By that logic, Cowher - who you hyped up earlier - should have been gone well before 2005/winning a SB ...jeckle_and_heckle wrote:Depends on what your goal is.
If your goal is to win 13 games and not be the Browns, then the sky is not falling. Lose an AFC Championship game, go home, smoke your pipe, content to be pretty darn good and, eh, not the Browns.
But guess what? When the Patriots lose an AFC Championship game they DO believe thy sky is falling. Did you see the way Bill Belichick looked at the AFC Championship trophy? Like they handed him a steaming chunk of toenail cheese.
The Broncos fired John Fox for losing Super Bowls and playoff games.
If Brown played for the Patriots and did what he did, he probably would not have started or even played in the game, and there's a good chance he'd find himself on another team next year.
If Tomlin coached in Denver, he'd be out of a job today.
For the great teams, it's Super Bowl or bust, baby.
... and isn't one of the reasons the Steelers are one of the premier franchises because of stability?
Comparisons to the Patriots, eh, no one else is the Patriots. 31 franchises are less than over the past decade and a half.
Comparisons to the Broncos. The last ten years the Steelers have been to as many SB's and won as many as Denver. Broncos missed the playoffs this year and Kubiak certainly would be back next season had he not left on his own. Need more of a track record of firing coaches other than the Fox/Kubiak situation before we can say Denver gets rid of coaches instantly if they don't win the Super Bowl.
Regardless, I generally think the Steelers organization knows what they're doing. In the AFC, the legitimate SB contenders for a while now have been the Patriots, whoever Manning brought with him and then every few years the Steelers/Ravens (mirror teams) rise to that level. Manning is obviously gone so that basically takes a competitive team out and is why I thought before the season that the AFC was NE and the Steelers would be behind them. Next season probably NE or Pittsburgh, too. That's the AFC, the other teams just make up the playoff field and never really have a chance. There's not a lot of competition. This era of the NFL has a lot of bad teams, a lot of below average teams and a lot of teams considered good because they make the playoffs that are actually average at best (look at the junk in the AFC playoffs this year, if it was 1989 the Texans not only wouldn't have won a division they wouldn't even have been a wild card team, yet that's who NE had to beat to get to the AFCCG). Especially in the AFC, there's not even a handful of possible championship teams, there's just a couple. I'd rather be the Patriots and at the top of that list, of course, but if I can't be them then I want to be the team that's next in line, always right there and essentially there when it's not the Patriots year. Or you can blow it up and possibly lose your spot in line. My thoughts, at least.