RiverDog wrote:It's ironic, as this morning, without my usual weekday local morning news to occupy me at 3:30 am, I watched the replay of the Bengals/Rams Super Bowl on NFL Network. Sorry, man, it was not a 'defensive' game. Good defense, yes, especially at the end by the Rams when the game was on the line and their pass rush finally began to wear down the Bengals' overmatch offensive line. But that was AFTER the Rams' offense had gone 79 yards in 15 plays and trailing by 4 to score the winning TD with 85 seconds left in the game.
We're going to have to agree to disagree on this one.
Good defense or defensive game, whatever. Bottom line is defense was extremely relevant. Both defenses held both offenses to under their scoring averages. The Rams had 16 points going into the final five minutes and the Bengals scored 20 points. It wasn't a shootout or high-powered offense game.
Point is even you acknowledge defense still mattered. And was necessary for a win. Not like some are claiming where dominant offense is what we need now because the rules no longer allow defense. It was a couple of well-matched teams with good balance on both sides of the ball slugging it out until one finally had more points at the end in a low scoring Super Bowl compared to how you could characterize a offensive game.
Even looking over the results of Super Bowls of the last five years, we've had some real gems by teams whose defenses stepped up big whether ours or the 13-3 New England win over the Rams in 2019. Where was McVay's spectacular offense then? Bill B didn't look like a dinosaur holding the Rams to 3 points three years ago.
Even last year the Tampa Bay defense stepped up big holding KC and Mahomes to 9 points. Sure the tackles were out, but 9 points is still super low for a Super Bowl team with Mahomes as QB.
Defense still matters a lot in the modern NFL even with the rule changes. Pete's methodology still works as does Belichicks' and any other defensive coach. Flavor of the past few years McVay has still produced one Super Bowl and even that Super Bowl required his defense to get a last stop to prevent even a field goal to win.