The head coaches of the teams that lose the AFC and NFC conference championship games are those that are the head coaches in the Pro Bowl.
Through Super Bowl XLII, there have been five head coaches to coach two different teams to a Super Bowl (Don Shula, Mike Holmgren, Bill Parcells, Dick Vermeil, Dan Reeves) but there has not been a head coach that has won a Super Bowl with two different teams.
Bob Stoops, Oklahoma won a national championship in his second season
There are usually several different coaches. All teams have 1 head coach who organizes the entire team under the General Manager. There will usually be 2-3 assistant coaches who deal with forwards or defense. To my knowledge all teams carry a goaltending coach to work exclusively with goalies.
As of right now the Buffalo Bills have had 15 different head coaches.
Since 1933, the Steelers have had 16 different head coaches.
Generally, it is the head coaches of all the teams. Coaches can nominate players from their team, but cannot vote for those players.
everyone involved gets a ring. except fans; that would be absurd.
Hank Vasconcellos was the head coach of the team for those four years.
The number of assistant coaches varies from team to team but here is what I understand the standard most teams carry. There are two assistant coaches on the bench along with the head coach. One assistant is for offense and the other for defense. There is also a goaltending coach who watches the game from a pressbox, "bird's eye" view and sometimes does doubles as the video coach. There is also a strength and conditioning coach. I have heard of teams carrying additional coaches for developing propects and are assigned to the minors and junior teams.
5 coaches have won championships as the Lakers head coach. John Kundla won 5 NBA titles and a NBL championship. Bill Sharman & Paul Westhead each won 1 title. Pat Riley won 4 titles and in two different stints, Phil Jackson won 5 titles.
There are different types of football coaches: offensive, defensive and special teams. Within each discipline, there are typically position coaches (o-line coach, d-line coach, etc.) who work with the respective lead coach for that side of the ball. The head coach is in charge of all the other coaches and manages most of the responsibilities for the development of the football team and playbook.