Yeah, we could very well be a better team next year and not have anywhere near the success. I'm predicting that to be the case. A shame we couldn't steal a SB this year. I'm already mentally ready for that. I know getting to the SB requires alot of luck. Chance of us getting that luck 2 years in a row is extremely unlikely. Just focus on upgrading the OL and offense and whatever happens happens I guess.
That's the heartbreaking part. I don't know whether people are just coping, but teams are never getting back after losing the SB unless they are a part of a dynasty, i.e always in the run, like the Pats and the Chiefs, and i'm not just talking about the following season.
One of the reasons is the whiplash of getting so close, and having to start all over again. The Pats had an incredibly easy schedule, a win streak of 17 games out of 18, an almost legendary defense that would have been hailed as historic if Maye and the offense weren't historically bad (the worst points per drive of a SB team since 2001), impossibly good injury luck with every single important player available for the SB, and convenient injuries to the other team, Collins out for the Texans, Nix out for the Broncos, and still couldn't cross the finish line.
They will never get such an easy schedule, injury luck, as weak a series of opposing QB's, and yes, i include Darnold as well, or such an incredible defensive run. Imagine if someone told you the defense will allow 12 points on Seattle's drives, 99,9% of people would be certain the Pats won. And yet Maye gifted them 17 points off of turnovers.
A decent, not good, not great, performance by the QB and the offense would have been enough to have a winning chance with such a good defense and they couldn't even muster that, scoring 0 points for basically 50 minutes. And despite ALL of that, they were down only 12 points with 9 minutes remaining, and the ball near midfield until Maye torpedoed every chance.
People will only start to realize what a missed opportunity this was 4-5 years down the line. SB opportunities don't grow on trees, you usually have only one shot in your career and you have to take it. Brees, Rodgers, Flacco and Stafford did, Marino, Bledsoe, Kaepernick, Goff, Burrow didn't. For the vast, vast majority of QB's (which are a very small percentage overall) that make it to the SB, they never get a do-over. Brees had terrible luck in the playoffs (the Minneapolis miracle, the PI call against the Rams, etc...) but he can sleep soundly because he played well in the one opportunity he had and brought New Orleans a championship. The opposite is true for someone like Goff.
Seattle was there for the taking. Being up only 12 while we played so badly should have bitten Seattle on their ass, but we never took advantage. Even though people will probably dislike me for saying it, it's far more likely Maye never gets back than otherwise. That's why this loss hurts me a lot more than the Brady losses because i was near certain Brady and Belichick are too good at their jobs not to make it back. Maye isn't, and that's not a slight on him, that's the reality of the sport. I hope the future will prove me wrong, but the way he handled the pressure of the playoffs and especially, the SB, i'm not an optimist. There are traits that you can't teach, and poise under pressure is one of those. Brady had it, Mahomes too, and they had it from the get-go. They had a lot of faults, bad games, bad passes but they never shied from the pressure and never succumbed to it. That's the most disappointing part of this playoff run. When the QB needs the OC to comfort him and give him courage in an AFCCG! of all places, that's a red flag. Nothing that happened in the SB should have been surprising after that.