Last time we spoke about the United Football League coaching changes, we were discussing the hiring of Ricky Proehl. A 16-year NFL player and 6-year NFL coach who had been to the Super Bowl 5 times, winning one with the Rams before they left for Los Angeles. This felt like a solid hire with logic behind the move. I am not sure we can say the same about the final three hires with the same air of confidence.

Table of Contents
- 1 Experience is Everything?
- 1.1 Chris Redman, Louisville Kings
- 1.2 Rick Neuheisel, Dallas Renegades
- 1.2.1 Coaching Career Begins
- 1.2.2 Coaching Staff
- 1.2.3 Steve Axmen, QB Coach
- 1.2.4 Andrew Weindinger, RB Coach
- 1.2.5 Jennifer King, WR Coach
- 1.2.6 Charles Arbuckle, TE Coach
- 1.2.7 Chris Scelfo, OL Coach
- 1.2.8 Nick Aliotti, Defensive Coordinator
- 1.2.9 Ron Aiken, Defensive Line Coach
- 1.2.10 Tim Hundley, Linebacker Coach
- 1.2.11 Mike Gilhamer, DB Coach
- 1.2.12 Brandon Burton, DB Coach
- 1.2.13 Chris Reinhart, WR Coach/Special Teams
- 1.2.14 Extra Credit
- 1.3 Kevin Sumlin, Houston Gamblers
- 1.3.1 Texas Take 2
- 1.3.2 Coaching Staff
- 1.3.3 2022 Coaching Staff
- 1.3.4 Tim Lewis, Defensive Coordinator
- 1.3.5 Ty Warren, Defensive Line Coach
- 1.3.6 Mark Snyder, Linebackers Coach
- 1.3.7 Greg McMahon, Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends Coach
- 1.3.8 Gordon Shaw, Offensive Line
- 1.3.9 David Beaty, Co-Offensive Coordinator/Wide Receiver Coach
- 1.3.10 J.D. Runnels, Co-Offensive Coordinator/Running Backs Coach
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- 1.3.13 YouTube
- 1.3.14 Join the Conversation on Discord, Facebook, or Reddit
- 1.4 Share this:
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- 1.6 Related Posts
Experience is Everything?
Much has been made of the experience level of some of the coaches being hired. The United Football League made some calculated risks hiring coaches with limited and sometimes no coaching experience at all. Aj McCarron is the most obvious example. McCarron is just one season removed from being a United Football League player, and now he will be a United Football League Head Coach, replacing easily one of the most successful spring football coaches of all time.
The first five coaches were a mixed bag of former United Football League coaches, Anthony Becht, and Shannon Harris, as well as new coaches with no professional or college experience, like McCarron. The final three coaches were just as mixed of a bag. This included the return of two former spring football head coaches, as well as the hiring of a first-time head coach and former Super Bowl winner. It is clear the United Football League has prioritized local ties above all else with the exception of one hire.
Chris Redman, Louisville Kings
If the United Football League’s goal was to hire coaches with local connections, Chris Redman fulfills it perfectly. However, looking beyond local ties, Redman’s limited coaching experience becomes central to evaluating the logic of his hire, which is at the heart of my concern about these appointments. As is the case for most United Football League fans currently.
As the United Football League ushers out coaches like Mike Nolan, Skip Holtz, Bob Stoops, and trades them for Chris Redman, Aj McCarron, and Ted Ginn Jr, I am not sure we can blame them for being upset and confused. Say what you will about local ties, but the three coaches above had garnered their own cult-like followings in their respective United Football League cities. (No I will not advocate for Cj Johnson to have stuck with the United Football League.)
First, let’s take a look at his ties to Louisville, which will make clear where a large portion of the motivation to hire Redman comes from. Chris Redman was born in Louisville, Kentucky, where he grew up in a family where football was life. His father, Bob Redman, is a Hall of Fame High School football coach with 317 career wins and 3 State Titles.
Redman followed this path and wound up starring at the same high school his father coached at. He would go on to be named All-State twice and Parade National Player of the Year, setting records along the way. He initially committed to Louisville before coaching changes nearly derailed what turned out to be a Louisville Hall of Fame and Ring of Honor worthy career.
