TriCitySam wrote:We'll, I simply don't get anybody's that is disappointed in the last 7 years. Other than NE, who has done better? Answer is nobody. Not GB, not KC, not Baltimore. So, so hard to win. Completely unrealistic.
You're not all wrong. Pete did a fantastic job of building what is undoubtedly the best stretch of football this franchise has ever seen and one of the best in the 21st century. From the 2012 season, Russell's rookie year when we ended the year by losing a very close playoff game in Atlanta through Super Bowl 49, a loss that in retrospect was the beginning of the end, we were the best team in the league, fielding one of the most feared defenses ever.
With the exception of Bill Belichick, who is possessed with some sort of weird, unexplained magic that no one before and likely no one after him, has been able to acquire, every coaching regime has an expiration date printed on it, and although it was in some sort of unreadable code, we've recently deciphered it as Feb. 1st, 2015. Pete knows it, too. How else can you explain his walking out on a post game presser? He's been those situations before where he's had to face the music after some tough losses. But this was different. This wasn't the eternally optimistic, win forever, gum chewing Pete. He had this colorless, blank look on his face, like he was seeing his life flash before him, as if someone told him that he had been diagnosed with an incurable disease and he had just months to live.
Yes, we've been moderately successful since that SB loss in 2015. We rattled off a couple of 10 win seasons, a divisional championship, and multiple playoff appearances, missing the post season just once, by a chip shot FG, and there were some very justifiable reasons to think that we were on the cusp of another Super Bowl appearance, that we were just a player or two away from returning to our glory days of those 3 literally awesome years. We rationalized our lack of recent success by blaming it on our coordinators, throwing 3 of them into the volcano in hope of appeasing the great football God.
Despite the tweak here and there, the changes in the coaching staff, things never got better. Bad trades and over reaches in the draft from previous seasons contributed to an overall decline of talent on the roster. The downward trend started to accelerate. Pete pushed all of his chips to the center of the table by burning 2-#1 picks and a #4 for a safety. It didn't work. The 2020 season, while on paper looking like a contender as we finished 12-4 and NFC West champs, it turned out to be a house of cards, culminating in an embarrassing loss to a division rival whose starting quarterback had a broken finger on is throwing hand and was unceremoniously dumped in the offseason. Our franchise quarterback openly expressed his displeasure at our situation, and rumors of a trade started to circulate.
But we were out of ammo. Pete walked into last year's draft with just 3 picks because he had spent them on rental players in what the clarity of 20/20 hindsight has revealed was a false illusion, like a thirsty prospector seeing a shimmering lake just a few more steps away. And of course, we didn't have a first-round pick that we might have been able to use to get a real difference maker.
Now the chickens have come home to roost. We've reached the bottom of the hill, 3-7 and out of the playoff hunt before Turkey Day. Reveling in the glory of what is with each passing day becoming a more and more distant past isn't a satisfactory existence for many of us diehard fans. We're ready for a change, and not just another tweak here or there.