I’m not saying it’s the best plan. I’m not saying it will continue working. But at this point it’s pretty obvious this team is playing exactly how the organization intended it to heading into this season, especially over the last 2 weeks:

  • Safe, mistake free offense reliant on a strong running game to support a young quarterback who might be a good game manager at best
  • Bend don’t break defense with a few superstars that can regularly make splash plays

And guess what? It’s kinda working. I hear the argument that it might be unsustainable. Only time will tell. But last night’s game was a perfect example that this strategy can work against a team that follows the “new NFL style” of a high powered offense.

Also, this is pretty much Steelers football. We had the advantage of a HOF QB that upped the offense in years past, but we’ve always relied on a strong run game and bend don’t break defense with playmakers. Maybe that doesn’t work anymore, but who knows.

If the offense gets a little more life this team looks way better, especially if it stays healthy. And if we do make the playoffs and manage to pull out a win, I better not hear all these doomers complaining that “all that matters is a Super Bowl.”

  • drdan412B
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    1 year ago

    Turnovers are somewhat unreliable. You increase your chances of getting them with pressure, good tackling, and reliable coverage, but footballs just bounce in weird ways. Those fumbles and tipped balls are going to pop out of bounds before you can get your hands on them sometimes.

    Look, winning while kenny is still “figuring it out” is better than the alternative. But at some point they’re going to be down two touchdowns and this formula isn’t going to be enough. I’m not advocating we get rid of kenny yet, but he needs to play better than this (with a new OC) to get a second contract.