Autumn Wind
Footballguy
Everyone loves dynasties as long as it's their team that is one.
Seriously. The leadup to those great Cowboys-49er Championship games was 17 or 18 weeks of pure boredom.So you miss dominant teams that made the NFL boring? Do you even remember what it was like watching a regular season Cowboys or 49ers game? Now I can watch any two teams and at least have a chance at seeing a competitive game.Jason, the NFL has been going downhill for some time. The Packers of the 60s, Dolphins and Steelers of the 70s, Niners of the 80s, Cowboys in the 90s....those days are not going to happen again. The league was better when everyone hated the Niners. Sorry Pats fans but you scraped up 3 Super Bowl wins in a very down era for the NFL. The salary cap makes for a more even league but the brand of football sucks and it came to a pinnacle with 2 teams this season that would not have made a Super Bowl in many other previous decades.I question my NFL love lately and have really been much more excited about college football and who they are signing than anything the NFL is doing. I have written threads before in here and taken flack for my criticism of the salary cap and the NFL...I am glad to see Mort feels the same way.This morning Mort was on Mike & Mike and when asked about the labor situation, went into a diatribe about how removing the salary cap might not be a bad thing because the quality of play in the NFL wasn't very good anymore. I was shocked to hear him say this [particularly when it's the popularity of that very league which pays his bills].
So I thought maybe I misunderstood his point, but in today's online chat...he made the comment again and was asked to clarify. He said...
Very bold statements from a guy who makes his living as an evangelist of the NFL and as someone that gets intel from every league office in the land. Do you agree or disagree?The league is a bad league right now. The quality of play is marginal at best. Too many rookies and young players are forced onto the field too early. The perception of parity - that a team can turn it around in one year - creates an owner and public unrest when things don't go right. That triggers too many firings, too many changes, and that affects the game. It's one reason why quarterbacks struggle in this league, too. Deep subject.

Exactly BO,F1 dealt with the same problem. It was Schumacher and everyone else there. That might be great for Ferrari but not for the whole "league".Somewhat of a tangent.
I had a European friend who asked me this question once, "Why do Americans like NASCAR so much over CART (open wheel) Racing? IRL has better technology, better cars, better drivers and they race on road coarses. It doesn't make any sense to me."
My reply, "Everything you said is 100% true. But NASCAR doesn't promote itself as being the best racing circuit, it promotes itself as being the most competitive racing circuit, and there is a big difference."
Exactly BO,F1 dealt with the same problem. It was Schumacher and everyone else there. That might be great for Ferrari but not for the whole "league".Somewhat of a tangent.
I had a European friend who asked me this question once, "Why do Americans like NASCAR so much over CART (open wheel) Racing? IRL has better technology, better cars, better drivers and they race on road coarses. It doesn't make any sense to me."
My reply, "Everything you said is 100% true. But NASCAR doesn't promote itself as being the best racing circuit, it promotes itself as being the most competitive racing circuit, and there is a big difference."
J
It was probably F1 my friend compared NASCAR to, not CART (or IRL). But the same point.
I actually think that can be said about Mort, John Clayton and Peter King. But I think that's not so much a byproduct of their work getting shoddy, but rather the Internet and disintermediation of information has made their perceived "edge" must more transparent.Am not sure what Mort meant exactly by the "bad league" comment, but the quality of his work in recent years has been nothing special. His reports don't seem that insightful to me and I think his stuff declined since Jimmy Johnson left the Dolphins. Johnson may have been a top source of inside info for him years ago, and that's just not happening anymore. We're continually being told by ESPN that "Mort's been working the phones," etc., but what he normally offers is conjecture and I don't see where his "scoops" are anything special----mostly just rumor-mongering. Clayton and Pasquarelli probably come through consistently with better, more thoughtful material. Mort is like a baseball player who keeps making the All-Star game by reputation.
I learn a lot more about what's going on in the NFL from this site and, specifically, from this board than from anyone at ESPN. It must be true of a lot of us, given how frequently we rely on the news here.
So, I suppose it matters little what Mort thinks of the NFL at present.
