Spaulding wrote:
24_Guy wrote:
Actually the Patriots did miss the playoffs that year without Brady. But regardless, in comparing Lovie to Belichick, you are setting the bar really high, you have to admit. Not only is Belichick considered one of the great all-time coaches, but he has had a first-ballot hall-of-fame QB all these years, and he has an owner that consistently procures talented players for him on both sides of the ball. Lovie does not have those advantages - not even close.
And actually, the most consistent thing Belicheck has done lately is go 8-0 at home and then lose game 1 of the playoffs
I would hate to see your wrath if Lovie pulled off a stunt like that.
To one of your other points though, which talented players do the Bears have that aren't playing to the best of their abilities?
I didn't start the comparison. It's not a fair one.
Not sure on Harris and Urlacher. I expected Cutler and Olsen to be further/farther? along, Hester. Maybe Forte, Knox.
I don't know... Harris plays on one leg, Urlacher is on the downhill side, but yet is considered in the running for DPOY. Cutler and Olsen, I don't expect Lovie to help in the manner on the offensive side. Not sure what Olsen's ceiling is anyway, he was (allegedly) shopped around last summer and (allegedly) nobody wanted him. Hester shouldn't be a WR, Knox is a little guy drafted in the 5th round from a small school, Forte is pretty good both running and receiving... OK my rambling aside, I guess there's no way to know how these players would gel under a different coach.
But Belichick not withstanding, who do you think might be better? In the last few weeks, I saw McCarthey waste the last 4 minutes off the clock and running out of time during the final drive in NE, I saw Pete Carroll kick a FG from the 8-yd line down 28-0 in the third quarter, I saw Andy Reid do something bizarre (can't remember what), and I saw Tomlin use both red flags in the first quarter, one of them on the first play, the kick-off return, to try to get 12 yards of field-position back.
Andy Reid lost at home in round one with supposedly the greatest offense known to man. Sean Payton showed his ass, big time, in Seattle. Coughlin missed the playoffs altogether, even though a division rival in Dallas wet the bed. Caldwell called a TO to help the Jets get into field goal range in the closing seconds.
Apparently I'm feeling quite verbose right now, but you get the point. It's not like Lovie is a dope in a league of geniuses.