Singletary brings fire after Nolan’s firing


The former Bears linebacker gives the league seven black head coaches — a record.

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — Mike Singletary radiated an uncommon intensity during his Hall of Fame career with the Chicago Bears. He then spent a decade giving motivational speeches before getting into coaching in 2003 as Mike Nolan’s right-hand man.

With yet another season nearly lost in San Francisco, the woebegone 49ers will need every bit of intensity and motivation they can get from the former linebacker with the famously fierce eyes.

Singletary became the 49ers’ interim head coach Tuesday, replacing his coaching mentor with a vow to build on the foundation he built with Nolan — even if he only gets nine games to do it.

“Right now, the guys realize that we do have something here,” Singletary said. “To what degree, I don’t know, but we do have something special here. It’s a matter of stepping in and being able to bring it together, and that’s something I’ve done all my life.”

After the club fired Nolan seven games into his fourth season, Singletary had mixed feelings Monday night when general manager Scot McCloughan asked him to take charge. Although Singletary has interviewed for four top jobs in the NFL and another at Baylor, his alma mater, the thought of replacing Nolan made him uneasy until he spoke to the man who had just been dismissed.

“[I] looked at [Nolan] and he looked at me, and before I said a word, he said, ‘I want you to take this job,’ ” Singletary recalled.

Singletary’s appointment gives the NFL seven black head coaches, matching the most in league history. He’s the third coach to take over a club this season, joining St. Louis’ Jim Haslett and Oakland’s Tom Cable.

Singletary had been Nolan’s assistant head coach since 2005 with the 49ers (2-5), who went 18-37 in Nolan’s tenure and lost their fourth straight game Sunday to the New York Giants. McCloughan said he approached owners John and Jed York “a couple of weeks ago” with a plan to fire Nolan, who hired him in 2005 when the Yorks gave control of all football operations to a career assistant coach with no background in personnel.

When the Yorks agreed, McCloughan didn’t even wait until the 49ers’ bye next week to drop Nolan.

“I don’t think there is a right time for a decision like this,” said McCloughan, who gained decision-making authority over Nolan last winter after the 49ers’ third straight losing season under Nolan.