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From double old to double new! The rams and tigers set a record for the youngest super bowl showdown manager

Remember last season when Super Bowl Chiefs coach Andy Reed and Pirates coach Bruce Arians set the oldest record in Super Bowl history against a manager combined? Both managers were 68 years old at the time. However, the wheel of history turns so quickly, this Super Bowl will stage a duel between two young managers, and the two managers who are less than 40 years old also make this showdown the historical record for the youngest combined age of two managers in the history of the Super Bowl.

From double old to double new! The rams and tigers set a record for the youngest super bowl showdown manager

Cincinnati Tigers coach Zach Taylor is only 38 years old this year, and this is his third season in charge of the Tigers, and in two years they have transformed from a bad signing team into a Super Bowl competition team. But he will face his former leader in the 56th Super Bowl, los Angeles Rams coach, 36-year-old Sean McVeigh. This time McVeigh had the opportunity to surpass Steelers coach Mike Tomlin as the youngest Super Bowl champion coach.

McVeigh has become the youngest super bowl manager in history, and in the 2018 season, at only 33 years old, he led the Rams to the Super Bowl, only that time they lost to the calculating Patriots, giving Brady the sixth championship ring of his career. And now the Tigers' coach Taylor was also in the Rams' lineup, when he was the Rams' quarterback coach.

From double old to double new! The rams and tigers set a record for the youngest super bowl showdown manager

"I love Zach Taylor and I'm happy for him." McVeigh said, "I think the Tigers are full of confidence across the team, just like Zach. He's very steady, very calm, and you look at the way Burrow plays, they never back down. He was always confident in his ability to react. I think they have a lot of room to grow and I'm happy for Zach. ”

Taylor gave McVeith the same compliment, joking that he could become the head coach of other teams with a cup of coffee with McVeigh. "The two years I spent working for Sean were the best two years of my life. It's fun and you'll enjoy the days you work with. ”

Either way, one of the two will make history. If the Rams win, McVeigh will be the youngest championship manager in history, and if the Tigers win, Taylor will become the first championship manager in Tigers history.

(Aibao)

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