To this Day, Redman is Still the Leader In
Career Passing Yards 12,541
Single Season Passing Yards 4,042
Single Game Passing Yards 592
Career Passing Touchdowns 84
Single Game Touchdown Passes 6
He went on to be selected in the 3rd round during the 2000 draft, going on to win a Super Bowl as a rookie with the Baltimore Ravens. Redman played 4 years with the Ravens before injuries nearly ended his career right there. He missed the entire 2004 season due to a torn labrum suffered late in 2003, his last year with the Ravens.
After missing all of 2004, he signed with the Patriots but was waived before the preseason, signing with the Titans. The Titans released him via final cuts, and he sat out all of the 2005 and 2006 seasons before signing with the Allen Wranglers of the AFL. That was until his former QB coach in college, Bobby Petrino, signed him after being hired by the Falcons as their Head Coach.
Redman would outlast Petrino by a long shot in Atlanta, sticking until being released in late August of 2012. That was it for his NFL career. He returned to Louisville, where he really began his coaching career.
He would stay very involved with Louisville sports, whether it was football, basketball, or even Horse racing. (Now we know the real reason he was hired)
Applicable Experience
Many will look at Chris Redman’s resume and see his lack of any college or professional coaching experience and immediately dismiss his abilities as a Head Coach.
They will ignore that he spent two years coaching High School football in Texas. Serving as a QB coach. They will ignore the relevance of his time with the Louisville Xtreme when they joined the Indoor Football League. Most of all, they will ignore the former players turned coaches who could follow him.
Coaching Connections
Looking back at the Ravens’ team that shaped Redman’s career, there are some familiar faces for fans of spring football. Rod Woodson, Jaime Sharper, Obafemi Ayanbadejo, Marcus Nash, Donnie Henderson, Jack Del Rio, Russ Purnell, Wade Harman, Phil Savage, Jeff Friday, Dennis Thurman, Gary Zauner, Carnell Lake, Mike Singletary, the list goes on and on. However, there are some names in that group, as well as some that are not on that list that could be a great fit, even if some may be more temporary solutions than others.
Jaime Sharper got into coaching following his playing career, most recently serving as LB Coach and Special Teams Coordinator for the DC Defenders in 2023. Currently, he is not coaching anywhere. Sharper has 2 years of coaching high school, five years of coaching college, and 1 year with the XFL. He has not coached anywhere since. His understanding of spring football operations and ability to fill multiple roles are huge values to the Kings.
Donnie Henderson, the former DB coach on that Ravens team, could be a name to watch. He has already spent time coaching in an NFL alternative league in 2019 as the Defensive Coordinator of the AAF’s Salt Lake Stallions. After his time in the AAF, he spent 21-22 with Arizona State as their DB Coach and later Defensive Coordinator. The 68-year-old coach does not appear to be coaching anywhere currently.
Wade Harman most recently spent his 2025 season coaching the Offensive Line for the Madrid Bravos of the European League of Football. However, he has spent 4-decades holding every offensive coaching role outside of QB coach. He could be an obvious choice given his experience in spring football and his ability to coach a multitude of positions. They overlapped the entire time Redman spent in Baltimore.
Kevin Wolthausen could be a very interesting, albeit slightly unlikely name. They crossed paths in 2007 with Atlanta. After Petrino left, Wolthausen was out of work for a year before being hired by the original United Football League’s Las Vegas Locomotives, where he went on to win two United Football League Championships in 3 seasons. Wolthausen also spent 4 seasons coaching linebackers and defensive line for Louisville.
Mike Smith is a guy who Chris Redman spent most of his NFL career very close to. Smith spent 2000-2002 in Baltimore with Redman. In 2008, when Smith was hired by Atlanta as Head Coach, Redman was already there. Smith then retained Redman until late in training camp in 2012. Redman played on two teams in the NFL for a total of 9 seasons, 7 of which overlapped with Smith. Smith is not currently coaching full-time anywhere, but coached Team Aina in the Hula Bowl for four years. He was named HC of the Guardians Coaching Staff for the American Bowl. On his staff: Mike Nolan, Mike Jones, and Corey Chamblin.
Carnell Lake missed winning the Super Bowl by one season. Joining the Ravens in 2001. He spent 2022 as a DB Coach in the USFL. In 2023, he was promoted to DC of the Memphis Showboats. He held the position for two seasons. He is not currently coaching anywhere, but will be assisting in the American Bowl on the same staff as Kevin Sumlin.
