- Joined
- Aug 7, 2010
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- 12,111
- Name
- Rambeau
You are kind of new here. What I believe we used to say, was that it was a "perfect storm" of things that could go wrong.I think all coaches though, to some extent, are cognizant of when their contract ends, and how they're not generally not going to be coaching in that last year without a renewal, so they'll try to win in that penultimate year.
In 2010, he was great. I'm not going to get mad over that final game because if it wasn't for the fact that the Rams were playing way beyond themselves to get to that point (and the rest of the division being crap), it wouldn't have been anything but just another game. You go down the path of getting mad about missing the playoffs despite the rest of the improvement, and eventually every season that doesn't result in a Super Bowl win is termed utter failure. Then you start thinking if you just keep hitting the reset button enough, you're going to get a "good" management team.
In 2011, some of the fault goes to the "win now" 1 year wonder veterans since I don't think any of them worked out. Most of the problem though was just a slew of injuries (including our 2nd year QB getting his brains smashed in behind a quickly makeshift OL, which I still wonder how much that hurt his development).
So I agree with you it hurt the team, but wasn't the main cause of what happened that year.
As far as coaches, I think they make a huge mistake when they do act selfish (for lack of a better word), instead of building towards the team's future, even if that means taking a step backward. I think owners understand this, better than coaches/GM's/some fans. I am always in it for the long haul, so I want to see a team that is trying to build a higher ceiling, and are not satisfied with throwing an old coat of paint over the old ceiling.