The reality is that the Steelers from 2004-2011 were just a few plays and injuries shy of a dynasty:
2004: The team was 15-1 -- Roethlisberger being a rookie hurt, the Patriots cheated big time knowing our plays from getting their *** kicked in regular season; could have been considered among best ever
2005: Roethlisberger's bad game in Super Bowl eclipses how incredible he was carrying the team through the playoffs offensively
2006: Cowher's personal situation and lack of focus made it a lost year
2007: Tomlin transitioned team to his style and his mistakes (working them too hard all year) caught up with them, but it was a necessary evil
2008: Seriously incredible team that could compete with anyone
2009: Troy's injuries were biggest thing -- weren't same team without him
2010: 3rd Super Bowl in 6 years -- again injuries to Troy and Pouncey hurt team badly in a Super Bowl that Steelers had a great chance to win on final drive anyway
2011: Final Run: Ben's high ankle sprain, Mendenhall's ACL, Hines decline; before playoff game -- Starks & Hampton torn ACL in playoff game. The end of the run.
Just consider what the main dynasties have done following their years:
1960's Packers -- horrible team until mid 1990s
1970's Steelers -- those of you old enough remember
1980's 49ers -- managed well through 1990s because they were able to go from Montana to Young, then over a decade of disasters and a short run just blew itself up
1990's Cowboys -- finally managed first playoff win since 1996
Okay -- more like 2000 Steelers "mini" dynasty (teams with 2 or more Super Bowls, 3 or more Super Bowl appearances)
1970s-80s Raiders -- been a degrading joke since 1983
1970's Dolphins -- were competitive for decade, never matched Steelers -- then landed gift in Marino and did nothing with it to this day
1990's Bills -- 4 Super Bowls in row; longest playoff drought in NFL (longer than Browns)
1990s Broncos -- Shanahan didn't look so brilliant after Elway retired, Davis got injured and were caught cheating salary cap
1980's Redskins -- After 1991 Super Bowl, they have been comical
1970's Vikings -- 4 times to NFCCG -- where they have absolutely choked badly, especially in 1998 and 2009; otherwise not even on radar
Just a small sampling: the point is that we've gone from legit Super Bowl Champion to transition and I get it's frustrating for all of us to go from watching that unique group and heck, even the Steelers teams since Cowher took over from 1992-2002 that got us so close, the missing piece being a QB. And we were not happy in 1998-2000 (although it was different, we weren't coming down from such a high and had more HOPE; heck we see Joey Porter in 1999 preseason and were dubbing him "baby Lloyd").
But a transition can take a little time: And were a made FG from back to back playoff appearances; a knee injury to Bell from easily advancing to AFC Championship. That sounds like a promising start, doesn't it?
This team does have a lot of needs on defense -- it's hard for all of us to think of the Steelers being carried by the offense because the only times we've really seen that were arguably 1978 & 1979 (and it was STILL the Steel Curtain) and 2002 when Tommy Maddox showed us our first legit passing game since 1982.
We've watched the defense carry us to 4 Super Bowls since 1995, only 1 where it let us down and we've been the best defense in football since the turn of the millennium and now we're supposed to accept that we can compete with a hopefully improving defense and rely heavily on the offense? It's all but impossible to reverse that kind of conditioning.
But if we look at this objectively:
Roethlisberger is only getting better
Bell is the equivalent to Troy on offense -- when he plays the team is just simply better
Brown was the best WR in football last year and with Wheaton and Bryant one can only believe the offense is going to have more weapons
Pouncey has taken over a leadership role in locker room not seen since 2011; and with DeCastro lead the best OL since 2005
The defense:
We're taking leaps of faiths on 4 #1 picks since 2011: Cameron Heyward, Jarvis Jones, Ryan Shazier and the unnamed 2015 (we're going defense, let's be honest) -- where the only one who has shown us that legit next level is Heyward, but the other two have suffered season ending injuries. In a sense, it is possible that we will have 3 #1 picks starting their first full year on defense next year. There are a lot of variables -- so yes, it's hard to get a warm and fuzzy feeling about all the unknowns -- but if they play at all with the talent they showed to make them #1 picks, who knows? A mix of big plays and big mistakes is a very likely possibility.
Still: The Ravens have lost so much over the last few years and the Bengals just are one of those typical one and done teams that lack a franchise QB -- the Browns are a debacle. I really see this team as a 10-6 division winner.