jeckle_and_heckle wrote:Reaser wrote:
On the other hand, I don't really think the sky is falling in Pittsburgh.
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.
Here's the thing about Fox, though: When Denver hired him in 2011 (after Gary Kubiak, Elway's first choice, was unavailable), he was coming into a locker room that had been poisoned by that two year old McDaniels (who graduated from the Belichick School of Public Relations). Fox was the opposite of that. Maybe Elway just brought him in to change the atmosphere for a few years while expectations were low, and then bring someone better in to take Denver to the next level.
However, a funny thing happened: A man named Tim Tebow led the Broncos to an 7-4 record after a 1-4 start, and they backed into the AFC West Title. Then, for an encore, this inaccurate passer led them to (gasp) a playoff win over Tomlin's Steelers. That started to raise the expectations again in a city that has seen a lot of playoff football in their history.
However, nobody was thinking about what was coming next.
On March 19, 2012, things got real in the Mile High City. The Sheriff himself, Peyton Manning, walked through that door. And, at that point, I believe that John Fox was no longer the right man to be the coach of the Broncos.
Now, Elway kept him on, and they won 13 games and got HFA, but I think that Elway was upset at Fox because he didn't try to go for the win at the end of regulation in the Baltimore game.
Then, the next year, Fox rides #18 to another 13-3 record and a Super Bowl, but he doesn't have his team prepared well at all for anything, including the crowd noise. The Broncos fall 43-8, and Elway becomes increasingly happy with Fox. That may have led to the playoff loss the next year, and Fox's decision to throw in the towel and leave for Chicago after that game. He isn't the guy that can meet high expectations. Also, after his heart problem during the 13 season, I don't know why he is coaching anymore.