05-09-2019, 07:20 PM
(05-09-2019, 06:55 PM)depthchart Wrote: I find it interesting how Mike & the Brain Trust of the Organization can reset the narrative.
Mike publicly claims Dalton must "re-establish" himself.
If Dalton falters then Mike can pursue the Drafting of a rookie QB to fix the problem (so to speak)
The "New Dey" slogan is tied to Marvin leaving and Zac coming in which is a reset of the narrative.
Players/Coaches go thru the revolving door first as solutions chosen by Mike & the Brain Trust but some leave as the culprits.
Meanwhile, Mike & the Brain Trust get to tee the ball up again with much of the blame sticking to some of the very players/Coaches that the Brain trust chose to begin with.
My old man has his own version of the Golden Rule that applies here. He who has the gold makes the rules.
The Brown certainly has their misses and their faults. At the end of the day, though, they don't go out there and suit up. They aren't the ones out there folding up in primetime, the playoffs, and against the Steelers. The narrative of the Bengals under Marvin has always been choking in big spots.
Does anybody think that if the Pats lost the SB that their fans would be saying that the FO is to blame because they knew they didn't have an outside threat at WR and went bargain bin shopping to try and fix the problem with Josh Gordon? Every team has weak spots. It's up to the coaches to emphasize their strong spots and camouflage their weaknesses.
At the end of the day, Marvin had the talent necessary to make some playoff runs and they didn't do it. They always crumbled under pressure. Different players, different assistants, they always cracked. They didn't choke because MB horribly mismanaged the team for a decade. They choked because Marvin was a mediocre coach.