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The quote was that the Krafts think they know football. That’s the problem. Unless you’re Al Davis or George Halas, there’s less than a 1% chance a billionaire businessman knows football. But the issue is that some owners don’t realize this, and fall victim to the Dunning Kruger effect. Jerry Jones and Woody Johnson are obvious examples here. And it is completely clear Kraft was heading down that path until Belichick started winning. The hope was (and the stories put out to the media from the Krafts indicated) that Kraft learned the errors of his way and let the football people make the football decisions. In reality, that only lasted as long as Belichick was winning. Once he stopped winning, the Krafts appear to have reverted back to Jerry Jones and Woody Johnson status. The Krafts don’t deserve some slack precisely because we have seen this behavior from them before.No owner knows football. It's not their job. It's an unfair rap.
In about a week we will know if they know enough to put their trust into someone else.
The judgement the first time was flawed. OK. They made a mistake. But they knew enough to stay out of BB and Brady's way for 6 Super Bowls.
So they deserve some slack until we know what they do.
Stan Kroenke knows nothing about football. But he is smart enough to know that he knows nothing about it. He hired Les Sneed, who he realized did know something about football, and let him run operations while Kroenke worked the non-football elements. That’s worked out pretty well. That’s what I want to see the Krafts do. I’ll even go back to James Orthwein. He’s bad news around these parts justifiably for trying to move the team. But from a football perspective, he also realized he knew nothing about the game, so hired the best guy on the market in Parcells and let him run the show and stayed out of it.












