Dawgs By Nature
There is a universal truth in the NFL that has been around as long as the league itself.
No team has sustained championship success without a top-flight quarterback.
That is not to imply that coaching does not matter, as the idea that a coach can just “roll out the balls” and titles will follow if the roster is talented enough is so simplistic as to be laughable.
But the history of the league reveals time and again that no head coach is winning without the right quarterback running the offense:
If there is only one thing to remember about how the NFL works, it is that the quarterback matters. A lot.
That is something to keep in mind this offseason if the Cleveland Browns decide to move on from head coach Kevin Stefanski. They could create an AI version of Paul Brown to call plays and have a hologram of Brown stalking the sidelines, and it won’t matter if the Browns don’t finally solve the issue at quarterback.
And make no mistake; if the Browns do make a change at head coach, the goal must be to build a team that can achieve sustained success.
Every few years, the NFL sees a team make an unexpected run to the Super Bowl built on a bit of luck and an easy schedule. The Atlanta Falcons have done it twice (1998 and 2016), only to fall back on mostly hard times. The Carolina Panthers (2003 and 2015) fall into the same category.
This year’s New England Patriots, led by head coach Mike Vrabel, who the Browns “had in the building last year” in case you had not heard, may be the latest example as they are currently 9-2, while playing one of the weakest schedules in the history of the NFL.
No one can fault a team for the schedule it plays, but seven of New England’s win have come against teams that are ranked No. 22 or lower in ESPN’s Football Power Index, including five of the bottom six in the Carolina Panthers (No. 27), New Orleans Saints (No. 29), New York Jets (No....