This is one of those retarded discussions where everybody says their president did all this great stuff but the other president did nothing but ****.
The Tomlin and Tolbert haters will always have excuses for the continued success of this team.
Mike Tomlin has been head coach for 9 seasons. Among active coaches with 5 or more seasons as head coach, only Mike McCarthy and Bill Belicheat have a better winning percentage. And oh BTW, the two best QBs in the NFL over that span.
Mike Tomlin is the youngest SB winning head coach in history. He's won the AFC twice. He's rebuilt the ENTIRE ROSTER (except Ben) from the ground up without turning in a losing season.
Hating Tomlin is a religion. And like religion, no amount of science or reason will overcome this dogma. People are emotionally attached to hating Tomlin the same way they are to loving Jesus.
Boy... you're pissy today.
It's an interesting website. And it uses Approximate Value from Football Reference.com as it's method of measuring value, which I actually agree with. It's not perfect, but it's good. I remember discussing this with TMC and he did something similar except he measured value as "Games Started". I also think the value of 2nd contracts is an interested method of evaluation, but that would take a lot of work.
Believe me, this website answers A LOT of questions I did a lot of work to find the answers to. In fact I have measured "what I would have done" in every draft since 2007 using Approximate Value. I evaluated every draft we've done using Approximate Value as one of the main methods of success.
But this website is not a reflection of Mike Tomlin's era yet. Not even close.
Because this is "accumulated" older players will have much more AV points than younger players.
The reason Jacksonville is 7th on this list is because it is measuring the players Jacksonville used to win 40 games between 2004-2007 (including a playoff game in Pittsburgh and Tomlin/Roethlisberger if I recall).
This list really is more a snap shot in teams success about 3-4 seasons ago more than now.
This list will not look the same when we measure 2007-2026 ten years from now. We've talked about the fact our 2008 and 2009 drafts have yielded exceptionally low AV production FOR OUR TEAM (which is what this is measuring) because neither of those draft classes had any player stick on the Steelers for a 2nd contract (or were even on the team 5+ years after the draft). Will Pittsburgh be high on the list? Probably. Stability helps. As does our M.O. of paying our own rather than spending a lot in free agency. But I doubt with our underwhelming 2008 and 2009 draft classes that will be #1, maybe not even top-5.
I think this is a really great website. Just understand what it is measuring and the fact it weighs those players from 1996-2002 (whose careers are mostly over and accumulated in full their AV) way higher than those players drafted 2010-2015 even if the newer players are much better talents (they haven't accumulated AV yet).
It is not an attack on Tomlin, just the fact this analysis really stresses the success of our drafts prior to Tomlin much more so that what he has done since he's been here.