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Cameron bolts: Offensive coordinator named new head coach of Dolphins

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buy this photo Chargers Offensive Coordinator Cam Cameron has been hired as new head coach for the Miami Dolphins. <br><small><B> North County Times File Photo </B></small> <br><A HREF="https://secure.townnews.com/nctimes.com/forms/photo_services/linkorder.php?des= Chargers Offensive Coordinator Cam Cameron has been hired as new head coach for the Miami Dolphins." target="new">Order a copy of this photo</A> <!— <br><A HREF=" ">More of this story</A> —> <br> <A HREF="http://www.nctimes.com/news/photogallery/" target="new">Visit our Photo Gallery</A> <br> <hr width="250">

SAN DIEGO -- The Chargers' high-octane offense helped motor Cam Cameron to Miami.

The Dolphins named Cameron, the Chargers' offensive coordinator since 2002, as their head coach on Friday. Cameron, who had also interviewed with the Atlanta Falcons and Arizona Cardinals, was the club's choice after it considered at least 13 candidates.

"We're excited for him," Chargers coach Marty Schottenheimer said. "He is a terrific football coach and a terrific person. He richly deserves this in my opinion, and he has done it in the right way."

There was little askew with Cameron's No. 4-ranked offense this season, setting a team mark with 492 points and pacing the NFL in scoring. Blessed with a powerful running game behind league MVP LaDainian Tomlinson, All-Pro tight end Antonio Gates' skills and Pro Bowl quarterback Philip Rivers' precision passing, Cameron helped the team to its second AFC West title in three years and an NFL-best 14-2 regular-season showing.

When the Chargers' season abruptly ended with last Sunday's loss to New England, the Dolphins pounced on Cameron, summoning him for a second interview on Wednesday.

After marathon meetings with the team's top brass, Cameron agreed to a four-year contract.

"He definitely is committed to winning … and we are committed to winning, whatever it takes, whatever it costs, we want to win," Dolphins owner Wayne Huizenga told the Miami media. "He wants to win and he wants to be successful. He has the same driving passion that we do."

It marks Cameron's first head-coaching stint in the NFL; he was also the Redskins' quarterbacks coach from 1994-96. He directed the Indiana University program from 1997-2001, going 18-37.

Cameron, 45, was credited with the development of ex-Charger Drew Brees, the All-Pro quarterback now in New Orleans, and Rivers.

"I think he played a major role," Schottenheimer said.

Now Cameron undertakes a massive undertaking in resurrecting the floundering Dolphins.

"It's my job to make this personnel work and find a way to score," Cameron said.

Rivers said Cameron is the man to do it.

"Cam has had a tremendous impact on me as a young quarterback," said Rivers, who threw 22 touchdowns and nine interceptions in his first year as a starter.

"He brings a lot of knowledge with both the game-planning and the system that he runs. He had a lot to do with my success this year."

Cameron replaces Nick Saban, who went 6-10 in his second of two years in Miami before fleeing for Alabama. Among the reasons Miami turned to Cameron is its dreadful offense, which averaged 16.3 points per game, its lowest output since 1967.

Schottenheimer expects Cameron's innovative ways to change that.

"I used to stick my head in the (offensive ) room down there and wonder what we were doing," Schottenheimer said of Cameron. "And he always had a good answer."

Even when Cameron shocked Schottenheimer last month, when the Chargers were perched at the Denver 4. It was time for some trickery, by the name of the "Bumerooski".

"I said, 'You got to be out of your mind,' " Schottenheimer said. "And he said, 'No, Coach, this is a team you can run it against. They are not a penetrating team, they move laterally, and that'll enable this play to work.' He knows what he is doing."

Rivers adds there's more to the creative Cameron than "X's" and "O's".

"He's a great motivator," Rivers said. "He has a great understanding of the game in all phases. He really has the demeanor about him that exudes a lot of confidence. I think his players feed off of that."

Schottenheimer has done preliminary work in filling Cameron's post. He will consider offensive assistants on his staff, including James Lofton (receivers), Rob Chudzinski (tight ends) and Clarence Shelmon (running backs).

"Right now, we're going to look at all of our options," Schottenheimer said.

"We'd like to keep the system in place. It is sound and has proven to be successful. We don't want our players to have to learn a new system.

"I'm going to sit back and not rush into anything. I'm going to look in-house first. We have our work cut out to replace Cam."

Lofton, according to Schottenheimer, is out of the running for the Raiders' head-coaching vacancy. Chudzinski was granted permission recently to speak with the Browns regarding their offensive coordinator opening.

Another possibility could be Schottenheimer's son, Brian, the New York Jets' offensive coordinator. He also interviewed for the Miami job before pulling his name from consideration. It's unclear if the Jets would allow the Chargers' former quarterbacks coach to return in what would be a lateral move.

Contact staff writer Jay Paris at jparis8@aol.com.

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