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I think those quick turnarounds aren't as quick as they seem. The Chargers for example were building since 2001 to become the a 12-4 team in 2004. That seemed quick but it's a cumulative process that takes time. Sometimes it seems to happen overnight, but it just shows how a team with a couple weaknesses can go 4-12 and then go 12-4 after getting a couple key pieces. Most teams weren't building from scratch like the Chargers so they can make improvements that result in a much better record fairly quickly. A lot of the turnarounds you see, like the Panthers, were due to injuries the previous year that made the team seem worse than it actually was.I can side with Mort on one aspect regarding the "good ol' days." I think as a general football fan it is much more satisfying to watch a team slowly assemble the pieces of a good or great run.
I do think that when a 4-12 team can turn around and the very next season and make it to the Super Bowl or the conference championships it may be exciting, but it seems a bit cheapened compared to a team that built their way up to that level.
The genius of the Patriots is that they're aren't the most talented team, they're simply the team taht executes best. I think that every year that they won the Superbowl, the Colts had more offensive talent, as did Kansas City, the Vikings, the Raiders, and probably a few other teams too. Teams with more defensive talent inlcuded the Panthers, Eagles, Steelers (maybe), Ravens, and Bucs. The Patriots won anyway. Some will argue that the officials had a hand in that, from the infamous tuck rule to the way the Pats mugged the Colts WRs. Honestly though, that's a boring conversation, especially b/c if it's true then it means we should stop watching football (or start watching pro wrestling). So looking beyond that, what it comes down to is the system, the coaching, and the mental toughness and discipline. I would argue that though other dynasty teams had more talent, none had the toughness, discipline, versatility, and depth of the Patriots. It's just a different way to win.Name me a team with the number of HoF all time greats the likes of the old Steelers, the Cowboys, the 49ers. It isnt nostalgia... we have a more equal playing field now. The bad teams are not as bad, the good teams not as good.I don't buy this argument at all.The one thing that stands out from the "glory days" of the NFL that guys like Mort describe is that there were "great" teams then. Who's to say? The Steelers played in an era when it was feast or famine. You were either a great team like Pitt, Dallas and the Raiders, or you were TERRIBLE like the Bucs, Bills or Seahawks.I think his point is that the league promotes mediocrity over greatness. Put together an ok team, then get a little lucky and have an above average year and hope for some things to fall in place in win a Super Bowl.Back in the 70s-90's, it was rare that a team could win a Super Bowl without being a GREAT team. There was not parity, but you had 5 or so good to great teams every year, who played the game so much better than ANY team does nowadays because of the landscape of the league under the current cap system.I'm not sure what his bent is...he elaborate by throwing out how the Steelers dominated the 70s without being a big market team and how the Marlins won two WS titles in a small market. Lord help us if the NFL starts taking cues from major league baseball, and the business conditions of the 70s in the NFL are so vastly different than today when money has gotten enormous; his examples are bordering on ridiculous.So Mort's fear is that owners, players and fans are unable to evolve?The league is a bad league right now. The quality of play is marginal at best. Too many rookies and young players are forced onto the field too early. The perception of parity - that a team can turn it around in one year - creates an owner and public unrest when things don't go right. That triggers too many firings, too many changes, and that affects the game. It's one reason why quarterbacks struggle in this league, too. Deep subject.
When you melt everything down to the lowest common denominator, you take away a lot of the greatness that while not as competitively balanced, gives more reason to watch because you are witnessing a great team. Not the better of a bunch of average teams, which is what we have today.
What really constitutes a "great" team? The Raiders were a very successful franchise for well over a decade, but they were pretty mediocre defensively. In a lot of ways, they were the Indianapolis Colts of their time. They could put up a bunch of points but were often ranked outside of the top 10 defensively. And they still won two Super Bowls in 5 years.
I think a lot of this is "good ole days" nostalgia BS.
To me, that is more meh.
], where Stark took issue with the notion that football has more parity than baseball. Stark pointed to the fact that 42% of baseball's teams have made the final 4 [i.e., the championship series] in the last six years [since revenue sharing was introduced] versus 37% of NFL franchises. He also pointed out that baseball has had a different world champ each of the last six seasons, whereas the NFL hasn't had a streak like that since the 60s [and they've only done it that one time].
I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.
Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.
