INDIANAPOLIS -- Tony Dungy needed one week to decide he still wants to be an NFL coach. Now it's back to pursuing that elusive Super Bowl run.\nThe Indianapolis Colts said Monday that Dungy would return as their coach next season, ending speculation he might retire following the December death of his 18-year-old son, James.\n"I was always coming back unless I said I wasn't," Dungy said through the team .\nDungy and team president Bill Polian were en route to the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala., Monday and were unavailable for comment. The Associated Press left a phone message for team owner Jim Irsay.\nDungy's eventual decision was not a certainty.\nOne day after the Colts' shocking 21-18 loss to eventual AFC champion Pittsburgh in the playoffs, Dungy seemed genuinely conflicted about his coaching future. At one point during his final news conference, Dungy said he was 100 percent sure he would return if the Colts asked him back. Later, however, he left open the possibility of retirement, noting he wasn't sure how he would react after spending time with his family and reflecting on his son's apparent suicide. \n"My only reservation is that I really don't know how I'll react in the next few days," he said then.\nPlayers have often praised Dungy for his rapport, his approach and his beliefs.\nIt's a combination that has helped make Dungy one of the NFL's most successful coaches throughout the past decade. Dungy has beaten all 32 teams, reached the playoffs eight times, won three straight AFC South titles and taken teams to the AFC and NFC championship games.\nWhen the Colts won their first 13 games this season, the discussion centered on the possibility of an unbeaten season. During the streak, Dungy won his 100th career game less than two weeks after he turned 50.\nAfter losing to San Diego, though, Dungy took a one-week hiatus to mourn the death of his son. James Dungy was found unresponsive in his Tampa apartment Dec. 22, 2005. Two days after the funeral, Tony Dungy returned to the team, and three days later, the Colts beat Arizona 17-13 in the regular-season finale with a last-minute goal-line stand. Afterward, safety Mike Doss sprinted to the sidelines and handed Dungy the game ball.\nNow Dungy appears ready to fulfill the three-year contract extension he signed in September. That will keep him with the Colts through 2009 and give him more opportunities to chase the one glaring omission from his resume -- a Super Bowl.\n"I could walk away without it," he said last week. "That's something a lot of guys have to walk away without. But I'll do it when the time is right, and right now, I don't think the time is right"
Dungy announces return to Colts for 2006 season
Coach's contract with team extends through 2009
Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe