superpunk
Well-Known Member
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An entire article about how the players crapped the bed, and out of it we take "Parcells was out of touch." Years of effective coaching had gone by, countless showdowns with assistants more renowned than Payton - but apparently all it took to expose 20 years of coaching was a single showdown with Sean Payton.
All it took for the style to become relevent again was a playoff berth.
How convenient.
It's the players, people. The entire article was about our players playing crap-*** football. They stopped executing, and we stopped winning. It wasn't any magical Sean Payton voodoo exposure. Clearly he outcoached Parcells that day. Clearly he had his squad more prepared than Parcells did.
Our defensive "scheme" wasn't "exposed". That's loser talk. Our players inability to execute was exposed. And no matter how much we changed things up from New Orleans to Detroit, the players couldn't get it right. Whether we're talking about the defense, or Julius Jones, it was the players screwing up on the field - not the coaches. That's what the whole article is about.
All it took for the style to become relevent again was a playoff berth.
How convenient.
It's the players, people. The entire article was about our players playing crap-*** football. They stopped executing, and we stopped winning. It wasn't any magical Sean Payton voodoo exposure. Clearly he outcoached Parcells that day. Clearly he had his squad more prepared than Parcells did.
Our defensive "scheme" wasn't "exposed". That's loser talk. Our players inability to execute was exposed. And no matter how much we changed things up from New Orleans to Detroit, the players couldn't get it right. Whether we're talking about the defense, or Julius Jones, it was the players screwing up on the field - not the coaches. That's what the whole article is about.