It’s safe to say that where Redman lacks experience, he makes up for it in his potential network of coaches. Many of whom have experience coaching at this level. He could wind up having one of the more impressive United Football League staffs in 2026.
Rick Neuheisel, Dallas Renegades
Rick Neuheisel is one of the outliers of these hires for the league. While every other coaching candidate has direct connections that can be drawn to the city they represent, Neuheisel does not. In fact, he doesn’t seem to have any ties to the city of Dallas at all, unless you consider a chance encounter with Bill McCartney in the Dallas airport that may have changed the entire trajectory of his career. However, unlike Chris Redman before him, what he lacks in direct ties to the market, he makes up for with coaching experience and direct experience in spring football as a player and Head Coach.
While Neuheisel has not coached in either iteration of the United Football League, he did however spend time as a player in the USFL, and later was hired as a Head Coach with the AAF in 2019 going 5-3. His ties to alternative football are strong, and he may even be able to draw on those past experiences when assembling his staff for the 2026 United Football League season.
Neuheisel was a part of a trend in the 80’s that saw some players opt to go straight to the upstart USFL right out of college. Comparable salaries and league rules/structure made it an appealing option for players who had a reason to bypass the NFL Draft Process. He would spend the 1984 and 1985 seasons with the San Antonio Gunslingers as their starting quarterback. In his two seasons with the team, he threw for over 5,700 yards.
Ultimately, following this, Neuheisel left the state of Texas and apparently never returned. In 1986, he dipped a toe into coaching for the first time. He served as a graduate assistant at his alma mater, UCLA. In 1987, a strike occurred in the NFL, and the league brought in “scabs” to get them through the disagreement with the union. Neuheisel was just 1 season removed from having been the Gunslingers’ starter, and he became a sought-after player for this stretch. First, he signed with the San Diego Chargers, where he spent 3 games as a replacement player, then he jumped over and joined the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as their backup for two games.
Coaching Career Begins
After the 1987 season, Neuheisel would not play again, instead focusing on his upstart coaching career. He was again brought on by his alma matter UCLA. He spent the 1988 and 89 seasons as the quarterback coach before overseeing wide receivers from 1990 to 1993. In 1994, UCLA had an opening at Offensive Coordinator, but Terry Donahue chose to hire Bob Toledo from Texas A&M over promoting Neuheisel, who decided to instead leave for Colorado University to serve as the Offensive Coordinator for the Buffaloes.
This changed everything for Neuheisel as the Buffaloes went 11-1 in 1994, and following the season Blll McCartney chose to retire. The school opted to promote Neuheisel, who would spend the next four seasons as the Head Coach for Colorado. In 1999, he was hired as the Head Coach of Washington, where he would stay for four seasons as well. He would then spend three seasons in the NFL with the Ravens before returning to college as the Head Coach of UCLA, where he played his college ball, and where he began his coaching career.
This marked yet another 4 year stint as a head Coach. Ultimately, leaving following the 2011 season, Neuheisel was out of football for 8 years before the Alliance of American Football offered him the chance to return to coaching with the Arizona Hotshots for the 2019 season. Holding a career record of 82-55, Neuheisel jumped at the opportunity, joining the Hotshots for his first chance to be a Head Coach at the professional level.
He would finish with a 5-3 record before the league folded, and again left him without a team. Now he returns to Dallas over two decades after a chance encounter in a Dallas Airport led directly to his first Head Coaching opportunity, as Neuheisel accepts what will likely be his last Head Coaching position.
Coaching Staff
Thanks to Anthony Miller, we know that his son will not be joining him in 2026 and has a college position coming soon. However, he did allude to the fact that he could look at getting the band back together for one more run at alternative football, this time in a much more stable league with the United Football League.
Let’s take a look at how that staff was assembled and where they are now.
Steve Axmen, QB Coach
Steve Axmen is 78 years old currently, and I would assume it is unlikely he makes his return with the United Football League in 2026. The last time he coached was in the AAF.
Andrew Weindinger, RB Coach
Weindinger has continued his professional career coaching primarily in Europe. After the AAF folded, Weindinger joined the Potsdam Royals as the Offensive Coordinator. In 2022, he was hired as the Head Coach of the Barcelona Dragons, but he lasted just 1 season before joining the Vienna Vikings, where he won back-to-back championships. In 2025, he was the Head Coach for the Madrid Bravos. He could be a candidate to join the staff, but it may take a prominent role. Perhaps Offensive Coordinator/Running Backs Coach?
