No offense kontra, but I find it comical when you twenty somethings make allowances...
Yeah. Thanks for the thinly veiled potshot. Using my age to try to disprove my argument is pretty weak if you ask me. But whatever floats your boat I guess...
In 2005 we embarassed ourselves in Denver. It wasn't the end of anything, although some predicted as much because we obviously were destined to threepeat. Then in 2006 it was really ovah as the much maligned regular season dynasty pulled our pants down in the second half of a championship game and spanked us on their way to a ring of their own.
What followed was really telling. We won the next 18 in a row before finally losing a game by literally a hair at the least opportune time. Of course we also lost a second first round pick in the upcoming draft that the value nut had been stockpiling, but I digress...
Except you forget to mention one thing: we were in all of these games. No single game was so far out of our reach to the point where it got embarassing. Denver, IMO, was not embarassing at all. Indy was only embarassing because we blew a lead. And I don't think I need to explain Super Bowl XLII. Those two games were embarassing, but for different reasons. This blowout loss to the Ravens was particularly embarassing partly because the team couldn't get out of it's own way (nothing different here from the entire regular season, just about every time we faced a good team with one exception) and partly because we were never really a threat to a team playing without the full services of it's starting quarterback. Essentially, we were very fortunate to be 10-6 this season. We could have very easily been 9-7 at the most, 8-8 at the least.
Following season was perceived as must have revenge for that totally unacceptable and embarassing performance. Only we lost the franchise in the first quarter of week 1 and that stiff Belichick could only squeeze 11 wins out with a backup who hadn't played since HS...while if he'd had Jeff Garcia or Daunte Culpper on speed dial we'd certainly have avenged the horror that was 2007...
This is another problem. Because I think Belichick made some mistakes this season does not automatically mean that I think he's a stiff. Now, perhaps I'm not reading this correctly and, if I am, correct me. However, if I'm not, then I would love to see you provide some sort of concrete evidence of where I've called Belichick a "stiff" or anything remotely of the sort.
This year after trading the Walmart replacement for #34, when the last of the too old and slow players the madden generation had been demanding they replace for like 3 years finally departed enmass, and it underscored the alternate interpretation of the old adage you can't coach speed...a fanbase tormented by no parades they can't even be bothered to attend anymore in 5 long years had had it. The kicker was trading a 30 year old DE they couldn't extend for a top 10 pick in the first draft with a rookie contract cap...like somehow what happens after 2011 matters...
Actually, the kicker was trading that 30 year old DE without a viable back-up option to come in there behind him. The day Seymour was traded, I came into the thread and posted that the only way that I can see Belichick trading such a dominant DE for the two gap scheme (outside of te first round pick two years away) was that he must have had a viable option (my guess was Pryor) that impressed him in training camp and preseason, enough so that he could warrant trading him away and leaving a huge gap in the defense. Turns out I was wrong, unless of course you want to try to make an argument about how Jarvis Green was a force in both the passing game and the running game. However, I'm not sure how you could do that since Green was regularly handled by a single blocker which would allow another guy to come out and isolate the OLB. Since you seem to think that BB is infallible in the way he carries himself and the team, I wouldn't expect you to understand that trading away such a presence without having a dependable back-up plan is anything but "genius". Face it Mo, in the short term this was a horrible move.
You guys need to stop making assumptions beyond this: Belichick is smarter that any of you...so is Kraft. They've forgotten more about the game and the business of football than any of us fans will ever know, no matter how savvy some of us truly believe outselves to be. Doesn't mean we can't talk about stuff. Just means we should focus more on trying to understand why they do what they do as opposed to patting ourselves on the back for being smart enough, or shortsighted enough to see all of their mistakes in hindsigh or based on our own short term view of what constitutes success...
You really should read the rest of my posts instead of just reading the negative stuff and bashing your head off of the keyboard...
And yes, it all starts and ends with Brady and his health, but his health can't be good for long if he keeps absorbing shots like he did last year. Personally? I have faith in Belichick to make the right moves this offseason and am looking forward (already) to 2010.
In the end, I can criticize the coach and the team's moves all I want (and most of it isn't hindsight, by the way. Though I do understand how it's more convenient for you to say that). I'm a fan. Fans pay the ticket prices. Fans buy the merchandise. Fans spend their extra time watching the games. Extreme fans take to using the rest of their time posting on forums. As such, I have earned the right point out the wrongdoings of the coaching staff and front office just as much as I have the right to applaud the good moves they make as well. That's how I can criticize Bill in one paragraph and then put full support behind him in another.
After all, next week it's those scoffed at regular season successes kicking off in their second superbowl this decade. Coming off a one and done wildcard loss to a perrenial playoff fraud last season...not to mention getting kicked to the curb at home by the same frauds the season before... Of course there were lots of Indy fans who over the last few seasons had come to the conclusion that it was clearly time to move on from Dungy and his lap dog assistant and that aging and unimaginative OC not to mention the egomaniacal GM who let Harrison age out without a replacement and was picking third rounders who walked away from the game after their rookie seasons and was now busting on such critical selections as their LT of the future.
Turns out he's still a genius...
This does not disprove my point at all. Manning and the Colts are going to the Super Bowl because they have the most complete team that they have ever had since he became quarterback. Manning has a great first option (Wayne), the second best second option in the league (Clark), and viable third and fourth threats (Garcon and Collie) one of whom can take their man vertical and stretch the field. He also has a pretty damn good O-Line as well as a defense that finally learned how to stop the run (one thing I'll give Caldwell credit for is beefing up the DT positions on the defense, something which Dungy apparently tried as hard as he could not to do). Compare that to this year's Pats team: Brady coming off of injury (I expect him to be better in 2010), injuries and age on the O-Line (Neal), a special teamer as the third "threat", lack of TE's due to said deficiencies on the O-Line, a D-Line taken out of it's game due to Seymour's absense (his side became easy to run against, his absense in effect allowed guys to bear down on Wilfork and make him less of a factor), and a LB corps that could stand to see improvements at three spots. Looking at the comparisons, it should be no suprise to anybody that Pats fans are now holding on to regular season accomplishments while the Colts find themselves in the Super Bowl.