over that span and barely missed out on playing for the national championship both times. In 1980, future Pro Bowl tackleJimbo Covert joined Grimm on the offensive line, giving Pitt a total of three future Pro Bowl stars out of their five offensive line starters. "There were games when my uniform never got dirty," recalled Marino. "There were games when I never hit the ground. That's incredible."[2]
He was drafted in the third round by the Redskins in the1981 NFL draft. Along withJeff Bostic,Mark May,George Starke andJoe Jacoby, Russ Grimm was a founding member of the Redskins' renowned "Hogs" offensive line of the 1980s and early 1990s (deemed one of the best front fives of NFL history), which was a mainstay of the Redskins' glory years during the firstJoe Gibbs era.
During his 11 seasons as the Redskins' starting guard, Russ Grimm helped lead his team to fourSuper Bowl appearances and three Super Bowl victories (Super Bowl XVII in 1983,Super Bowl XXII in 1988, andSuper Bowl XXVI in 1992). Along the way, Grimm was selected to 4 consecutivePro Bowl appearances (1983–1986). He was named an All-Pro in each of those years as well.
Joe Bugel, Grimm's former offensive line coach and theBoss Hog, said that Grimm could play anywhere, "He was one of the most complete football players, and people, that I've ever coached. He could play all the positions – center, guard and tackle. He was the leader by example."[3]
According to Mark May, a teammate both at Pittsburgh and on the Redskins, no one lived up to the "Hog" persona more than Grimm: "He was a blue collar stiff and proud of it."[4]: 57 In his 2005 memoir, May recalled a Christmas party at his house in 1982: "I iced down a keg of beer and stationed it on the landing between the first floor and basement. Russ turned the landing into his headquarters for the evening. He grabbed a chair and a Hog shot glass (a 60-ounce pitcher) and parked his butt on the landing next to the keg. Except for an occasional trip to the bathroom, we didn't see Russ on the first level all night..."[4]: 58
Don Warren - the Washington tight end, and fellow Hog - once said about Grimm's congeniality, "Russ Grimm would swallow his dip by halftime and throw up on somebody's shoes."[5]
Grimm was a semifinalist for thePro Football Hall of Fame in 2004, and a finalist in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2010.[6] The bust of Grimm, sculpted byScott Myers, was unveiled at the Enshrinement Ceremony on August 8, 2010.
After retiring as a player, Grimm returned to the Redskins as atight end coach (from 1992 through 1996, andoffensive line coach from 1997 through 2000, during which he was instrumental in the development of tacklesChris Samuels andJon Jansen.[citation needed] After his coaching stint with the Redskins, Grimm joined thePittsburgh Steelers as offensive line coach in September 2000. In 2004, he was promoted to assistant head coach (offensive line).
In 2004, after theChicago Bears firedDick Jauron, Bears management considered Grimm as a top candidate for the job.[7] The job eventually went to thenSt. Louis Rams defensive coordinatorLovie Smith.
In 2005, Grimm added anotherSuper Bowl ring (totaling four) to his résumé as part of the Pittsburgh Steelers' coaching staff (offensive line coach). Under Grimm's guidance in 2005, theSuper Bowl champion Steelers averaged nearly 140 yards rushing per game during the regular season to rank fifth in the NFL while also grinding out 181 rushing yards in theirSuper Bowl XL victory over the Seattle Seahawks. In 2006, the Steelers' offensive line helped pave the way for running backWillie Parker to gain 1,494 yards and 13 touchdowns on 337 carries with 4.4-yard avg. and earn his first Pro Bowl selection. The Pittsburgh offense finished the 2006 season with the 10th-best rushing attack in the NFL, helping to give the Steelers the seventh ranked total offense in the league. Parker finished the season with the second and third top rushing performances of the year in the NFL with 223 rushing yards on 32 attempts and a TD againstCleveland Browns and 213 yards on 22 rushes and two TDs vs.New Orleans Saints.
On January 5, 2007,Bill Cowher resigned as head coach of the Steelers. In the press conference that followed, Steelers' president Art Rooney II announced Grimm as one of the candidates for the job. He was named as a finalist for the job along withKen Whisenhunt andMike Tomlin. On January 22, 2007, the Steelers hired Tomlin as their head coach. The day after Tomlin's hiring, Grimm was hired to serve under Whisenhunt as the Arizona Cardinals assistant head coach and offensive line coach.
In his first season in Arizona, his offensive line allowed 24 sacks, sixth best in the NFL and the fewest given up by the Cardinals since 1978 with 22. Grimm's offensive line also paved the way for running backEdgerrin James to rush for 1,222 yards, the fifth-best total in team history. The Cardinals' offense finished with the fifth-best passing attack in the NFL and threw for a team-record 32 touchdowns. Grimm remained with the Cardinals until Whisenhunt and the entire offensive staff were fired in December 2012, following a 5–11 season.[8]
After the Arizona Cardinals hired Whisenhunt as their new head coach, on January 14, 2007, the finalists for the Steelers position were reduced to Grimm andMinnesota Vikings defensive coordinatorMike Tomlin. On January 22, 2007,Mike Prisuta of thePittsburgh Tribune-Review reported from an undisclosed source within the Pittsburgh Steelers organization that then-assistant coach Grimm would replace Bill Cowher as the team's coach. A day earlier,ESPN andSports Illustrated stated on their web sites that Tomlin had been chosen to replace Cowher. However, theTribune-Review claimed that an unnamed "NFL source" said that on January 21, 2007, Tomlin had not heard from the Steelers and no contract negotiations had taken place. Grimm was one of three finalists to replace Cowher, along with Tomlin andChicago Bears defensive coordinatorRon Rivera.
Twenty-four hours later Tomlin was announced as the Steelers' new coach. Steelers' PresidentArt Rooney II toldCBS Sports on January 23, 2007, that no formal offer was ever made to Grimm, explaining that team representatives did talk about an offer and contract numbers with both Grimm and Tomlin on January 20. Rooney explained, "We did tell Russ nothing would be final until Sunday. I feel bad if he got the wrong impression." TheTribune-Review and Prisuta refused to comment on their blunder, and Prisuta's story was discredited and removed from their website.[9]
On January 26, 2016, theTennessee Titans hired Grimm as their offensive line coach.[10] In his first year, the Titans O-line was one of the best in the league. Left tackleTaylor Lewan went to the Pro Bowl and rookie right tackleJack Conklin was voted a first-team All Pro.
Grimm announced his retirement from coaching after the 2017 season.[11]

In high school, Grimm punted, playedquarterback andlinebacker atSouthmoreland High School while earning nine varsityletters and starring on the basketball team.
Grimm was inducted into the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. His younger brother,Donn, was a starting linebacker onNotre Dame 1988 national championship team and signed with the Cardinals as a rookie free agent in 1991. He has four children, Chad,Cody, and fraternal twins Devin and Dylan. All of his children attendedOakton High School in Fairfax County, Virginia. Chad played football atVirginia Tech and served as an assistant coach for the Redskins from 2009 to 2019, and Dylan plays lacrosse atLoyola University Maryland.[12] His second eldest son, Cody, also played at Virginia Tech and was drafted by theTampa Bay Buccaneers in the seventh round of the2010 NFL draft.[13] Cody would later go into coaching. His daughter, Devin, played soccer at St. Mary’s in Maryland.
Grimm is featured in the video gameAll-Pro Football 2K8.[14]