Posted on 06/28/2016 9:44:44 PM PDT by MaxistheBest
bfl
RIP.
Dan Marino and the Dolphins shredded Buddy’s defense. My friend made a crap load of money on that game. Had the Dolphins made the Super Bowl they had a better chance to beat the Bears than the Pats.
>>How often do teams shut out opponents in the playoffs in the NFL even once?
SF shut out the Bears in the ‘84 playoffs; the Rams shut out the Cowboys in the division round of ‘85; the Giants shut out the Redskins in the 1986 NFC-C game. It may not be common now, but it wasn’t exactly uncommon then.
>>roster was stacked with nine Pro Bowlers,
That Cowboys team the Bears beat 44-0 had 4 Pro bowlers that year and other perrenial pro bowlers from that era: Danny White, Ed (TT) Jones, Tony Dorsett (HOF), Tony Hill, John Dutton, Mike Downs, Dennis Thurman, and I think Mike Saxon made it a few times as well.
>>several players who were among the best of their era at their positions, and may end up with a half-dozen players in the Hall of Fame.
Other than Peyton, Dent Hampton and Singletary, who? Hampton and Dent are VERY questionable entries. Peyton, of course, is the real deal and in my opinion, probably only behind Jerry Rice as the greatest player of all time.
The Cowboys had 2 HOFers that same year — White and Dorsett. And they flamed out early.
I'd consider DT Steve McMichael and LB Wilber Marshall among the best in the NFL at their positions back then, along with kicker Kevin Butler. In fact, I always thought Butler was the best kicker in the NFL during his years on the Bears. He would have been a perennial Pro Bowler except he played half his games in the toughest NFL stadium for kickers.
Miami definitely would have put up a better fight in the Super Bowl than New England ... but, then again -- so would most NFL teams back then. LOL.
You do know that team produced a raft of Hall of Famers right?
Richard Dent at his best was completely un-blockable.
They did it once, maybe not on a rematch. That was always the fun of the 46 defense, it’s high risk high reward. It’s an ears back defense that will either kill the play in the back field or give up a huge gain. There’s no middle ground, which is why it doesn’t have a great track record outside that one year. But that one year...
>>You do know that team produced a raft of Hall of Famers right?
Only 4, and only one totally legit. None of the other three would have made the HOF had they played in the ‘70s. If you want to say Payton makes up for it, fine, but let’s not kid ourselves: this team was “loaded” because they defeated other weak teams.
>>Richard Dent at his best was completely un-blockable.
Arguable, but even if true, 1) he wasn’t at his best more than a year or two, and 2) no more so than Ed Too Tall Jones.
Walter Payton
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