Hawktawk wrote:3 Super bowl teams and a Lombardi. But some would say he underachieved. A classy man that called the pure WCO as well as anyone but stubborn and unwilling to change a game plan to account for key injures etc. Holmy the GM hampered Holmy the HC IMO. i DUNNO. By today's standards hes probably in . He didnt win it and his and loss of cool on the sidelines while totally justified threw his team off on a night where they would have had to be perfect to beat the Stealers and Leavey. A really really good coach but maybe not great.
NorthHawk wrote:I hope he gets in. He took 2 different teams to the SB, won 1 and was ripped off in the other.
He was also the HC of very competitive teams over the course of his coaching career.
Hawktawk wrote:Last I checked neither Reeves nor Coryell ever won a single championship . Coryell never went . Part of my argument for Holmgren and our other guy Pete is the body of work . And in the case of Pete that legendary run of defenses . I do believe Holmgren was cheated out of XL. We all were . He didn’t help himself by losing his $h@T with the officials but even Bill Leavy admitted “ I booted a couple calls that affected the outcome of the game “ .
If losing that game is a minus surely getting the Seattle chickens to their first one is a huge plus . That’s a daunting list to survive but Holmgren with 3 trips and a Lombardi and competetive teams most years of career is deserving of the honor at some point .
RiverDog wrote:CANTON, Ohio -- Super Bowl-winning coaches Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren are among 54 seniors, coaches and contributors named as semifinalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame's class of 2023.
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/342 ... ifinalists
IMO his resume comes up a little short and I'd be surprised if he makes the final cut, but it seems like my personal bar for players and coaches is considerably higher than that of the HOF committee that makes the call.
RiverDog wrote:CANTON, Ohio -- Super Bowl-winning coaches Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren are among 54 seniors, coaches and contributors named as semifinalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame's class of 2023.
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/342 ... ifinalists
IMO his resume comes up a little short and I'd be surprised if he makes the final cut, but it seems like my personal bar for players and coaches is considerably higher than that of the HOF committee that makes the call.
obiken wrote:I agree but how did Tom Flores make in River?
Hawktawk wrote:I don’t necessarily disagree with Coryell. Those teams with Fouts were tough although I’d credit the genius bill Walsh within much more influence on the pro passing offense . Coryell always seemed to have excellent skill pieces around Fouts . They were done in first by the marathon in Miami then the frigid weather in Cincy after being emotionally and physically drained . Great coaches and players often never win a Super Bowl . Those who do win one or even go should be thankful .
RiverDog wrote:If you want to get technical, Paul Brown was the creator of what became known as the west coast offense. Walsh was the OC for Brown when the two were in Cincinatti, a team that Brown himself literally created. Brown was arguably the biggest innovator in the game. That's not to take away anything from Walsh. He took what Brown taught him and took it to the next level. They were both brilliant football minds.
Coryell's offense was summed up by passing to set up the pass. Running was an afterthought. I think of Coryell similar to how I think of Sid Gillman, the original Charger's head coach and also a member of the HOF. Coryell belongs in the Hall. It's because of those guys that I get offended when they induct a coach like Flores, who was a midget in comparison.
Only in retrospect am I happy or grateful for winning a Super Bowl. I am not satisfied unless we actually win one, and it's a huge disappointment for me when our season ends without a Lombardi. I'm a little selfish in that respect.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Not sure how you stayed a Seattle fan given how little we win Championships with any of our teams. At least you're not a flavor of the year team jumper when Seattle is doing badly, which has been the case most of their history if a Super Bowl at the end of the year is satisfaction.
I enjoy watching myself. I have power over whether Seattle wins or loses. I stick with the team because I was born here and I like to root for the home teams. I did follow the Bulls when Michael Jordan was there, but I wasn't a Bulls fan. I was a Jordan fan. When he left, I never paid any attention to the Bulls again. At this point, I wouldn't mind having a basketball team back. It's nice to have home teams to follow during the sports seasons. I don't like hockey and soccer enough to follow those teams, though I'd probably watch a championship series with hockey maybe.
RiverDog wrote:Trust me, I always have been, and always will be, a diehard Seahawk fan. The fact that I have ended every season but one hugely disappointed hasn't and won't deter me from soldiering on. It's one of those things with me: Never settle for being 2nd best. Always strive to be better. Never give up.
