I say Jimmy comes up short. The fact he failed to do anything more with Miami than what Shula did in his later years is a mark against him. Marino's one and only 1000 yard rusher (Karim Abdul Jabbar in 1996) happened on Jimmy's watch, but Johnson should have de-emphasized the passing game to a degree and put together a better rushing game to compliment Marino and defenses wouldn't just key on him like they always have. Abdul-Jabbar wasn't a very good RB in retrospect, he ran for over 800 yards each year from 1996-98, but with YPC of 3.6, 3.2 and 3.6 respectively. If Jimmy Johnson was such a draft genius, why didn't he work his magic in Miami like he did in Dallas by trading up to get a top five draft pick or two during his run? Sure, he brought in Patrick Surtain, Jason Taylor, Zach Thomas and Sam Madison, all very good defensive players, but his offense was virtually indistinguishable from what Shula had done in his later years there.Eagles One wrote:Jimmy Johnson deserving of HOF. He built those Cowboys' teams of the 1990s and would have won at least one more SB, had he not resigned after Jerry Jones insulting him. Tom Flores not deserving. Basically inheriting Maddon's team. Did not do anything to improve the Seahawks. Coryell no. Did not even get to a SB and basically expanded on Sid Gilman's passing oriented offense.
I also have to disagree about Flores to a degree. Sure, he failed to do anything in Seattle, but in Oakland/LA he took some of the aging remains of Maddon's teams and added to them Howie Long, Marcus Allen, Mike Haynes, Jim Plunkett, Matt Millen, Todd Christensen, Lyle Alzado, and Bo Jackson to name a few. His work with the Raiders was very impressive.