Thursday, October 1, 2009

Bill's No. 1 on the, er, list


Truth and attitude. We've been pouring both around here since we opened the Grill Room one month ago. And thanks for your patronage.

So here's today's truth: After 25 years in the newspaper business, I can tell you that when a columnist throws a list at an editor, said columnist has found absolutely nothing interesting to groan about. Or...more likely, said columnist spent too much time in a watering hole like the GR the night before, and is having trouble processing all forms of thought.

That in mind, today you are getting a list...

(Truth, Part II: One of the dirty little secrets in the business is that lists, especially thought-provoking ones, are extraordinarily reader-friendly and therefore popular. Columnists are never, ever told this.)

Today's Attitude: Ranking the NFL Coaches
(First-year coaches were spared...)

  • 1. Bill Belichick, New England: Bill Parcells never won a Super Bowl without Belichick on staff. Belichick (pictured) has won three without Parcells. Maybe the greatest defensive strategist ever.
  • 2. Tom Coughlin, N.Y. Giants: You want him on that wall. You need him on that wall. Nothing gets past the ultra-prepared Coughlin.
  • 3. Andy Reid, Philadelphia: Reid's greatest attribute is that his teams play hard for him no matter what. Sometimes he falls in love with the pass a little too much, though.
  • 4. Jeff Fisher, Tennessee: The NFL's longest-tenured coach with one team. Like Reid, his players give him all they got. Special teams this year, however, have been a disaster.
  • 5. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh: There's a theme here... His players will run through a wall for the guy. He won the Super Bowl last year by finally learning it is OK to loosen up the offense from time to time.
  • 6. John Harbaugh, Baltimore: This guy might be one of the all-time greats when his final bio is written. Took a lot of guts for a rookie coach to toss the keys to a rookie QB like Harbaugh did last year.
  • 7. Mike Smith, Atlanta: See above. Like Harbaugh, Smith gave the ball to a rookie QB last year, and a franchise that had gone to the dogs (sorry, Mike), was back in the hunt.
  • 8. Lovie Smith, Chicago: After a 5-11 start with the Bears, has rolled up a nifty 42-25 record. Tends to be a little conservative. Be interesting to study how he deals with pretentious, but talented QB Cutler this year.
  • 9. Mike McCarthy, Green Bay: Did a heckuva job dealing with the on-again, off-again Favre crap, er, flap. That could have brought many coaches down. Tends to lose too many close games, though.
  • 10. Sean Payton, New Orleans: Payton gets high points for burning the coaching bible and often scripting unconventional approaches to otherwise conventional situations. This dude will go for it from anywhere on the field on fourth down.
  • 11. Brad Childress, Minnesota: Won six games his first year with the Vikes, eight the second, 10 the third, and is off to a 3-0 start this year. That, sports fans, is a positive trend.
  • 12. John Fox, Carolina: His loyalty to older, more established players might be starting to hurt him. But this guy was 63-49 heading into the year with the Panthers. Rumors are heavy he's gone after this year. If so, he'll land somewhere else -- and win.
  • 13. Ken Whisenhunt, Arizona: Has a brilliant four-game run to the Super Bowl last year to light up his resume. This year, though, we'll find out how good he really is dealing with that success.
  • 14. Mike Singletary, San Francisco: Hard to believe there were so many doubters when the guy was finally given the head job. Is he wicked intense? Yep. But he seems to be learning how to blink every now and then.
  • 15. Tony Sparano, Miami: Has to get huge credit, along with Big Brother Parcells for turning around a floundering Dolphin team last year. But bench Ted Ginn already.
  • 16. Jack Del Rio, Jacksonville: Mr. Conservative would have been in the Top-10 two years ago. Could just be a case of being in one place too long. Really needs to get some Payton in 'em, though.
  • 17. Jim Mora, Seattle: Showing a flare for kicking players in public -- just like daddy.
  • 18. Marvin Lewis, Cincinnati: Lewis has his detractors, but fact is he is 48-50 with a franchise that's been perpetually laughable over the years. Have to think anything less than nine wins gets him run this year, though. Even the Bengals have only so much patience for the mediocre.
  • 19. Gary Kubiak, Houston: Kubiak better win this year, or he's done.
  • 20. Norv Turner, San Diego: Probably the luckiest man in America besides whoever is on Jennifer Aniston's arm. A loser everywhere, he then goes to a San Diego team loaded with talent -- and is managing to muck that up too.
  • 21. Tom Cable, Oakland: Honestly, who could possibly know how good or bad this guy is given his owner. Has to be better than what's below him, though.
  • 22. Dick Jauron, Buffalo: Has had ONE winning season in nine years as a head coach. Seriously, what keeps this guy employed?
  • 23. Jim Zorn, Washington: Like Cable, the poor guy has to work for an egotistical maniac, who threw him into some deep water without a life preserver. He probably should have admitted he couldn't swim.
  • 24. Wade Phillips, Dallas: Here's the other theme -- maniac owners. Phillips simply can't win a big game, but Jerry keeps him around because he's well-behaved, and doesn't hog the mirror.
  • 25. Eric Mangini, Cleveland: Might be the worst coaching hire any franchise has ever made. What in the world did the Cleveland hierarchy see in this guy that they just HAD to have him?!
(...but not completely spared)
Ranking the rookies:
  • 1. Rex Ryan, N.Y. Jets: Buddy's boy is winning and making enemies everywhere. Sound familiar?
  • 2. Jim Schwartz, Detroit: The guy won a game for Detroit. 'Nuff said.
  • 3. Jim Caldwell, Indianapolis: So far, so good for this easy-goer.
  • 4. Josh McDaniels, Denver: Ran the childish Cutler and is still 3-0.
  • 5. Steve Spagnulo, St. Louis: Patience will be tested in talent-void St. Louis.
  • 6. Raheem Morris, Tampa Bay: Not sure what the Bucs saw in this youngster.
  • 7. Todd Haley, Kansas City: The gentle K.C. press is already burying this guy.
(Daily Mail (UK), photo)

2 comments:

  1. Andy Reid? Getting to the Super Bowl and actually winning it are two completely different things...hence the overnight Coughlin makeover (at least in the media shorthand) from "guy who lost his locker room" to "great coach" after actually winning the big one.

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  2. Good point, MJ.
    Winning is everything.

    No mistake that the only three coaches that have actually won Super Bowls are in the Top-5 slots.

    Reid's teams are consistently in the hunt, though. He's 101-64 in the regular season, and 10-7 in the playoffs. He's also survived in a pretty tough media town.

    Gotta give him that. Right?!

    Cheers,
    Doug

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