Buffalo Bills interim coach Perry Fewell decided to join the New York Giants as defensive coordinator Thursday night after also weighing an offer from the Chicago Bears.
"I expect Perry to bring the same qualities that I expect from myself," Giants coach Tom Coughlin said in a statement announcing the move. "I want him to be firm, fair, honest and demanding. My expectation is that he will solidify and unify our defense and be an outstanding teacher. I want energy, enthusiasm, toughness and to make the necessary corrections and game adjustments."
"Perry is a teacher and a leader, and I thought he did an outstanding job of displaying great leadership as the interim head coach of Buffalo this season."
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Fewell also interviewed for the Bills' head-coaching vacancy, but he has said for a while that he believed he was a long shot for that position.
Fewell replaces Bill Sheridan, who was fired by Coughlin the day after the regular season ended. The Giants gave up more than 40 points in each of their last two games and 427 points for the season, ranking third from the bottom in the NFL. Only the Detroit Lions and St. Louis Rams gave up more.
Fewell and Coughlin have known each other for years.
Fewell spent five seasons as Coughlin's secondary coach with the Jacksonville Jaguars. Fewell spent the last four years as the Bills' defensive coordinator and was made their interim head coach for the final seven games of the 2009 season after Dick Jauron was fired. The Bills went 3-4 under Fewell.
Both teams struggled with injuries on defense this season. The Giants lost safety Kenny Phillips (knee), middle linebacker Antonio Pierce (neck) and tackle Jay Alford for the season and had cornerbacks Aaron Ross and Corey Webster, linebacker Michael Boley and defensive tackle Chris Canty sidelined for significant portions of the season.
The Bills had five starters go on injured reserve.
"I am ecstatic to come to work for the New York Giants," Fewell said in the statement. "It's a good football team with good defensive players, and it is a franchise known for defense."
The Bills struggled to stop the run (30th overall), but their defensive backs led the AFC with 28 interceptions and were second in the NFL behind only the Green Bay Packers. Rookie safety Jairus Byrd tied for the league lead with nine interceptions.
The Giants had 24 takeaways and 13 interceptions in 2009.
In Fewell's four years as coordinator, the Bills' defense ranked 18th, 31st, 14th and 19th in the NFL, and that was with an offense that didn't produce much or control the ball.
The year before, the Bills were fourth in the NFL in red-zone defense, allowing a touchdown on just 41.8 percent of possessions inside the 20-yard line.
Fewell coached Bears defensive backs in 2005, when the team led the NFC with 24 interceptions and cornerback Nathan Vasher and safety Mike Brown were selected to the Pro Bowl. It's one of the reasons that Bears coach Lovie Smith wanted Fewell back as coordinator.
"His defenses have consistently done a good job taking the ball away," Coughlin said.
Fewell was the St. Louis Rams' secondary coach in 2003 and 2004. He entered the NFL as the defensive backs coach for Coughlin's Jaguars in 1998 and stayed there through 2002. Jacksonville's pass defense ranked third in the NFL in 1999, and two years later, the team gave up just 13 touchdown passes.
"We brought Perry into the league in Jacksonville," Coughlin said, "and I was impressed with his thoroughness, his ability to work with the players and his absolute intent on learning all he could about his profession. He was hired as the secondary coach and he has had great experiences in St. Louis and Chicago with Lovie Smith and that system and in Buffalo with Dick Jauron, who was my original defensive coordinator in Jacksonville."
Fewell was a college coach for 13 years -- working at North Carolina, Army, Kent State and Vanderbilt -- before coming to the NFL.
"I was a young coach, and he helped develop my philosophy of the game, the discipline, the know-how, the toughness that it takes and the attention to detail," Fewell said of his time with Coughlin. "Being prepared. That is what he instilled."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.