Boston College (1992–1993) Departmental recruiting coordinator / administrative assistant
Maryland (2010–2015) Director of football operations
Fran Foley (born 1961 or 1962) is an American former football player, coach, executive and administrator. He is best known for his brief stint as de factogeneral manager of the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL), a post he held from January to May 2006.
Foley began his coaching career while still attending Framingham State in 1983, serving as a volunteer football coach at Worcester Academy.[4] He then served as a graduate assistant for the Colgate Raiders in 1984, for The Citadel Bulldogs in 1985, and for the Rutgers Scarlet Knights in 1986.[5] From 1987 to 1990, Foley was an administrative assistant at Rutgers.[5]
After his four-season stint as an administrator, Foley again became a coach in 1991, joining the Boston College Eagles as an assistant working with the tight ends and placekickers.[2] After a year in the position, he served from 1992 to 1993 as a departmental recruiting coordinator for Tom Coughlin and as an administrative assistant, helping the team sign several top recruits.[1]
Foley followed Coughlin to the Jacksonville Jaguars of the National Football League (NFL) in 1994, becoming the assistant director of pro personnel for the newly-formed expansion franchise that started play in 1995.[1][2] He helped the team reach the AFC Championship in their second year of existence and helped them reach the playoffs each year from 1996 to 1999, including division championships in two of those years.[2] He received a promotion to director of pro scouting in 1997 and remained with the team through 2002.[2] Foley was hired by the San Diego Chargers as director of pro scouting in 2003.[6] He helped them win the division title in his second season with the team, their first since 1992.[2]
After three seasons with the Chargers, Foley was hired by the Minnesota Vikings as vice president of player personnel on January 26, 2006.[7] He also became the team's de facto general manager, although he was not all-powerful in the team's personnel department, being part of what was called the "Triangle of Authority", which featured him, coach Brad Childress and executive Rob Brzezinski working together to make decisions.[8][9][10][11]
In mid-April, less than three months into his tenure, his hiring was put under scrutiny when it was revealed Foley's media biography gave "embellished" details about his playing career at Framingham State, which Foley called a "clerical error".[12] Soon after, it was revealed that his biography also overstated information about his coaching stints at Colgate, The Citadel and Rutgers, and his roles with the Jacksonville Jaguars.[5] He said that he did "nothing to misrepresent what I've done," but a Star Tribune journalist called it a "lie" and asserted that "He did everything to misrepresent what he had done".[13]
Three days after the 2006 NFL draft, when the Vikings made several selections that were widely criticized, the team announced that Foley had been fired, just three months into his tenure.[14][15] He sued the team for wrongful termination, claiming that he had only left the Chargers due to his Vikings contract being three years guaranteed, and that the Vikings in firing him had breached that contract.[14] His lawyer also claimed that he had been "unfairly defamed ... he wants people to understand that he's always been honest."[16] They reached an undisclosed settlement in August 2006.[16] Despite the criticism his draft selections received, a 247Sports piece from 2009 noted that "perhaps Foley wasn't so bad after all", stating that five of the team's six selections ended up being quality starters.[8]
After his stint with the Vikings, Foley spent time as a development director at the Baptist Health Foundation.[2] In 2010, he joined the Maryland Terrapins football team as Director of Operations, working with Randy Edsall whom he had been with on two prior coaching staffs.[2] He was relieved of his duties along with Edsall in October 2015.[17]