PatsFans.com Menu
PatsFans.com - The Hub For New England Patriots Fans

Super Bowls aren't won on flashy free agent signings


Status
Not open for further replies.

PATRIOTSFANINPA

Pro Bowl Player
2019 Weekly Picks Winner
Joined
Dec 4, 2006
Messages
16,482
Reaction score
1,343
NFL.com news: Super Bowls just aren't instantly won in free agency

I guess the Pats might have come close in 2007,but the article is right on......all you need are a couple of not-so-much Household names in skill positions of need and you can win it all.

Thats likely to be the path that Belichick goes down only being a few minutes from winning it all with a secondary that only few people outside of NE can name the players.
 
Belichick likes depth in the roster. I think he'd go the route of taking a few decent veterans rather than paying one elite player if he has the chance. Look at what Carter was able to do for us last season. There is a lower risk with adding depth of proven veterans than poor depth with an elite player at a position.
 
I'll admit I didn't read the article, but the Pats did win the Super Bowl after landing prized free agent Roosevelt Colvin. I consider Rodney Harrison a big time catch that year too.

Sure, Colvin got hurt in like the second game, but the Pats still won.

From the Patriots perspective, most of our flashy pickups have been from trades (Moss, Welker, Dillon).
 
I,like most in here would love one of these proven studs,either on offense OR defense to come to NE.

But chances are the Pats are defending AFC Champions and may go the low profile way through FA and another offseason of dissapointment for Patriot fans who want the glamourous guys to come only to find out that lightly known player such as Jack Mehoff is the FA we sign.

Question is would you rather have one or 2 big names to use most of the cap space up? or a few WTFs who have proven to be good players on the other teams but not very well known by fans who are not consumed with knowledge of every player in the NFL?
 
Last edited:
We could use a deep threat, "household name" or not.
 
I'll admit I didn't read the article, but the Pats did win the Super Bowl after landing prized free agent Roosevelt Colvin. I consider Rodney Harrison a big time catch that year too.

Sure, Colvin got hurt in like the second game, but the Pats still won.

From the Patriots perspective, most of our flashy pickups have been from trades (Moss, Welker, Dillon).

You could add Rodney Harrison to that list as well

However the article is based on what the Super Bowl Champions had done in the offseason before their title for the past 5 years.
 
I get the point: you can't just sign a bunch of new guys to fill a ton of holes and think they'll all immediately come together cohesively. But would anyone on here seriously argue that Mario Williams (just an example) wouldn't immediately make our defense better?
 
I can think of some "flashy" free agents who have helped to win Super Bowls with their new team:

Corey Dillon (ok, he was a trade, not a free agent)
Charles Woodson
Deion Sanders (In fact, he won Super Bowls back to back years as a flashy free agent acquistion for the 49ers in 1994 and the Cowboys in 1995)
Charles Haley
Reggie White (although not immediately)
Jeremy Shockey
Jonathan Vilma (another trade)
Darren Sharper
Drew Brees (took several years)
Keyshawn Johnson (another trade)
Simeone Rice (although he was more of a flashy reclaimation project)
Marshall Faulk (another trade)
Shannon Sharpe
Rod Woodson
Plaxico Burress

A lot of flashy free agents tend to bomb or disapoint with their new teams, but there are plenty of examples of free agents or trades of flashy players who played key roles with their new team winning a Super Bowl.
 
Last edited:
I can think of some "flashy" free agents who have helped to win Super Bowls with their new team:

Corey Dillon (ok, he was a trade, not a free agent)
Charles Woodson
Deion Sanders (In fact, he won Super Bowls back to back years as a flashy free agent acquistion for the 49ers in 1994 and the Cowboys in 1995)
Charles Haley
Reggie White (although not immediately)
Jeremy Shockey
Jonathan Vilma (another trade)
Darren Sharper
Drew Brees (took several years)
Keyshawn Johnson (another trade)
Simeone Rice (although he was more of a flashy reclaimation project)
Marshall Faulk (another trade)
Shannon Sharpe
Rod Woodson
Plaxico Burress

A lot of flashy free agents tend to bomb or disapoint with their new teams, but there are plenty of examples of free agents or trades of flashy players who played key roles with their new team winning a Super Bowl.

Did you even read the article?

It is based on a trend for the past 5 years and the recent years of the NFL...not historical
 
Did you even read the article?

