Coach of the Year (TV Movie 1980) Poster

(1980 TV Movie)

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6/10
Decent light drama
leczorn9 November 2004
I was going through the $1 DVD bin and saw a football movie so I bought it! This 1980 made for TV movie is about a former Chicago Bears player named Jim Branden (played by Robert Conrad) who was paralyzed in the Vietnam War and now wants to coach. The Bears won't give him a coaching job so he ends up coaching a team at a juvenile correctional school, where his nephew resides. The kids there have horrible attitudes at first and lose their first game, which is against an exquisite private school. But Branden eventually wins the respect of his players, who unify around him and work hard to win the rematch. I find the movie to be a little too predictable down the stretch but it's a decent light drama and worth the dollar. As a nice bonus, Mike Post contributes some good music. 6/10.
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4/10
I was in the football stand audience
tedmccarron16 April 2005
When this movie was made in 1980, I was a teenager in the football stands playing as part of the audience. This was done at Mooseheart, Illinois. The big letters spelling out "MOOSEHEART" at the top of the stands were covered up with a banner in the movie. The director would tell us to cheer loudly at certain points, as if a touchdown was being made. St. Charles juvenile correction center is a real place less than 30 miles from Mooseheart, although I think it may have closed down recently. During one scene, they show a black woman and a white man in the audience watching the game. Right below them, you can see my sister Noel's head (she was 11 at the time). In the VHS version, I can only see the top of her head, but when I saw it on TV in 1981 I could see her whole head and my sister Jacqui as well.

I thought the movie itself was OK for a made for TV movie. Since there's already a description of the movie here, I need not repeat it. It's worth seeing at least once.
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5/10
Did The Rock See This?
bkoganbing7 July 2007
Take away the paraplegic component of the story and what you have is an Eighties version of The Rock's Gridiron Gang from last year.

Paralyzed Vietnam veteran, Robert Conrad, left behind a career with the Chicago Bears to serve his country in Vietnam where he got the spinal wounds that left him in the wheelchair. He can't get any kind of coaching job due to his injuries. When his juvenile nephew gets himself arrested however for armed robbery and sentenced to a juvenile facility, Conrad takes on the job of athletic director of the place.

Just like in the big screen Gridiron Gang, football proves to be therapeutic for both the kids and the coach who's pretty down on himself. Conrad is fine in the part and he gets nice support from an old friend Red West who plays the warden at the juvenile center. West was a regular on Conrad's Black Sheep Squadron series. Erin Gray is Conrad's sister and Ricky Paul Goldin is the nephew.

Nothing outstanding here, but it's a decent enough made for TV film.
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2/10
Where were the acting coaches?
BrettErikJohnson11 July 2004
I don't know if this type of movie was as cliché then as it seems to be now.

Considering how many "Bad News Bears" films had already been released by 1980, however, I think that this sort of movie was already a tired idea.

A former football player is partially paralyzed in Vietnam and is confined to a wheelchair. The Chicago Bears offer him a PR job but he wants to coach. At the same time, his underage nephew is picked up for armed robbery. We are told that he has already been arrested over a dozen times before and he must now serve some hard time...which turns out to be less than a year!

Of course, the kid is actually a good kid who only needs a tough male role model in his life. The same goes for all of the kids in the detention facility. Yes...even the one locked up for attempted murder! I'm sure you already know what happens so I'll try and keep the rest of this brief.

Our protagonist becomes the coach of the kids' football team. He overcomes the delinquents' cynicism and earns their respect. His team faces off against a local high school team (yeah right!) and they get their butts kicked. Now determined more than ever to prove himself a worthy coach, he demands a rematch. Will these underprivileged, scrappy kids with hearts of gold be able to improve enough to win the rematch? Awful execution of the football sequences ruins any possibility of excitement in this film. "Coach Of The Year" should get penalized for roughing my brain. 1/10
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3/10
Predictable with bad acting
nuhc1 July 2008
Like another reviewer, my wife bought this movie as part of a 20 movie family pack. I guess you could say that this was a decent made-for-TV movie for 1980, but it is super-predictable and the acting, except for Robert Conrad, is generally sub-par. The football scenes are nothing special and seem to mainly act as filler for the movie. The movie is very dated now, but a decent remake could probably make this into a good movie. However, is that really necessary? I mean, how many "underdog sports team works together for the big game with the undefeated guys" movies do we really need? This is probably a good movie for your younger kids if you find it in the bargain bin, but a sports movie buff will find it lacking.
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1/10
Dreadful! Awful! I want my 96 minutes back!
CineTigers16 August 2005
I received this movie in a pack called "50 all-star Movies" for $18 (45 cents each). Many are good. This one was terrible. It was a hackneyed retread done 1000 times before and each time better. A crippled ex-jock is dared to coach a team made up of juvenile delinquents. They learn from him that they can make it if they play by the rules. I'm sure the kids and the locals were thrilled to be included in a "real TV movie", but I can't imagine what the folks that launched and produced this project figured they could bring to this already over beaten subject. I kept waiting to see that 'new twist' or 'new angle' but, honest, it doesn't come. Avoid this movie. Forget about the 45 cents, I want the 96 minutes of my life back.
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5/10
So-so film of returning handicapped veteran trying to help wayward youth
SimonJack27 February 2021
"Coach of the Year" is one of many films about returning Vietnam War veterans adjusting in life. A number of others also had handicapped veterans, such as Jim Brandon in this film. Robert Conrad plays the paraplegic veteran who gets a job as football coach for the juvenile boys prison in Illinois. The film is about his struggles to make a life for himself and to be accepted and lead these kids in something meaningful.

This is such a familiar plot that many may find it way over-used. If the story and screenplay were anything special, and/or the acting was superb, it might be a noteworthy film in this genre. But neither of those situations apply here. So, this is a so-so film that most people may find tolerable at best.
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10/10
Jim becomes the coach of an institute. He has a hard time getting the kids serious about football. The kids finally play and win!
cutepi123412 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Coach of the Year is a very, very funny movie. It is the best movie i have ever watched, and i think it always will be. The characters are all really sassy and say the best things ever. I love quoting this movie because of the things that are said. The kids at the institute don't get along with the coach. They call him "wheels" to be mean, but it's just silly. Andy, the coach's nephew, goes to the institute. He doesn't get along with sweetlife, another kid at the institute. They get in some fights that are all hilarious. In one fight, sweetlife says, talking about Andy's uncle "he here to take care of you?" Andy replies in a sassy tone, "i take care of myself, SWEETHEART!" This movie is the best.
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Robert Conrad in Lee Marvin's steps?
searchanddestroy-14 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
When I saw this cute little drama, I of course thought of Robert Aldrich's DIRTY DOZEN. At a very different scale, I agree...But the story of a hard boiled and somewhere kind of rebel leader who has to take in charge a bunch of outcasts in order to lead them to win, or be brilliant in something where they could be asked for...

Everything here is predictable, no surprises at all, only clichés, but it remains touching and very pleasant. Conrad is really good in this character.

I guess this kind of story around football has been made a thousand times before. But I repeat, this is worth seeing.
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