Weindinger may be a hot commodity overseas, but holding a title like this in the United States with the United Football League, could jumpstart his interest in leagues higher than the ELF. Perhaps even as a potential successor to Neuheisel if and when he retires from the United Football League.
Jennifer King, WR Coach
Jennifer King played football for 13 seasons before retiring and joining the coaching ranks. In 2018, she worked with the Carolina Panthers as a wide receiver coaching intern. She was also hired that same season by the Hotshots, where she assisted with receivers and special teams for two seasons. She would continue to do internships when available to garner recognition as an NFL-level coach, while also holding positions at colleges.
Finally, her third year as an intern paid off. She was hired as Assistant RB Coach for the Commanders the year following serving with them as an intern. She remained with them until 2023. In 2024, she joined the Bears. Currently, she is working with North Carolina Central University. It’s unlikely she would leave a college program for the United Football League, but maybe there is potential to pull double duty.
Charles Arbuckle, TE Coach
Chris Scelfo, OL Coach
Chris Scelfo is currently with Tulsa, serving as a Special Assistant to the Head Coach. This was his first coaching position since the XFL in 2020. Scelfo was one of many coaches who jumped from the failing AAF to the XFL for the 2020 season. I would assume he could have the flexibility needed to rejoin Neuheisel if he were interested. Scelfo has spent 13 seasons coaching offensive line and seven more coaching tight ends. He could be among the most experienced offensive line coaches in the United Football League in 2026.
Nick Aliotti, Defensive Coordinator
Nick Aliotti retired for the first time in 2013. He returned from retirement to coach the Arizona Hot Shots, then returned to his coaching position when the league folded. Chances are, Aliotti will not be returning to the United Football League in 2026.
Ron Aiken, Defensive Line Coach
Ron Aiken is also in his 70’s and has not coached since the Hot Shots in 2019. While he is potentially available, it’s likely he will decide to stay retired and not make his way back to spring football with the United Football League in 2026, seven years removed from his last coaching job.
Tim Hundley, Linebacker Coach
Tim Hundley has decades of collegiate coaching experience, and much of it came coaching next to Rick Neuheisel. Whether it was alongside him at UCLA when both were assistants, or later when he was Head Coach at Colorado and Washington. Even at 74 years old, there is a chance Hundley returns to rejoin his longtime friend in the United Football League. He has coached linebackers and defensive backs during his career, allowing Neuheisel some flexibility.
Mike Gilhamer, DB Coach
Mike Gilhamer is likely available and willing to join the United Football League. After his time with the AAF, he wound up coaching with the Seattle Sea Dragons in 2023. Some of his former Sea Dragons players may even still be in the player ranks set to be drafted.
Brandon Burton, DB Coach
Brandon Burton went on to join the Permian Basin, where he coached DB’s and was later named Defensive Passing Game Coordinator. He would remain there through the 2022 season. He then began coaching youth athletes for Texas Sports Academy. This means he is currently located very close to where his former Head Coach was recently named Head Coach once again.
Chris Reinhart, WR Coach/Special Teams
Since the AAF folded, Reinhart’s career has taken off. After his stint with the Hot Shots, he was able to join Arizona State for their 2019 season, where he coached Brandon Aiyuk. In 2020, he joined CU under Karl Dorrell and was later promoted to Special Teams Coordinator in 2022. He is now the Head Coach of the High School he once attended. He could potentially be able to pull double duty, depending on whether he holds teaching duties or not.
Neuheisel also said he would look at the current Renegades staff in an effort to potentially retain some of the assistants. If the end result is some hybrid of the Hot Shots staff and the Renegades staff, there are a lot worse ways to build a spring football staff. Keep in mind the Renegades aren’t far removed from an XFL championship win.
Extra Credit
While there is no obvious indication that Neuheisel and this particular player have kept in touch since they were together in the AAF, but what about hiring Scooby Wright to help coach linebackers? Wright was a former NFL draft pick that later spent time in the AAF, XFL, TSL, USFL, before an injury forced him to retire from the UFL in 2024. Wright has arguably one of the most decorated resumes in all of spring football.
