Booby said, "grasp" - BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!
You're hands are full everyday - we know...
This coming from Bermuda-Dil(do), the guy who didn't know Marino ever went to a Super Bowl and couldn't understand the premise of Best D ever for one season.
You, of all people. Very sad.
Don't leave out the 2008 Steelers, they had the toughest schedule in the history of the NFL and also played at the beginning of the passing era. That 2000 Ravens defense was damn good, but go back and look at their schedule and QB's they faced, trash.
can you reread opening thread? it mentions 80/90s giants and Eagles defense. that kinda makes it hard for us simple folk to grasp that it is evaluations on single seasons only.
Gosh, darn it!!! Those pesky facts keep bubbling to the top...
you mention eagles and giants of 80s and 90s but dont expect people on a steeler message board to bring up the Steelers of the 70s.
Bermuda-dil(do), why do you think Marino never made it to the Super Bowl?
Aikman could barely remember who he was by then.The 2008 Pitt D was very good, but not as dominant as the very best. The 2000 Ravens could only play who was put on their schedule, and let's face it, it wasn't like they faced NO ONE along the way.
They started off the season dropping a donut on us, 16-0. (Yea, we had Kent Franken-Graham at QB.)
But along the way, they wasted Brunell and the Jags twice (who were coming off a 14-2 season and trip to the AFCC game).
They beat the AFC Champ. Titans and McNair.
They beat Troy Aikman and the Cowboys.
They beat up Jake Plummer and the Cards, who had a pretty good offense and passing game.
Then in the playoffs they destroyed Denver, TN and Oakland, before tearing the Giant into shreds in the Super Bowl.
I don't think their entire schedule was a cream puff. And like I said, they can only play who is on their schedule, both in season and postseason.
You won't ever hear Pitt 2008 D compared to the Ravens' 2000 D. Balt.'s DL, LBs AND secondary were ALL loaded.
https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/rav/2000/gamelog/
Straw man argument. I never said no one could mention Steelers of 70's, but the ARTICLE itself (not my commentary) treats the subject only by single seasons.
You're hands are full everyday - we know...
This coming from the Doh who struggles with the basics of the English language. You of all people...
"You're" is a contraction for "you are."
"Your" indicates possession.
Hardly the same thing.
https://www.espressoenglish.net/difference-between-your-and-youre/
I wouldn't have bothered with this easy slam, but you came after me, as if it is I who wonders around aimlessly, without being cognitive.
You, of all people........
Plus, the 70's didn't have free agency to deal with so it's not an apples to apples comparison if you consider a multi-year span.
This coming from Bermuda-Dil(do), the guy who didn't know Marino ever went to a Super Bowl and couldn't understand the premise of Best D ever for one season.
You, of all people. Very sad.
1976 Steelers. You know how a decent offense helps the defense, keeping them off the field, putting up points to force the opposition into pass-only? No such luck for much of the 1976 season, since the team had Mike Kruczek as QB for six full games and part of three others because Bradshaw was hurt. No matter. The defense gave up 6, 0, 0, 0 points in the first four games, and COMBINED yardage allowed (4 games, mind you) of 713 yards in those four contests.
Unfortunately, both Harris and Bleier were hurt in the playoff game against Baltimore. If those guys are available, the Steelers spank the Raiders and win their 3rd straight, and the 1976 defense is not deprived of a SB showing.
as far as individual seasons go, my top three in the post-merger NFL:
1. '76 Steelers
2. '85 Bears
3. '00 Ravens
1991 Eagles
Statistics don't describe how dominant they were that year and how much they had to do when Cunningham went down with an injury. Of all the defense I WATCHED week-in, week-out, that was the best.