)I have no idea how you think any of those things are really relevant, although I'm not sure what you mean by "all time top 10" (ie statitiscally? fan opinion? what?). As for 5-6 future HOFers playing, on the presumption that the HOF is the measuring stick it's supposed to be (debatable IMO, given some of the players I see/hear being associated w/it nowdays), so what? You could say that of nearly any year, I would think.The fact that there are probably 4-5 active RBs who could easily end up in the all-time top 10, probably 4-5 receivers with a shot at getting into the top-10 all-time, probably 5-6 future Hall of fame QBs playing, and defenses who are bigger and faster than ever before, and I have no idea how he could make those comments.
The flip side is IMO we see fewer truly great teams, or play. This past SB is a prime example. Sure they earned their way, blah blah.....but the level of play in the SB (and the playoffs to a siginificant extent even) was hardly top quality. Quite often it either stank or was very mediocre. I think Mort's point is that games/play seem to have become more of a "won by default" kinda thing, ie the quality of play is less a team/drive/player succeeding because he/they did well, and more because the other side screwed up, or they just sort of trudged their way to it. IMO that is true, to a large extent.The parity is EVERYTHING in the NFL - fans continue to show up in droves because they know any team can turn their fortunes around in a hurry.
Thank God. Best thing that could happen to it. Maybe then a lot of the supercircus freakshow soap opera BS would finally go away and we could re-focus on simply the sport again (not that I'd hold my breath).If the NFL loses the cap, the popularity of the league will be in grave danger.
True, I'd choose diff. teams, but I would love to see some truly "great" teams again (which oh btw doesn't automatically mean "dynasty") vs the proliferation of half-(buttcheeks) schmucky ones we have today. Well worth the trade-off.Does anyone really want to go back to the days of watching the Steelers, Cowboys, or 49ers win 3-4 Super Bowls in 5 years?
Yeah right. There's no more backlash vs NE than there ever was to a team who wins it repeatedly. People just babble about it a lot more now due to the proliferation of the 'net, msg boards, etc.Hell, there's enough backlash against the Patriots for their remarkable run in this era to illustrate that 20 years of dynastic teams would not be well-received.
I do WHEN THEY ARE GOOD GAMES. If you think a close game equates to a good one, you're deluding yourself...ie if it's close because both teams are stinking up the field equally, it's not a good game. Again, we're talking about quality of play.Personally, I like the 30-27 Super Bowls a lot better than the 55-10 ones.
Thx for confirming that you really are severely deluded.The Super Bowl is actually a football game again, rather than just an "event"
I tend to agree. I don't any SB winner over the past 5-6 seasons could reasonably expect to beat the 1990s Cowboys or any of the other "dynasty" teams. On one hand, the NFL has much greater parity than it did before, which as a fan is cool since it makes the games more entertaining. But I don't see how anybody could doubt that the "good" teams of today just objectively aren't as good as the "good" teams of yesterday.This morning Mort was on Mike & Mike and when asked about the labor situation, went into a diatribe about how removing the salary cap might not be a bad thing because the quality of play in the NFL wasn't very good anymore. I was shocked to hear him say this [particularly when it's the popularity of that very league which pays his bills].
So I thought maybe I misunderstood his point, but in today's online chat...he made the comment again and was asked to clarify. He said...
Very bold statements from a guy who makes his living as an evangelist of the NFL and as someone that gets intel from every league office in the land. Do you agree or disagree?The league is a bad league right now. The quality of play is marginal at best. Too many rookies and young players are forced onto the field too early. The perception of parity - that a team can turn it around in one year - creates an owner and public unrest when things don't go right. That triggers too many firings, too many changes, and that affects the game. It's one reason why quarterbacks struggle in this league, too. Deep subject.
While Mort may be a blathering idiot (which he mostly comes off as) I happen to think he's more right than wrong on this one. Just look at the coach of the current SB champions. If he had any other owner, he would have been gone years ago. Because he has one of the last links to the pre-merger days looking over him, he was allowed to right the ship, and it payed off. I hope more owners will take notice.As for QB play, Mort is nothing but correct. Think about it. What was the winning QB's quarterback rating in the SB for goodness sake? The 'best' teams in the league (ie playoff teams) had some despicable QB play in the playoffs. Other than Rothlisberger, name a first round QB who has/is succeeding in the NFL. For every success, there are more and more faliures.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.