Seattle has been a sort of home away from home all of my life. My aunt lived there, and we visited at least a couple times a year, so I've followed the Sonics, Pilots, Mariners, and Seahawks, all from the day they were born, religiously, as did my parents.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I've heard that delusion about "never settle for second best" or "2nd place is the first loser." Never bought into myself. You'd never do or pursue anything if that really was the criteria for competition. Why bother competing every year if there is only one winner? Pretty pointless to even try at that point as 99.9999% of people will never be good enough to win much of anything.
I do believe strongly in self-improvement and competition providing a guide to self-improvement though most will mostly compete against themselves and what they did before. Winning is nice, but the process is more important than the end result. It follows that should you continue the process, the end result should eventually be a championship or some positive end result like making more money, getting stronger, or some goal you set out as well as all the positives gained from engaging in the process. I don't bother with worrying too much about the end result as it will take care of itself if you have a very good process. I would never taint my team with feelings of failure should they not "win" the championship. I would analyze what went wrong in the game before the loss and correct that, then it would fix itself.
Championships are the result of a very well-designed process or system. That is why teams like the Patriots and Steelers have more than most. They have a very good system in place for producing them under their current regimes. That's why I liked Paul Allen as owner. He had a good process for producing a competitive team. It's too bad he didn't have kids like the Rooney Family to pass on the team to and continue the system.
I imagine if you really believed as you do, you would have stopped watching sports teams, especially Seattle sports teams, a long time ago. So you must just enjoy watching them yearly and growing towards hopefully a championship as well.
RiverDog wrote:As you might have suspected, I've read a lot about JFK and the Kennedy family. The old man, Joseph Sr., taught his kids never to settle for 2nd best, that the only thing that mattered was winning, that anything else was unsatisfactory. One night at the supper table, Bobby announced to the family that he was going to become a priest, to which the old man replied "Good! It will be nice to have a Pope in the family."
You don't want to settle for 2nd best, and what I mean by 'settle' isn't to be associated with being a poor sport or demeaning anyone that doesn't finish first. What I mean by 'settle' is not to be satisfied, to push yourself to greater heights, don't rest on your laurels.
You've mentioned to me that you work out regularly. Working out involves goal setting, that you want to do X number of minutes on the aerobic machine, lift X number of pounds on the bench press. If you achieve that goal, are you satisfied with your performance, or on the next day, do you push yourself to lift 10 more pounds, go an extra 2 minutes beyond what you did before? That's not a perfect analogy, but it's as close as I can come to explaining how I approach my expectations for my favorite teams.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Among his peers of his era, maybe he deserves HoF. In the modern era, getting multiple trophies is pretty hard. Only HoF lock I see for coaches with the multiple Lombardi's in the modern era is Bill B. Everyone else seems lucky to get even one. Coughlin is one of the only others with multiple since what? 2000s?
Aseahawkfan wrote:I was trying to find another coach who won more than one and I couldn't find one other than Coughlin and Bill B.
There are multiple teams that won two Super Bowls in the 2000s since the salary cap, but usually with different coaches. I think modern coaching Hall of Fame criteria may differ from the past where multiple Lombardis was the drive.
What other coaches have won twice during the last 20 years?
obiken wrote:Does getting your team to the Superbowl and winning one, make you a HOFamer? I dont know, I Marv Leavy was a great coach who got there 4 times, along with Bud Grant, they are HOFamers. Holmy, I would say yes, because he took two teams to the SB and won one. Flowers, no way!
obiken wrote:Does getting your team to the Superbowl and winning one, make you a HOFamer? I dont know, I Marv Leavy was a great coach who got there 4 times, along with Bud Grant, they are HOFamers. Holmy, I would say yes, because he took two teams to the SB and won one. Flowers, no way!
Aseahawkfan wrote:I think Pete Carroll has a better chance of making it into the Hall of myself once he's done. He has a back to back Super Bowls and 4 points away from winning. He built a legendary defense that set the NFL record with four straight years of number one points allowed and earned the name The Legion of Boom. He took an under-sized QB and put him as the leader of his team with spectacular success.
I feel like if Holmgren makes it, Pete should make it. But we'll see how it goes. Pete would almost guarantee his trip if he could win one more Super Bowl.
Outside of Belichek, I don't see any HOF quality coaches since 2000, according to my own personal standards. Mike Reid, maybe, if he gets another Lombardi. Parity is a killer as far as coaches go.
