Re: HOF Finalists named
Posted: Sun Jan 08, 2017 12:33 pm
The Patriots are a dynasty. The four year run of the 90s Cowboys wasn't.
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No argument with the DeBartolo-Jones linking, yet DeBartolo is the football equivalent of George Steinbrenner in the sense of cost being no object. DeBartolo had the good sense to stay out of personnel decisions, yet he ended up suspended/pushed out (effectively for life) by the NFL, mirroring Steinbrenner, who was TWICE suspended. The latter ban was supposed to be "for life" but lasted less than three years. Steinbrenner is still on the outside looking in when it comes to HOF, primarily because of that idea that it doesn't take a whole lot of skill to open up a checkbook.bachslunch wrote:Well sure, Johnson had a whole lot to do with that dynasty -- I'd say almost as much as Walsh did with the 'Niners dynasty. But if credit is being given above to DeBartolo for the latter, Jones deserves as much credit for the former. Which is to say not a whole lot in either case beyond making a good hire and opening up a checkbook.
My thinking is that Jones is much more worthy of the HoF than DeBartolo because he has the added committee work and the revenue generating model for merchandise on his resume that DeBartolo lacks. I can see the argument that this makes him HoF worthy to some reasonable extent. I don't see him as equivalent to the best owners enshrined (Halas, Reeves, Hunt, Bell) but can see a case for him being a middle tier owner member with folks like Marshall, the Rooneys, the Maras, Davis, and Wilson -- probably towards the lower end, but in that vicinity. DeBartolo and Bidwill to me constitute the mistake end of the enshrined owners.BD Sullivan wrote:No argument with the DeBartolo-Jones linking, yet DeBartolo is the football equivalent of George Steinbrenner in the sense of cost being no object. DeBartolo had the good sense to stay out of personnel decisions, yet he ended up suspended/pushed out (effectively for life) by the NFL, mirroring Steinbrenner, who was TWICE suspended. The latter ban was supposed to be "for life" but lasted less than three years. Steinbrenner is still on the outside looking in when it comes to HOF, primarily because of that idea that it doesn't take a whole lot of skill to open up a checkbook.bachslunch wrote:Well sure, Johnson had a whole lot to do with that dynasty -- I'd say almost as much as Walsh did with the 'Niners dynasty. But if credit is being given above to DeBartolo for the latter, Jones deserves as much credit for the former. Which is to say not a whole lot in either case beyond making a good hire and opening up a checkbook.
The argument that "this person should be in the HOF because that person is in" reminds me of the argument that fans of former Brown WR Gary Collins make about his HOF chances. His numbers are very similar to Lynn Swann's, with each having won MVP honors in a title game (Collins pre-SB). Plus, Collins played in four NFL championship games (albeit the latter two were in the SB era) and was the Browns' regular punter for six seasons. Even though I'm a Browns fan, I'm not convinced he belongs, yet I know that plenty of others who don't feel that Swann does either.
He was able to use the Browns move as a weapon in getting a new stadium.bachslunch wrote: No idea what Pat Bowlen has done to deserve consideration, though.
I don't think Rooney belongs. He owned arguably the worst team in the NFL until his sons took over the operation. One reason his teams were so bad was that, every time he lost at the track, he'd cut a player or two to lower the amount he had to pay in salaries. At times, the Pittsburgh roster was ten under the limit because he couldn't afford to pay any more players.bachslunch wrote:Couple questions:
1. Was under the impression Jerry Jones had done a good bit of committee work in addition to creating the product revenue model he's best known for. Still wouldn't make him the best owner in, of course -- though he'll beat Bidwill and DeBartolo handily enough.
2. How good a HoF selection was Art Rooney? Maybe he did all kind of significant stuff I don't know about. I'm happy to be convinced.
I think the best argument for Rooney was that he took a financial risk and invested in the NFL at a time when it wasn't a money-making operation, and he 'stayed the course' and kept ownership of his team for a very long time. Is that enough to warrant enshrinement? I don't think so.rhickok1109 wrote:I don't think Rooney belongs. He owned arguably the worst team in the NFL until his sons took over the operation. One reason his teams were so bad was that, every time he lost at the track, he'd cut a player or two to lower the amount he had to pay in salaries. At times, the Pittsburgh roster was ten under the limit because he couldn't afford to pay any more players.
Art Rooney made some mistakes as owner, but the NFL wasn't exactly dripping with cash in that era. Transferring more of the decision making to family was the right move, and that helped turn the Steelers into a storied franchise. Countless stories of Rooney helping players over the years when he could have cut and run. Even helped the NHL Penguins get started by keeping a couple of the original investors on board. The remarkable success since 1972 has not been contingent on one head coach, or one QB, and it all goes back to Art Rooney.rhickok1109 wrote:I don't think Rooney belongs. He owned arguably the worst team in the NFL until his sons took over the operation. One reason his teams were so bad was that, every time he lost at the track, he'd cut a player or two to lower the amount he had to pay in salaries. At times, the Pittsburgh roster was ten under the limit because he couldn't afford to pay any more players.bachslunch wrote:Couple questions:
1. Was under the impression Jerry Jones had done a good bit of committee work in addition to creating the product revenue model he's best known for. Still wouldn't make him the best owner in, of course -- though he'll beat Bidwill and DeBartolo handily enough.
2. How good a HoF selection was Art Rooney? Maybe he did all kind of significant stuff I don't know about. I'm happy to be convinced.
It's 'funny' that the PFHOF renamed an award after Ralph Hay (Ralph Hay Pioneer Award) when they haven't elected him to the HOF.ChrisBabcock wrote:Speaking of HOF worthiness of owners... How's this for an outside the box potential supersenior candidate?:... Ralph Hay