While Mort may be a blathering idiot (which he mostly comes off as) I happen to think he's more right than wrong on this one. Just look at the coach of the current SB champions. If he had any other owner, he would have been gone years ago. Because he has one of the last links to the pre-merger days looking over him, he was allowed to right the ship, and it payed off. I hope more owners will take notice.As for QB play, Mort is nothing but correct. Think about it. What was the winning QB's quarterback rating in the SB for goodness sake? The 'best' teams in the league (ie playoff teams) had some despicable QB play in the playoffs. Other than Rothlisberger, name a first round QB who has/is succeeding in the NFL. For every success, there are more and more faliures.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.
Peyton ManningYou consider Drew Bledsoe, Daunte Culpepper, Byron Leftwich and Michael Vick success'? Wow. I'll just say we have different standards and leave it at that...While Mort may be a blathering idiot (which he mostly comes off as) I happen to think he's more right than wrong on this one. Just look at the coach of the current SB champions. If he had any other owner, he would have been gone years ago. Because he has one of the last links to the pre-merger days looking over him, he was allowed to right the ship, and it payed off. I hope more owners will take notice.As for QB play, Mort is nothing but correct. Think about it. What was the winning QB's quarterback rating in the SB for goodness sake? The 'best' teams in the league (ie playoff teams) had some despicable QB play in the playoffs. Other than Rothlisberger, name a first round QB who has/is succeeding in the NFL. For every success, there are more and more faliures.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.Peyton Manning
Donovan McNabb
Carson Palmer
Steve McNair
Daunte Culpepper
Eli Manning
Drew Bledsoe
Michael Vick
Byron Leftwich
One season or playoff run does not an era make...
Bledsoe has been a very successful NFL QB, absolutely. I'm not talking strictly about last year. Culpepper had arguably the second best passing season in league history in 2004, are we so quick to forget that? Leftwich and Vick are certainly more debatable...but if you're definining success by wins and losses [which you must be if you single out Big Ben], they've both done quite well.You consider Drew Bledsoe, Daunte Culpepper, Byron Leftwich and Michael Vick success'? Wow. I'll just say we have different standards and leave it at that...While Mort may be a blathering idiot (which he mostly comes off as) I happen to think he's more right than wrong on this one. Just look at the coach of the current SB champions. If he had any other owner, he would have been gone years ago. Because he has one of the last links to the pre-merger days looking over him, he was allowed to right the ship, and it payed off. I hope more owners will take notice.As for QB play, Mort is nothing but correct. Think about it. What was the winning QB's quarterback rating in the SB for goodness sake? The 'best' teams in the league (ie playoff teams) had some despicable QB play in the playoffs. Other than Rothlisberger, name a first round QB who has/is succeeding in the NFL. For every success, there are more and more faliures.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.Peyton Manning
Donovan McNabb
Carson Palmer
Steve McNair
Daunte Culpepper
Eli Manning
Drew Bledsoe
Michael Vick
Byron Leftwich
One season or playoff run does not an era make...
Is that a function of the salary cap or just poor scouting? The "flameout" rate of first round QB picks has ALWAYS been very high. Even prior to the salary cap era.Kelly Stouffer? Andre Ware? Jeff George? Dan McGwire? Todd Marinovich? David Klingler? Tommy Maddox? Rick Mirer?While Mort may be a blathering idiot (which he mostly comes off as) I happen to think he's more right than wrong on this one. Just look at the coach of the current SB champions. If he had any other owner, he would have been gone years ago. Because he has one of the last links to the pre-merger days looking over him, he was allowed to right the ship, and it payed off. I hope more owners will take notice.As for QB play, Mort is nothing but correct. Think about it. What was the winning QB's quarterback rating in the SB for goodness sake? The 'best' teams in the league (ie playoff teams) had some despicable QB play in the playoffs. Other than Rothlisberger, name a first round QB who has/is succeeding in the NFL. For every success, there are more and more faliures.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.I would submit that tackling is as bad as it has ever been. Coaches don't hit in practice during the season for fear of injury, and it shows on the field.I'd love to hear Mort elaborate on "quality of play".
Are we talking about fundamentals like RBs reading holes, blocking and tackling, coverage, QB play? I mean, what is he referring to? Because you could make the case that certain parts of the game are worse and other parts are better than ever.
