NWebster wrote:Bob Gill wrote:NWebster wrote:I'd have thought 68 Colts ... and definitely Bears in 42, they outscored their opponents 4 tobe1!
I'd take the 1941 Bears over 1942, without a doubt. Sure, they lost one game, but so did the 1942 team, in the end. And they lost at least a couple of major players after 1941: McAfee for sure, plus Standlee, I think, and maybe one or two others.
I think the Bears' 1941 team might easily be one of the ten best ever, all things considered.
Won't get a huge argument from me on that - those 40's Bears team has just incredible talent.
Placing 'Super Bowl Shuffle' as best-ever Bears team may be right (may be not) but you better think long and hard before making it your final answer. Perhaps '41
is the best! Would
love to see those two square off!!
As for my own opinion on some of these 'best-ever' franchise teams (disregarding 'post-'59', making it 'all-time'-period), there are some cases where two of them just so happen to be in the same year. For instance, as I already stated, I think
1948 is the best Browns team. I also think that the best-ever
Cardinals team was that very same year as well. This despite Cards actually winning-it-all the year before, whereas they
not winning it in '48 such the case with '78 Cowboys given nod over '77 (Cards had to deal with a Philly
blizzard, Cowboys with...the
'78 Steelers; understandable in either event). Perhaps there are some who may think Broncos & Falcons (and Vikings) for 1998, but I disagree. IMO, the 1980 Falcons (and 1969 Vikings) are 'best-ever' franchise-history-wise.
Another example of - again, in
my opinion - two best-teams-ever in a franchise both taking place the same year...the two very teams who partook in
SBIV!
And if its strictly since-1960 (ignoring '58/'59 Colts)...participants of
SBIII can be another (oh yes, I
do respect the
heck out of that Walt Michaels squad from after their 0-3 start in '81 thru the following year's 'tournament' semifinals, but 'best-ever' not quite; it's
'68, come on! Tuna's '98 installment #2, plain and simple).