There's a couple of things that sets Holmgren above Pete. The first is that Pete got fired from two NFL jobs. Not so with Holmgren. The Walrus took two different teams to the SB. Pete has had just the one. Holmgren's coaching tree is much more impressive than Pete's, with Andy Reid, Steve Mariucci, Dick Jauron, Ray Rhodes, and Jon Gruden compared to Pete's Lane Kiffen, Dan Quinn, and Gus Bradley.
RiverDog wrote:Outside of Belichek, I don't see any HOF quality coaches since 2000, according to my own personal standards. Mike Reid, maybe, if he gets another Lombardi. Parity is a killer as far as coaches go.
There's a couple of things that sets Holmgren above Pete. The first is that Pete got fired from two NFL jobs. Not so with Holmgren. The Walrus took two different teams to the SB. Pete has had just the one. Holmgren's coaching tree is much more impressive than Pete's, with Andy Reid, Steve Mariucci, Dick Jauron, Ray Rhodes, and Jon Gruden compared to Pete's Lane Kiffen, Dan Quinn, and Gus Bradley.
RiverDog wrote:Outside of Belichek, I don't see any HOF quality coaches since 2000, according to my own personal standards. Mike Reid, maybe, if he gets another Lombardi. Parity is a killer as far as coaches go.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I think Carroll is a shoe in with one more Lombardi. Holmgren never a built a defense like the Legion of Boom. In fact, historically they beat out defenses like the Steel Curtain, Baltimore's legendary defense, Purple People Eaters, Doomsday Defense, and every great defense in history for most years leading the league in points allowed. That's pretty big on a coaching resume.
RiverDog wrote:
To sum up my thoughts on the various HOF discussions:
1. I do not think that Mike Holmgren has a good enough resume to be given a gold jacket. 2. I think that Pete is a peg below Holmgren at this point of his career, and that if he were to retire today, he won't get inducted. 3. With the exception of Bill B., the only NFL head coach in the 21st century era that is a first round HOF'er is Andy Reid. 4. I fully recognize that my standard for HOF inclusion, for both players and coaches, is higher than the committee's. Like a lot of fans, I tend to think solely in terms of how I would vote and not necessarily in terms of their actual chances.
RiverDog wrote:
To sum up my thoughts on the various HOF discussions:
1. I do not think that Mike Holmgren has a good enough resume to be given a gold jacket. 2. I think that Pete is a peg below Holmgren at this point of his career, and that if he were to retire today, he won't get inducted. 3. With the exception of Bill B., the only NFL head coach in the 21st century era that is a first round HOF'er is Andy Reid. 4. I fully recognize that my standard for HOF inclusion, for both players and coaches, is higher than the committee's. Like a lot of fans, I tend to think solely in terms of how I would vote and not necessarily in terms of their actual chances.
Hawktawk wrote:If you’re putting guys like Coryell who never went to or Levy who never won one you gotta put Holmgren in with 3 appearances including Seattle’s first and a Lombardi. I have him a peg under Carroll . Holmgren had a GM named Ron Wolf who filled his every wish including Reggie White and Brett Favre , stars at the skill positions seemingly every year , great O lines . And when Favre threw the pick to lose to Denver in the second SB a wolf was furious at Holmgren , said of the ruined dynasty “ were a fart in the wind” , could t wait to get rid of him .and in the travesty that was XL Holmgrens outbursts and temper tantrums made a bad situation worse . In Seattle his teams were soft , couldn’t beat anyone on the east coast , never won a playoff game on the road .
Pete built his team . Pete built the greatest defense of the modern era in terms of longevity . Pete picked a 5’10” runt over a guy making 20 million who was signed as the presumed starter . That took balls . That helped Russel greatly in his career as it helped Seattle . and for all the crap about Bevell he designed a read option offense and a ground and pound run game to utilize Russell’s strengths . That second super bowl doesn’t happen without the team Pete put around Wilson when special teams and defense was the only reason along with luck that we were in overtime with Russels dreadful performance . In the end he put the ball in Russels hands to win it and he threw it to the other team . Bad call and worse execution
Still in all I think Pete should be in as well .
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, the HOF discussion belongs here, not in the Mayfield thread. Sometimes our discussions go off on some weird tangents.