Kevin Sumlin, Houston Gamblers
Finally we address the return of Kevin Sumlin. This hire caught many people off guard. In 2022 the Houston Gamblers were led by Kevin Sumlin during their inaugural season. After most media outlets had the Gamblers ranked fairly high in 2022 preseason power rankings due in part to Sumlin’s background as a college head coach but the results fell short of expectations. The Gamblers finished 3-7 in their first season, and Sumlin moved on after just 1 year, and that was in the USFL, which arguably was not quite as talented as the United Football League is in 2026.
The move to hire Kevin Sumlin to coach the Gamblers made sense back in 2022, and it still makes some sense for all the same reasons to this day. Sumlin spent nearly half of his career coaching in the state of Texas. From 1989 to 2000, Sumlin bounced around, holding positions with Washington State, Wyoming, Minnesota, and Purdue (with Drew Brees, no less) before landing his first opportunity in Texas.
In 2001, he was hired as the Assistant Head Coach and Wide Receivers Coach. In 2002, he added Offensive Coordinator to his titles. In 2003, Sumlin took a position under Bob Stoops with Oklahoma, where he would stay for 5 seasons. He held multiple roles overseeing tight ends and Special Teams for his first two seasons before being promoted to Co-Offensive Coordinator and Wide Receivers Coach.
When Sumlin left Oklahoma, it was once again to return to the state of Texas. This time as the Head Coach for the University of Houston. He would go on to serve as the Head Coach for Houston for four seasons, culminating in a 35-17 record with 3 bowl appearances. After the 2011 season, he accepted a lateral move to Texas A&M.
Texas Take 2
Returning to Texas A&M in 2012, Sumlin led his new team to an 11-2 record and a win in the Cotton Bowl. With expectations set sky high thanks to his record with Houston and hot start with A&M, Sumlin would lead the team to six straight winning seasons. The caveat was that the program never matched the success it found in its first season with Sumlin. In fact, their win total steadily fell; in 2012, 11 wins, 2013, 9 wins, 2014-2016, 8 wins, and in 2017, 7 wins.
Following the 2017 season, Sumlin left Texas A&M, being replaced by Jimbo Fisher in 2018. He would land on his feet at the University of Arizona. This would prove to be his most ill-fated run as a Head Coach. Spending just two and a half years with Arizona, he collected a 9-20 record. He was fired the day after a blowout loss to Arizona State that brought his record to 0-5 in 2020.
For the 2021 season, Sumlin served as an advisor to Alabama before accepting the Gamblers position for the 2022 season. The opinions of this hire ranged from; Sumlin is ruining any potential career he has left in the college ranks to Sumlin will be an NFL head coach in a few years after taking this position. The truth is, none of them were accurate.
Instead, Sumlin and company went 3-7, and he left after one year to accept a position with the University of Maryland, where he has been coaching ever since. Little did anyone know at the time that when he accepted the position with Maryland, he would be back with the Gamblers just three seasons later.
Coaching Staff
Sumlin’s coaching staff could be an interesting group. His ties spiderweb throughout college football at nearly every level, and he likely has former assistants in the NFL as well. We could see him revisit some of the names he brought in during the 2022 season with the USFL, or we could see him build an entirely new staff. One thing is for sure: we can speculate, but it would be a surprise to see even a few of our suggested names turn out to be accurate. With a network as large as Sumlin’s, his staff could be taken from anywhere and everywhere.
Let’s take a look at his staff from the 2022 season and see who is available to return if Sumlin has any interest in a reunion. Before we start this exorcise let me just preface this by saying coaching experience and talent was not lacking on this staff despite their record as a group.
2022 Coaching Staff
J.D. Runnels, Co-Offensive Coordinator/RB Coach
David Beaty, Co-Offensive Coordinator/WR Coach
Greg McMahon, Special Teams Coordinator/TE Coach
Gordon Shaw, Offensive Line Coach
Tim Lewis, Defensive Coordinator
Ty Warren, Defensive Line Coach
Mark Snyder, Linebackers Coach
We will begin by looking at the coordinator positions first, and just for the sake of being different, we will start with defense.
