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Remembering DC, LB and Special Teams Coach Jeff Ulbrich

winfall

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Sep 5, 2004
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Per Wikipedia.
Ulbrich was drafted out of the University of Hawaii by the San Francisco 49ers in the third round (86th pick overall) of the 2000 NFL Draft. He only saw action in four games during his rookie season due to a right shoulder injury. He won the starting job in 2001. In 2005, he started only five games at inside linebacker before missing the remainder of the season with a torn biceps muscle. He started in 9 out of 16 games in 2006. Ulbrich took a backup role to first round pick Patrick Willis, and also a role on special teams. He was placed on injured reserve on October 19, 2009 after he suffered a concussion. Ulbrich announced his plans to retire as a result of the concussion on December 9, and he has said that he would like to become a college football coach one day.[1]

Ulbrich was hired by the Seattle Seahawks as a special teams assistant on January 29, 2010. He became the UCLA Bruins special team and linebackers coach in 2012 and helped leading the Bruins to the Pac-12 South Division Championship in his first year. One of his players, Anthony Barr led the nation in sacks with 13.5. (Another of his LBs, Myles Jack, became the first PAC-12 player ever to be named Freshman of the Year on both Offense and Defense. A third, Eric Kendricks, won the Butkus Award and was named to the NFL's All-Rookie Team).

After three years at UCLA, Ulbrich left to become the linebackers coach of the Atlanta Falcons. [3]

In the 2016 season, Ulbrich and the Falcons reached Super Bowl LI, where they faced the New England Patriots. In the Super Bowl, the Falcons fell in a 34–28 overtime defeat.[4]
 
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