Bob Gill wrote:Oh, I wouldn't agree with that either. I assume you know more about this kind of stuff than I do, but for what it's worth, I do think of Landry as more of an innovator. That's all.
I think Landry is unique in that he was influential on both sides of the ball. Even the greatest coaches usually focused on either offense or defense. Some random thoughts:
*I don't consider Parcells to be among the greatest coaches.
*I would put Belichick maybe at #1 over Paul Brown, at worst #3 behind Brown & Lombardi. I think Belichick is unquestionably the best coach of his era, which you can't really say about any other coach other than perhaps Brown & Lombardi. I always thought Gibbs was better than Walsh...achieved the same with less talent and multiple schemes.
*I don't really care about Coaching Tree, or lack thereof. The concept itself is subjective...I recently saw an article that put Sean McVay on the Bill Walsh Coaching Tree...that is some Adam & Eve lineage. Coaches who have staffs with high turnover have a distinct advantage over coaches with stable staffs
*Chuck Noll is an interesting case. He took over the worst franchise in NFL history in 1969 and made it the best franchise of the 70's. Possibly the greatest achievement of any NFL coach in history. I don't think you can compare him to Belichick and say Noll had a shorter run of success and at the same time say that Noll operated in a time when controlling player movement was much easier...to me, those are divergent thoughts. Noll would be expected to have a shorter run of success than Belichick, because he can't replace his players as easily as Belichick.