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For years I have defended Mike Tomlin vs. his detractors. I mean he did direct 2 teams to Super Bowl - and I still say that the rules changes which were on high alert had a difference in that 2010 Super Bowl. The Secondary wasn't great at coverage but by beating up WRs. It's why the 2008 Steelers were so dominant. However, the combo of Colbert and Tomlin is obviously not the level of Colbert and Cowher. I blame both for the horrible drafting since 2007 and the plateauing of Wallace and Woodley, as well as the underachievement of Mendenhall. Cowher had a knack of getting the best out of his guys; Tomlin hasn't. I am not big on firing him - but he needs to illustrate an ability to get more out of his guys or he'll be the first Steelers coach fired since 1968.
LeBeau: IMO LeBeau is a perfect example of the difference between success and not success: it's a finer and thinner line than most realize. He did get a chance to be a Head Coach - in fact he really built the core of the 2005 Bengals. But it was the Bengals! Put Bill Walsh with the Cardinals and it's failure plain and simple. If LeBeau had a chance with a great management he'd have been a HOF Coach - all he needed was a real chance but never got it. His run with Steelers is maybe 2nd only to Noll - every Super Bowl run has seen him run the defense. But I wonder if the rules changes are making his scheme obsolete. It's obvious Belichick knows it inside and out - cheating probably helped but it's irrelevant. I love LeBeau - but there are some sad truths that are unavoidable: and one of them is that ALL GOOD THINGS MUST END. The game passed Noll by - he knew it himself as he still tried to play 70s football in a league that had obviously opened to the pass. The Joe Walton debacle proved his NFL was gone. It may be the same for LeBeau.
LeBeau: IMO LeBeau is a perfect example of the difference between success and not success: it's a finer and thinner line than most realize. He did get a chance to be a Head Coach - in fact he really built the core of the 2005 Bengals. But it was the Bengals! Put Bill Walsh with the Cardinals and it's failure plain and simple. If LeBeau had a chance with a great management he'd have been a HOF Coach - all he needed was a real chance but never got it. His run with Steelers is maybe 2nd only to Noll - every Super Bowl run has seen him run the defense. But I wonder if the rules changes are making his scheme obsolete. It's obvious Belichick knows it inside and out - cheating probably helped but it's irrelevant. I love LeBeau - but there are some sad truths that are unavoidable: and one of them is that ALL GOOD THINGS MUST END. The game passed Noll by - he knew it himself as he still tried to play 70s football in a league that had obviously opened to the pass. The Joe Walton debacle proved his NFL was gone. It may be the same for LeBeau.
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