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I thought they were mediocre. Just look at the surrounding seasons for the Giants. I think the OP is right in that no one really views the 2007 as true champions, just a team that got lucky. Heck, even nfl.com recently put together a story ranking the best Patriots Superbowl teams, and 2007 was #1.
I can't speak for any other fanbase or any other fan, but for me, the 2007 loss had to be the single most painful moment in my sports-watching history, and that includes SB20 against the Bears, Bucky effing Dent, and Bill effing Buckner. Don't get me wrong, the Holocaust was worse and all, but that was, to me, the Worst Thing Ever To Happen In Sports.
That said: They won. We lost. They did not "get lucky." Luck plays its part in every game, and every team is paid in part for how it manages risk (under various guises... clock management, the 2-point-conversion decision, 4th and 1 calls, self-inflicted safeties, etc.)
It doesn't matter really how we choose to remember it because we're not on the team.
But for the team itself those Giants SBs are part of the whole tapestry of what's happened in the past. The Patriots are extremely robust against the temptation to believe that the past predicts the future.
However, painful though they might have been, the SBs against the Gintz constituted a test for BB/TFB's will to win. In the immediate sense they failed that test. Success breeds success and failure breeds failure. They both learned at heart what BB has always preached: that the past does not predict the future.
BB has maximized our chances to win the SB throughout his tenure, with the obvious understanding that playing in 8 SBs will likely result in a certain number of SB trophies, unless you're Buffalo or Minnesota (or until recently, Denver.)
His understanding that you have to take seriously wiping the slate clean has been a great advantage. TFB/BB's ability to rebound after losing 2 to win another 2, and soon, possibly, 3... is testament to the toughness of this franchise's character.
Chalking the losses up to "luck" is a satisfying way to talk about losses, but I am certain there are Seattle and Atlanta fans who rely, in part, on the same narrative (with the predictable "it's all fixed" and "they cheat" narratives complementing the argument from probability.)











