Joey007
Pro Bowl Player
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2010
- Messages
- 18,209
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It can definitely be said that one of the things that made the defenses of the early 2000's so successful was how well they played together.
Outside of Law and Seymour, there weren't superstar, perennial pro bowl players scattered across the defense. Rather, it was a ton of very good, selfless players who all formed to play well together as a collective group.
Vrabel, Bruschi, Seymour, Law, Harrison, Willie. The list goes on. None of these guys were outsiders in the lockeroom. Even guys like Rodney who were initially, would buy in to the culture very quickly.
Now, compare them to these guys in recent years. Easley was certainly an oddball who seemed to not care about the team nor about winning. Collins also was similar to this. While less extreme, it's telling that he didn't care about getting shipped to the worst team in football. $ was obviously a way higher priority than winning to him. Chandler I believe did care about winning, and was loved in the locker room, but he was still a bit of an individual, and never seemed to show any leadership. It's now fair to wonder if Sheard is going the direction of Collins as well.
What I'm getting from all of this is that there is no doubt that Bill has been hitting on getting defensive guys in the draft with legit NFL talent. The problem is appearing to be that he's drafted players whose hearts are not as into it as they need to be. He's drafted a lot of personalities that are a bit of lockeroom outsiders. Of course money will be a priority to these guys. But if they aren't there to win, they shouldn't be in New England.
You're goal is to build a team, not collect talent. Collins, Jones, and Easley all had talent that went through the roof. But they were not helping build this into a team defense in the long run. It's not saying we're better off without them. We all know that this defense has a lot of problems right now.
I feel that Bill understands that the only thing that will keep this defense from completely quitting is to cut bait with those who aren't there to win. Simple as that. With this offense, we can win it all with a middling defense. But no offense can overcome winning with a defense who quits. These moves have been drastic, but they may have been the only options that Bill had.
Outside of Law and Seymour, there weren't superstar, perennial pro bowl players scattered across the defense. Rather, it was a ton of very good, selfless players who all formed to play well together as a collective group.
Vrabel, Bruschi, Seymour, Law, Harrison, Willie. The list goes on. None of these guys were outsiders in the lockeroom. Even guys like Rodney who were initially, would buy in to the culture very quickly.
Now, compare them to these guys in recent years. Easley was certainly an oddball who seemed to not care about the team nor about winning. Collins also was similar to this. While less extreme, it's telling that he didn't care about getting shipped to the worst team in football. $ was obviously a way higher priority than winning to him. Chandler I believe did care about winning, and was loved in the locker room, but he was still a bit of an individual, and never seemed to show any leadership. It's now fair to wonder if Sheard is going the direction of Collins as well.
What I'm getting from all of this is that there is no doubt that Bill has been hitting on getting defensive guys in the draft with legit NFL talent. The problem is appearing to be that he's drafted players whose hearts are not as into it as they need to be. He's drafted a lot of personalities that are a bit of lockeroom outsiders. Of course money will be a priority to these guys. But if they aren't there to win, they shouldn't be in New England.
You're goal is to build a team, not collect talent. Collins, Jones, and Easley all had talent that went through the roof. But they were not helping build this into a team defense in the long run. It's not saying we're better off without them. We all know that this defense has a lot of problems right now.
I feel that Bill understands that the only thing that will keep this defense from completely quitting is to cut bait with those who aren't there to win. Simple as that. With this offense, we can win it all with a middling defense. But no offense can overcome winning with a defense who quits. These moves have been drastic, but they may have been the only options that Bill had.