Getting rid of the cap won't change that. The fickle nature of the modern sports fan dictates that the revolving door policy of coaches is here to stay.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.
And is there a huge difference between coaches who are allowed to fail for a while in a city and eventually become successful (like Noll and Landry) vs. coaches who get fired after failing and getting second and third chances somewhere down the line (Belichick, Vermeil, Shanahan)?Getting rid of the cap won't change that. The fickle nature of the modern sports fan dictates that the revolving door policy of coaches is here to stay.Fair point...but when Mort was asked to elaborate he went on some tangential diatribe about QB play, too much coaching turnover, which leads to too much change in offensive systems...didn't really make a convincing point. He also pointed to Chuck Noll and Landry having a bunch of losing seasons to start their tenures, and how in today's NFL they would've never been allowed to keep their jobs long enough to become legends.
NASCAR's restrictor plate = The NFL Salary CapExcellent point, Woodrow.And I'll ask the question: What is the biggest change Nascar has made over the years?From a viewership perspective, the NFL has grown [and continues to grow] by leaps and bounds whereas NHL, NBA and MLB have suffered declines. Only Nascar has really shown marked growth among American TV viewers. And commensurate with the NFL's growth has been unprecedented revenues...both in terms of TV contracts and gate/merchandising. It's as close to a perfect sports league [financially] as one can ask for; and ANY alterations to that model would be both risky and likely unwise.I saw this in his chat today and was surprised by his comments. To me, the NFL is just as enjoyable today as it has been since I started watching in 1976. As a counter example, the same cannot be said of the NBA (IMO).
Parity.
There are a few teams that aren't really competitive but the reality is now that any of 15 cars can win any Sunday. Years ago, you had to be a Dale Earnhardt fan to have a winner. It was Richard Petty before him. Everyone else was an also ran.
Today, Nascar can market a entire group of drivers to tons of different demographics. You have guys like Gordon to the professionals, Earnhardt Jr. to the younger guys, Carl Edwards shirtless on the cover of ESPN mag to the women and more. And all have a great shot at winning now.
I think this move to parity and the explosion of popularity are definitely tied together.
J
Who's this Jeff Pasquino guyNASCAR's restrictor plate = The NFL Salary CapExcellent point, Woodrow.And I'll ask the question: What is the biggest change Nascar has made over the years?From a viewership perspective, the NFL has grown [and continues to grow] by leaps and bounds whereas NHL, NBA and MLB have suffered declines. Only Nascar has really shown marked growth among American TV viewers. And commensurate with the NFL's growth has been unprecedented revenues...both in terms of TV contracts and gate/merchandising. It's as close to a perfect sports league [financially] as one can ask for; and ANY alterations to that model would be both risky and likely unwise.I saw this in his chat today and was surprised by his comments. To me, the NFL is just as enjoyable today as it has been since I started watching in 1976. As a counter example, the same cannot be said of the NBA (IMO).
Parity.
There are a few teams that aren't really competitive but the reality is now that any of 15 cars can win any Sunday. Years ago, you had to be a Dale Earnhardt fan to have a winner. It was Richard Petty before him. Everyone else was an also ran.
Today, Nascar can market a entire group of drivers to tons of different demographics. You have guys like Gordon to the professionals, Earnhardt Jr. to the younger guys, Carl Edwards shirtless on the cover of ESPN mag to the women and more. And all have a great shot at winning now.
I think this move to parity and the explosion of popularity are definitely tied together.
J
Congrats Jeff...although the name Jeff Eaglz will be missed.not to mention that the Steelers gained an unfair advantage over otehr teams by leading the way into the Steroids era.This confusses me. Mort is trying to compare the Steelers in the 70s that operated with no cap and no Free Agency and then trying to imply the Steelers could have the same success in 2010 with no salary cap and free agency.I'm not sure what his bent is...he elaborate by throwing out how the Steelers dominated the 70s without being a big market team and how the Marlins won two WS titles in a small market. Lord help us if the NFL starts taking cues from major league baseball, and the business conditions of the 70s in the NFL are so vastly different than today when money has gotten enormous; his examples are bordering on ridiculous.
