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Dennis Allen
Dennis Allen NO Saints
Dennis Allen
Date of birth September 22 1972 (1972-09-22) (age 51)
Place of birth Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
New Orleans SaintsNo. N/A
Position Head Coach
College Texas A&M University
Career highlights
Coaching Record / Statistics
Career player statistics (if any)
'     
'     
'     
Team(s) as a player (if any)
1996* Buffalo Bills
Team(s) as a coach/administrator (if any)
1996–1999

2000–2001

2002–2003

2004–2005

2006–2007

2008–2010

2011

2012–2014

2015

2015-2021

2022-present
Texas A&M University
(Graduate Assistant)
University of Tulsa
(Secondary)
Atlanta Falcons
(Defensive Quality Control)
Atlanta Falcons
(Defensive Assistant)
New Orleans Saints
(Asst. Defensive Line)
New Orleans Saints
(Defensive Backs)
Denver Broncos
(Defensive Coordinator)
Oakland Raiders
(Head Coach)
New Orleans Saints
(Senior Defensive Assistant)
New Orleans Saints
(Defensive Coordinator)
New Orleans Saints
(Head Coach)

Dennis J. Allen (born September 22, 1972) is an American football coach who is the head coach of the New Orleans Saints of the National Football League (NFL).[1] In 2022, Allen was promoted to head coach of the Saints after spending the previous seven seasons as the team's defensive coordinator.

He was previously coached the Oakland Raiders for 2 seasons, the third season, he was fired after a 0-4 start with them. He had a 8-28 record while coaching the Raiders. The 2 seasons were both 4-12, before being fired on the 0-4 start.

Allen previously coached for the Denver Broncos, New Orleans Saints, Atlanta Falcons, University of Tulsa and his alma mater, Texas A&M University. His father Grady Allen was also a standout linebacker for the Aggies and later in the NFL for the Falcons. Dennis and his wife, Alisson, have a son, Garrison and a daughter, Layla.[2]

Allen is known for his aggressive "bend but don't break" defensive play calling that gives up a lot of yards, but also forces many sacks and turnovers. In 2009 in New Orleans, the Saints ranked 3rd in interceptions despite giving up 321 yards per game.[3] Allen's Broncos were in the bottom half of yards allowed, ranked 23rd, but were 5th in the league in sacks.[4]

Playing career[]

Allen was not known a highly-recruited defensive back at L. D. Bell High School in Hurst, Texas before choosing to follow in his father's footsteps and play for Texas A&M. Allen was a 4-year letterman for the Aggies as a safety from 1992-1995. He started the final 21 games of his career on the top-rated Texas A&M "Wrecking Crew" defense. His fourth-quarter interception clinched an 18-9 victory over rival Texas in 1993, sending the Aggies to their third-straight Cotton Bowl Classic. He won Southwest Conference Defensive Player of the Week honors after intercepting two passes in a 36-14 win over Oklahoma in 1994. Allen was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Buffalo Bills and competed in their training camp in 1996.Template:Category handler/numbered[citation needed]

Coaching career[]

College[]

Allen began his coaching career at his alma mater, serving as a graduate assistant coach under his old coach R. C. Slocum for four seasons (1996–1999), working primarily with the secondary. He then went on to Tulsa where he was a secondary coach for two seasons (2000–2001).Template:Category handler/numbered[citation needed]

National Football League[]

In 2002, Allen’s first year with the Falcons, when he assisted in coaching the defensive backfield, the club tied for third in the NFL with 24 interceptions and improved from 30th vs. the pass in 2001 to 16th the following year.Template:Category handler/numbered[citation needed]

On January 24, 2011, Allen was hired by the Denver Broncos to become their defensive coordinator.[5]

Oakland Raiders[]

On January 24, 2012, Allen was hired by the Oakland Raiders General Manager Reggie McKenzie to become their 18th head coach. He is the first Raiders head coach to have a defensive background since John Madden retired following the 1978 season as the team's former owner Al Davis, who passed away during the 2011 season, preferred to have offensive-minded head coaches.

Coaching tree[]

NFL head coaches under whom Dennis Allen has served:

References[]

External links[]

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