CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- When he was hired in 2011, Ron Rivera told former Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson that he only wanted to be a head coach for eight to 10 years.
But after being fired by new owner David Tepper on Tuesday, Rivera said he has no plans to walk away from the league he has been a part of as a player and coach for 33 years.
"Absolutely,'' Rivera said Wednesday when asked whether he wanted to coach again. "My intent is to coach again. I love coaching. Not just coaching because it's about winning football games, but coaching because you have an opportunity to impact young men and people. And that's what I want to do."
Rivera, who spoke for 35 minutes at his farewell news conference at Bank of America Stadium, said his goal remains to win a Super Bowl as a head coach, as he did as a player with the 1985 Chicago Bears.
He reached the title game with Carolina in 2015, losing 24-10 to the Denver Broncos.
"My biggest regret is not winning the Super Bowl,'' Rivera said.
Rivera seemed to push back at Tepper using the words long-term mediocrity to sum up the coach's tenure and Carolina's history. He reminded that despite not having consecutive winning seasons in his nine years at the helm, the Panthers won three straight NFC South titles from 2013 to 2015, something no other coach had done.
Rivera said his best coaching job came during the 2014 season, when Carolina won its final four games to win the division with a 7-8-1 record. That team went on to win a first-round playoff game before losing at Seattle in the divisional round.
"I'm proud I took over a 2-14 team and won back-to-back-to-back NFC South division titles,'' Rivera said in a five-minute opening statement. "I want to re-emphasize, I'm proud I took over a 2-14 team and won back-to-back-to-back. See the emphasis? Won three in a row.
"But do you define it by wins and losses? Or do you define it by winning the division? I get tired of hearing he couldn't win [two] years in a row. We won three years in a row. And we were the first team in the NFC South to do it, so I'm doggone proud of that.''
A message to the Carolinas pic.twitter.com/hDaZKV7Gtw
— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) December 4, 2019
Rivera believes the past two seasons would have been different if quarterback Cam Newton hadn't been injured. Carolina was 6-2 in 2018 before Newton's right shoulder injury limited his effectiveness and resulted in a seven-game losing streak.
Newton suffered a Lisfranc injury in the third preseason game this season and was shut down after aggravating the injury during a Week 2 loss to Tampa Bay.
Newton plans to have surgery, a source confirmed to ESPN.
"The biggest thing that happened the last two years that contributed to this long-term mediocrity was we had no quarterback situation settled,'' Rivera said. "If you have a settled quarterback situation, you're pretty doggone good. Our problems didn't start until when? Until our quarterback got hurt."
NFL Network was the first to report that Newton planned to have surgery.
Tepper has said a couple of times over the past month that no decision has been or would be made on Newton's future with the team until his health is determined. Newton has one-year left on his contract.
"So, at the end of the day, hopefully the young man is going to be healthy and it'll be a good sign for this team,'' Rivera said.
Rivera finished as the winningest coach (76-63-1) in Carolina history. He was the NFL Coach of the Year in 2013 and '15. He also dealt with several major off-the-field crises, including Pro Bowl defensive end Greg Hardy's domestic violence case and allegations of sexual and racial misconduct by Richardson.
He believes the way he handled those situations, along with his record, will help him land a new job.
"I've got the right kind of experience,'' Rivera said. "Having gone through the things I've gone through, been where we've been, it gives me experience. It doesn't mean I'll be better than anybody else, but it gives me perspective."
One of Rivera's favorite things during his career at Carolina was wearing T-shirts to news conferences with a message. One of his favorite sayings after losses was "missed opportunities."
He combined both to conclude this news conference, holding up a black T-shirt with the words "missed opportunities'' on the front.
"It didn't match what I was wearing,'' said Rivera, explaining why he didn't wear it. "And as I said, our greatest missed opportunity was we didn't win the Super Bowl. Thank you."