"American Football League/AFL" Denver Broncos

* "American Football League/AFL" San Diego Chargers (1964 AFL season/1964–1965 AFL season/1965)

/ pastcoaching =

* NFL Tennessee Titans/Houston Oilers ()

* NFL Washington Redskins (–) [RB]

* NFL Washington Redskins (–) [OC]

* NFL New York Jets ()

* NFL Carolina Panthers (–) [TE]

* NFL Washington Redskins (–) [OC]

/ statlabel1 = Touchdown/TD–Interception/INT

/ statvalue1 = 9-10

/ statlabel2 = Yards

/ statvalue2 = 1,339

/ statlabel3 = Passer rating/QB Rating

/ statvalue3 = 68.8

/ nflnew = donbreaux/2510121

/ pfr =

/ pfrcoach =

/ dbf = BREAUDON01

}}

"Donald Carl Breaux" (born August 3, 1940) is a former American football player and coach. He played college football at McNeese State University/McNeese State College and in the American Football League (AFL). He served two stints as an assistant coach under head coach Joe Gibbs with the Washington Redskins of the National Football League.

More Don Breaux on Wikipedia.

It does lend itself to a guy who has tremendous quickness and burst. Coles ran it pretty well, too, but sometimes being quick enough to burst by a guy is the difference.

We've practiced it a lot but we waited to call it until we felt like it was the right time.

It's like a chess game. Defense is recognition. Those guys usually know us better than we know ourselves. That's why we just run the same things and give them all kinds of different looks.

It's a travesty because he was gone. I mean there was nobody on that side of the field.

At that point it's basically a punt return.

We definitely want to rush for touchdowns, and I'd say it's a little bit of a surprise that we haven't. I just have to believe that eventually, we'll do it because of Clinton's skill and our ability to get into the right scheme and right plan.

He is so physical without the ball. He does things nobody else in the league does.

We're working our way through the terminology and getting on the same page language-wise and how we're going to call things. Some of the terminology is the same, but other times it's the same word but as different meanings. But it's not going to be a problem.