- Thread starter
- #1
Last edited by a moderator:
Alzheimer's?
When your offense is built around a downhill power run game and your QB only really plays well in shotgun/pistol formations these problems will exist.
No i did state it here Robo.
I stated here and i cannot recall what thread that he will lose control of the team after a loss in Seattle,you could see it on the faces.
Plus Davis and two other players stated that Harbs is very distant to them and "Old school".
Here is what I'm sensing and tell me if you think this is reasonable or not.
Harbaugh has universally been treated as though he's brilliant, a once-in-a-lifetime football mind. He's a genius and above reproach.
His players are not dumb and knew it wasn't true; that he was in fact a very proud person who stumbled into a made team who won, not because of him but in spite of him.
And they resented it.
Now that they're now winning, shit will unravel and Harbaugh is already powerless to stop it.
Not true. He took over a gifted team that routinely underperformed. He took that talent and turned it into a winner. The season isn't over just yet.
Losing teams mentioned in connection to the curse
Super Bowl losing teams who went on to poor follow-up performance include:[3]
Cincinnati Bengals. (Super Bowl XXIII). 1988 season: 12-4; 1989 season: 8-8.
Cincinnati started a long streak of losing with their 1989 Season mark and it ended with them making the playoffs in the 2005 Season.
Denver Broncos. (Super Bowl XXIV). 1989 season: 11-5; 1990 season: 5-11.
The Broncos would rebound to advance to the 1992 AFC Championship Game vs Buffalo
Buffalo Bills. (Super Bowl XXVIII). 1993 season: 12-4; 1994 season: 7-9.
Atlanta Falcons. (Super Bowl XXXIII). 1998 season: 14-2; 1999 season: 5-11.
New York Giants. (Super Bowl XXXV). 2000 season: 12-4; 2001 season: 7-9.
St. Louis Rams. (Super Bowl XXXVI). 2001 season: 14-2; 2002 season: 7-9.
Oakland Raiders. (Super Bowl XXXVII). 2002 season: 11-5; 2003 season: 4-12
Carolina Panthers. (Super Bowl XXXVIII) 2003 season: 11-5; 2004 season: 7-9.
Philadelphia Eagles. (Super Bowl XXXIX) 2004 season: 13-3; 2005 season: 6-10.
Chicago Bears. (Super Bowl XLI) 2006 season: 13-3; 2007 season: 7-9.[4]
Here's my point: Coaches should make it about the players because it IS about the players. Harbaugh doesn't think, he KNOWS it's about him. The players have gone along with it because they were winning. If you keep losing, the locker room is going to walk out on this guy. When guys like Gore are ready to split, it's over and time to move on from Harbaugh.
Start winning and this is a non-issue but two losses out of the next three and I can see heads rolling.