Tim Lewis, Defensive Coordinator
During the 2022 season, Lewis served as the defensive coordinator for the Gamblers, suffering through a rough season. In 2023, when the XFL launched, countless coaches jumped ship to the new league due to a few factors being more coach-friendly. Lewis was one of those coaches, joining the Renegades under Bob Stoops as Co-Defensive Coordinator. He would help the Renegades win the 2023 XFL Championship game.
Lewis had a strong impact on building the roster before he was offered the Defensive Coordinator position for Boston College for their 2024 season. Lewis accepted the position under Bill O’Brien during his first season with the school. After the 2025 season, it was announced O’Brien had parted ways with a trio of coaches, including Lewis. It is worth noting that Tim Lewis has been a part of the AAF, XFL 2020, USFL, and XFL 2023. It is also worth noting that his brother is Will Lewis, one of the few General Managers who survived the restructure that eliminated individual General Managers.
Ty Warren, Defensive Line Coach
Ty Warren launched his entire coaching career by serving on this staff. Less than two seasons after serving on this staff for his first real coaching position, he would be hired by Stephen F. Austin, where he spent two seasons. He has since built what looks to be a promising young college coaching career, joining Mississippi State for the 2026 season. He is not likely to return to the spring football with the United Football League.
Mark Snyder, Linebackers Coach
Mark Snyder had worked alongside Kevin Sumlin for three years as his defensive coordinator at Texas A&M. After returning to join Sumlin coaching linebackers for the Gamblers, he remained in spring football for the 2023 season, joining the Guardians as well. After the 2023 season, when the Guardians went away, Snyder did as well.
It appears that he is still available, and in fact, his heart appears to still lie with spring football as his Twitter profile picture is the Guardians logo. He was recently on a podcast discussing the state of college football and NIL. He could serve a number of roles: linebacker coach, defensive line, defensive backs, defensive coordinator, or special teams coordinator. It would be surprising if Snyder’s name was not on a 2026 United Football League coaching staff.
Greg McMahon, Special Teams Coordinator/Tight Ends Coach
Greg McMahon was a huge addition to the staff when he was hired by the Gamblers in 2022. He has spent the better part of the last 4 decades coaching special teams. This included a Super Bowl victory with the New Orleans Saints. He announced his retirement following the 2021 season after his fifth season with LSU. Despite this retirement, he was hired by the Gamblers for 2022.
McMahon was yet another coach who jumped to the XFL, joining the Houston Roughnecks for the 2023 season. Despite his previous retirement after the spring season, it was announced that McMahon would join Tulane University. He would be replaced prior to the 2025 season, and as of right now, McMahon is available for a potential return to the Gamblers with Sumlin.
Gordon Shaw, Offensive Line
Gordon Shaw has decades of experience coaching offensive line and was another big-time hire for Sumlin. Shaw had spent time with him previously at the University of Houston and actually stuck after Sumlin left for Arizona. As far as I can tell, Shaw has not been hired after the 2022 season with Sumlin. He is an older coach who could find a job coaching spring ball more attractive than a full-time college coaching job. It would not be shocking to see Shaw return to the Gamblers.
David Beaty, Co-Offensive Coordinator/Wide Receiver Coach
David Beaty has spent the vast majority of his career coaching in Texas, although a bulk of that time was as a High School coach. From 1994-2005, he coached High School Football before being hired by Rice. He spent two years at Rice before moving on to Kansas.
He would spend the next five seasons bouncing back and forth between Rice and Kansas. He spent three years with Texas A&M, and in 2019, assisted Texas as a consultant. Spending nearly 30 years coaching in Texas certainly doesn’t hurt the popularity of hiring him.
Beaty is currently back in Texas as the head coach of Denton High School after spending two seasons coaching wide receivers for Florida Atlantic. Perhaps he can pull double duty and assist the Gamblers in some capacity. If not, the UFL would be smart to try to, at the very least, give out free tickets to his students.
J.D. Runnels, Co-Offensive Coordinator/Running Backs Coach
It appears that Runnels is currently still available as well. He was previously hired as the Head Coach for an Oklahoma-based team, but the team never got off the ground. To my knowledge, he is not currently coaching anywhere. He could be a great addition to the staff once again.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Redman
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisville_Cardinals_football_statistical_leaders
https://gocards.com/honors/athletics-hall-of-fame/chris-redman-/14
https://twitter.com/itschris_redman?s=21
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