It is based on a trend for the past 5 years and the recent years of the NFL...not historical

I didn't read the article, but I listed a lot of flashy players acquired in free agency or via trade that won Super Bowls in the last five years including Plaxico Burress, Drew Brees, Charles Woodson, Darren Sharper, and Jonathan Vilma.

Besides, the last 5 years is such an arbitrary number. The last few years there hasn't been many big name free agents because of the uncapped year and the lack of a lockout. There hasn't been a free agent class like this one in a decade. Prior to this year, the only truly flashy free agent that I can think of being available in free agency is Julius Peppers in the last 2-3 years. Oh yes, Nmandi Asomougha.

So I agree with the premise of the article. Because over the last 5 years there has been very few flashy free agents, none of the non-existent flashy free agents helped a team win a Super Bowl. Seriously, the article is flawed when it doesn't acknowledge that over the last few years there hasn't been a lot of flashy free agents.

In fact, some of the flashy free agents listed in the article were crapshoot QBs like Matt Cassel and Kevin Kolb who neither started more than one season when they were acquired and neither were free agents (both were trades). Ignoring the fact they weren't free agents, the only reason they were flashy was because they were QBs. Any other position and they wouldn't have netted what the teams traded them got nor gotten huge QBs. They were just potential franchise QBs in a QB starved league.

I'm glad I didn't read the article before I responded because it is a weak arsed article with incorrect information and a major point ommitted (free agency over the last five years has been devoid of marquee talent unlike this one).

Personally, I don't think getting flashy free agents guarantee much of anything, but plenty have helped teams win Super Bowls. There is no magic formula on this. Some marquee free agents pan out great. Some fail miserably.
 
Last edited:
I agree we don't need to go the Philly Eagles route , but people wake up we have not won the super bowl since 2004.If we get jags again we will be very competitive but fall in the play-offs like we have been doing lately. Since the team refuses to draft pass rushers early , and has an abominable record drafting wide receivers a single piece like Mario Williams or Wallace could be difference we are lacking.
 
Jeez, the Patriots were in the Superbowl this season and the no.1 seed in the AFC for the playoffs, no.1 seed the previous season too. There is another Superbowl coming if they keep playing to that level.
 
No, Superbowls are won with good players and coaching. Good players tend to get payed eventually. Just because Brady, Vince and Mankins never actually made it to the FA market it doesn't mean they weren't "flashy, big money" signings. They became among the highest paid players at their positions.
 
**HOMER ALERT**

You can tell me that, but I'll stick with my belief that if this team adds Mario Williams, we'll be doing big things in the S.B for the next couple years.
 
**HOMER ALERT**

You can tell me that, but I'll stick with my belief that if this team adds Mario Williams, we'll be doing big things in the S.B for the next couple years.


I am not sold on getting Williams or any other big name free agent, but I don't buy that getting a marquee free agent can't be the missing component of a Super Bowl run.

The article is just flawed especially when some of the best examples of flashy free agents weren't free agents at all and were back up QBs who got some playing time because the guy they played behind were injured and the teams that traded for them gambled on what they showed in short spurts as a starter would translate to what they were as full time starters and franchise QBs. The gamble in both cases didn't pay off although it paid off far more for the Chiefs.
 
I mentioned in another thread, if you take the time to go back and study the last 10 offseasons, I would highly expect the 12 playoff teams from the previous year to have less cap space on average than the teams sitting at home in January. Those playoff teams would probably have free agents that need re-signing. (it stands to reason that a playoff team would have more talent, therefore costing more money before free agency even begins)

How often is it that a top-level team has the cap space to keep their key players PLUS sign someone like Mario Williams or Vincent Jackson?

I'm not suggesting that we MUST bring in an elite player, but the Super Bowl/free agent history isn't black and white.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.


Tuesday Patriots Notebook 4/16: News and Notes
Monday Patriots Notebook 4/15: News and Notes
Patriots News 4-14, Mock Draft 3.0, Gilmore, Law Rally For Bill 
Potential Patriot: Boston Globe’s Price Talks to Georgia WR McConkey
Friday Patriots Notebook 4/12: News and Notes
Not a First Round Pick? Hoge Doubles Down on Maye
Thursday Patriots Notebook 4/11: News and Notes
MORSE: Patriots Mock Draft #5 and Thoughts About Dugger Signing
Matthew Slater Set For New Role With Patriots
Wednesday Patriots Notebook 4/10: News and Notes
Back
Top