To sum up my thoughts on the various HOF discussions:
1. I do not think that Mike Holmgren has a good enough resume to be given a gold jacket. 2. I think that Pete is a peg below Holmgren at this point of his career, and that if he were to retire today, he won't get inducted. 3. With the exception of Bill B., the only NFL head coach in the 21st century era that is a first round HOF'er is Andy Reid. 4. I fully recognize that my standard for HOF inclusion, for both players and coaches, is higher than the committee's. Like a lot of fans, I tend to think solely in terms of how I would vote and not necessarily in terms of their actual chances.
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, the HOF discussion belongs here, not in the Mayfield thread. Sometimes our discussions go off on some weird tangents.
To sum up my thoughts on the various HOF discussions:
1. I do not think that Mike Holmgren has a good enough resume to be given a gold jacket. 2. I think that Pete is a peg below Holmgren at this point of his career, and that if he were to retire today, he won't get inducted. 3. With the exception of Bill B., the only NFL head coach in the 21st century era that is a first round HOF'er is Andy Reid. 4. I fully recognize that my standard for HOF inclusion, for both players and coaches, is higher than the committee's. Like a lot of fans, I tend to think solely in terms of how I would vote and not necessarily in terms of their actual chances.
[/quote]Aseahawkfan wrote:Why would you give it to Andy Reid? I never cared for Reid as a coach myself. I've seen that guy get outcoached in big games too often. I couldn't pick Reid myself, though I guess for pure longevity and regular season wins he would make it in. And he finally has a Super Bowl because Patrick Mahomes is elite.
The criteria in the modern era will be lower or no coaches would make it in but Bill B. Not even sure Reid would make it in unless he wins another Lombardi.
Hawktawk wrote:Reid is a great coach . Great . As I recall KC was a doormat when they hired him . He made several playoff appearances with Alex smith and he chose Mahomes and after one year moved away from Smith who was a proven solid if not spectacular qb. He’s made Philly look foolish firing him but of course they fired Doug Peterson 2 years after he won a Super Bowl with them . Reid has been a winning coach for 2 decades . It’s no coincidence Holmgren won with him as OC but when he left Holmgren lost . I always considered him better then Holmgren , even early on .
Hawktawk wrote:Reid is a great coach . Great . As I recall KC was a doormat when they hired him . He made several playoff appearances with Alex smith and he chose Mahomes and after one year moved away from Smith who was a proven solid if not spectacular qb. He’s made Philly look foolish firing him but of course they fired Doug Peterson 2 years after he won a Super Bowl with them . Reid has been a winning coach for 2 decades . It’s no coincidence Holmgren won with him as OC but when he left Holmgren lost . I always considered him better then Holmgren , even early on .
RiverDog wrote:Andy Reid currently ranks 5th all time in number of coaching wins and has a shot of passing Landry to claim the #4 spot. That alone is going to get him some serious consideration. His winning percentage is better than current modern day HOF coaches Joe Gibbs, Bill Cowher, Bill Walsh, Bill Parcells, Marv Levy, Jimmy Johnson, Tom Flores, and Dick Vermeil, among others. His teams have appeared in the playoffs in 17 of his 23 seasons. He is tied for 3rd with Don Shula for most playoff wins. Two more playoff wins and the only one above him will be Belichick.
I can't see how anyone in their right mind would put in Tom Flores or Bill Cowher in ahead of Andy Reid.
You're making my point for me. It don't take near as much to get in the Hall of Fame now. Cowher has one Super Bowl. Tom Flores, sheesh, what a joke.
So Pete and Holmgren got a shot.
RiverDog wrote:Andy Reid currently ranks 5th all time in number of coaching wins and has a shot of passing Landry to claim the #4 spot. That alone is going to get him some serious consideration. His winning percentage is better than current modern day HOF coaches Joe Gibbs, Bill Cowher, Bill Walsh, Bill Parcells, Marv Levy, Jimmy Johnson, Tom Flores, and Dick Vermeil, among others. His teams have appeared in the playoffs in 17 of his 23 seasons. He is tied for 3rd with Don Shula for most playoff wins. Two more playoff wins and the only one above him will be Belichick.
I can't see how anyone in their right mind would put in Tom Flores or Bill Cowher in ahead of Andy Reid.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You're making my point for me. It don't take near as much to get in the Hall of Fame now. Cowher has one Super Bowl. Tom Flores, sheesh, what a joke.
So Pete and Holmgren got a shot.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 42 guests