74_75_78_79_ wrote: ↑Mon Jul 28, 2025 9:16 am
ShinobiMusashi wrote: ↑Sun Jul 27, 2025 8:57 am
Marino for me falls into the Barry Sanders category. I hate to talk negative about their careers because they were amazing and two of my favorites to watch, but these guys careers have been overly romanticized and they are built up now like they were all time bests at their positions and there's just this litany revision history excuses for why they never won Championships. Those guys were special attraction entertaining players that were fun to watch but neither was ever going to ever carry any teams to a title, they just weren't cut from that cloth, but at the same time they were larger than life superstars that overshadowed whatever teams they played for, both had freakish once in a lifetime talent, almost to the point where it was like they existed on a separate plane from the rest of their respective teams. That is not a championship winning dynamic for a sport where it's 11 vs 11 on the field.
Reading this article makes me cringe a bit...
https://johnbaranowski.wordpress.com/20 ... an-marino/
I never declared Dan as being totally blameless in his playoff/SB-win(s) shortcomings. You win as a team, you lose as a team. But reading that, and further details and examples given, tightens it up some for someone who would still like to see him in a Legandary light, #13 did want to pass the ball as much as possible even if wanting to do so too much, this I already knew. Yes, it would have been nice had Steelers got him in '83. But I always did opine that getting Phil Simms would have, perhaps, maybe been just as fine.
Barry Sanders didn't want any other RB in the backfield with him. I always felt winning a championship with just one back in the backfield would be problematic. You need to have that blocking back, I'd think, along with that other back being a power-back to complement things. Most of his career involved he being pulled from the backfield in goal-line situations. And, at least early on, when breaking away he would get caught from behind just before making the end-zone (if memory serves well, I do remember him greatly improving that in the end). Juking-out tacklers, causing that ACL to Rod Woodson in the '95 opener, seemed to be his specialty. Great highlight-reel stuff, a 1st Ballot HOFer, but perhaps lacking certain things as already aforementioned thus preventing him from being on Jim Brown's level (as his own father would opine to him) along with those other 'All-Time Great' RBs of that very tier. He being all by himself in the backfield not, really, a recipe for a team winning a World Championship. Much to blame throughout for Detroit's '90s playoff shortcomings, overall more-so than Sanders. Why ever have a run-n-shoot in the first place?? #20, sadly, not completely blameless either (-1 yard vs GB in that playoff game
such a haunting stat).
Dan wanted to pass more often than maybe he should have, Barry wanted to be all alone in the backfield, and Peyton Manning wanted to do-it-all, be the OC & GM as well, along with - without even having to say anything - influencing management to "not dare" pick a QB ever in any of the early rounds. I once felt that his 'artillery' in that old he-vs-Brady debate was the fact that Indy fell all the way to 2-14 in the year he was out as opposed to the Pats finishing 11-5 with Cassel. But some of you in here helped me flip that logic.
It's all about winning championships. Tom Brady was fine-enough with stronger backup QBs and not feeling he having to do everything. Peyton could have very easily had a zero titles career if the wind blew just right. 2006, though a deserved title to me, had a bit of that "stars-aligned" vibe to it, and 2015...well, you know. I'm glad #18 ended up getting some Hardware (and wish #13 & #20 would have as well), but he was someone who wanted to 'do-it-all' while in Indy. Understandable as also the case with Marino and Sanders, that's being a competitor, but a certain coach or management team simply implementing that team concept can tone something like that down. Like one of you said previously, Elway once being a QB who early in his career felt he had to 'do it all' and then won two SBs a different way, was the very GM who set it all straight upon #18 showing up at Mile High.
1998 - Dan was on his way out, Peyton just getting started, Barry's final season. I'll say it yet again...
much fan-dome to come, still a fan today, but general-excitement going into a season and throughout the entire season and looking back at it, 1998 thus far is still seen by myself as the last peak; and this, of course, despite my Steelers collapsing, this despite the SB itself being one of the all-time snoozers (I was still excited going into the 'Elway/Shanny vs Dan Reeves' showdown, predicting it'd go into OT). Not my favorite season since following, but no season since has matched it as far as, again, general fan-dome before, throughout, and after.