The fact that there are more teams now than in 1970s wouldn't have anything to do with the dilution of talent?The pats were only great in a sea of mediocrity. They'd be creamed by the truely "great" teams of yesteryear.For those who have played in online simulation leagues, the Pats had a HUGE advantage. While everyone had the same constraints as far as players, the Pats had such an advantage in their team management/coaching, that they took about the same talent (maybe a bit more, and certainly a great young QB) and matched up with teams who didnt have the coaching/management to win 3 of 4.Thanks FF, this is a far more logical position for Mort to have and I believe there is some validitity to this.The truth is, players 1, 2 or 3 years experience are far more cheaper (cap wise) than veterans. It is just not cost effective for teams to bring in an aging veteran; Gary Plummer in San Francisco, Matt Millen and Earnest Byner in Washington and so on and so on.I took Mort's comments as him being discouraged that young players are expected to produce immediately now. The salary cap forces teams to find players in the draft that can contribute immediately. Often times that means players are in over their heads thus diluting the product on the field. This trickles down to coaches being fired, etc.
Sure the Patriots were great, but they have maintained their greatness by filling their roster with younger players and releasing veterans.
I really don't have a problem with this, but it is a far more legit argument if this is what Mort's statements are based on.
But again, they are only great in light of a bunch of average teams. In the 80's/90's that team might have made one superbowl.
Maybe.
Some years, if not most, they wouldnt be a top 3 team in the league.

TY, but let's not hijack the thread here....This is a great discussion. I agree with Mort to a point - the depth of NFL rosters has suffered due to the cap. "Cap casualty" vets are let go every year - and we're seeing the biggest set this week. Steve Tasker-like contributors just don't exist any more. If you can't start in 3 years or less, you're history.Who's this Jeff Pasquino guyNASCAR's restrictor plate = The NFL Salary CapExcellent point, Woodrow.And I'll ask the question: What is the biggest change Nascar has made over the years?From a viewership perspective, the NFL has grown [and continues to grow] by leaps and bounds whereas NHL, NBA and MLB have suffered declines. Only Nascar has really shown marked growth among American TV viewers. And commensurate with the NFL's growth has been unprecedented revenues...both in terms of TV contracts and gate/merchandising. It's as close to a perfect sports league [financially] as one can ask for; and ANY alterations to that model would be both risky and likely unwise.I saw this in his chat today and was surprised by his comments. To me, the NFL is just as enjoyable today as it has been since I started watching in 1976. As a counter example, the same cannot be said of the NBA (IMO).
Parity.
There are a few teams that aren't really competitive but the reality is now that any of 15 cars can win any Sunday. Years ago, you had to be a Dale Earnhardt fan to have a winner. It was Richard Petty before him. Everyone else was an also ran.
Today, Nascar can market a entire group of drivers to tons of different demographics. You have guys like Gordon to the professionals, Earnhardt Jr. to the younger guys, Carl Edwards shirtless on the cover of ESPN mag to the women and more. And all have a great shot at winning now.
I think this move to parity and the explosion of popularity are definitely tied together.
JCongrats Jeff...although the name Jeff Eaglz will be missed.
don't foget `Awesome Bill from Dawesonville`...bill elliott..lolExcellent point, Woodrow.And I'll ask the question: What is the biggest change Nascar has made over the years?From a viewership perspective, the NFL has grown [and continues to grow] by leaps and bounds whereas NHL, NBA and MLB have suffered declines. Only Nascar has really shown marked growth among American TV viewers. And commensurate with the NFL's growth has been unprecedented revenues...both in terms of TV contracts and gate/merchandising. It's as close to a perfect sports league [financially] as one can ask for; and ANY alterations to that model would be both risky and likely unwise.I saw this in his chat today and was surprised by his comments. To me, the NFL is just as enjoyable today as it has been since I started watching in 1976. As a counter example, the same cannot be said of the NBA (IMO).
Parity.
There are a few teams that aren't really competitive but the reality is now that any of 15 cars can win any Sunday. Years ago, you had to be a Dale Earnhardt fan to have a winner. It was Richard Petty before him. Everyone else was an also ran.
Today, Nascar can market a entire group of drivers to tons of different demographics. You have guys like Gordon to the professionals, Earnhardt Jr. to the younger guys, Carl Edwards shirtless on the cover of ESPN mag to the women and more. And all have a great shot at winning now.
I think this move to parity and the explosion of popularity are definitely tied together.
J