|
|
Belichick can adapt
Photo
by Winslow Townson - AP
|
....much as has Jerry Manuel
Photo
by Tom Mihalek - AP |
It’s tough to think about sports with
any degree of
seriousness on September 11th. I’m
always taken back to my living room, watching a
newscast with some
morning coffee. They first said it
appeared a private plane had crashed into the World Trade
Center. Then they discovered it wasn’t a private
plane at all but a commercial airliner.
And, as I watch, already horrified,
another jet crashes into
the tower. Three people from my town
were killed, including a good friend of my daughter.
And there is no World Trade
Center.
In the aftermath, our leader vowed to
get the people
responsible. Then he assigned the
responsibility to a country he hated, and, what a coincidence, Cheney
was a key
figure in the mistaken notion that Iraq was producing weapons
of mass
destruction. So off we went to war for
no reason, killing Iraqis and a lot of Americans too.
Seven years later, we have no clue as
to the whereabouts of
Osama bin Laden. We’re assured people
are looking though. The economy is
horrible, nobody can sell their house, and the dollar is doing its best
impression of a peso. Oh, it’s pretty tough to get a job too. Maybe that’ll curtail the flow of illegal
immigrants.
We have only two “legitimate”
candidates for President. And, once again,
the prospective Vice
Presidents are far and away more impressive than the Presidential
candidates. There’s something wrong with
our
picture.
Leaders determine a great deal in
life, and in the sports
world too. We of course have seen the
Mets take on new life since Jerry Manuel took the reins.
Willie Randolph was a great sportsman and a
nice man. Some say our President shares
those traits. Wasn’t he reading a story
to a class of children during the attack on New York City? Wasn’t
he addressing a nice group of Republicans
when Katrina slammed into New
Orleans?
How does this tie in with the world of
sports, you may
ask? Well, the only bridge I can
construct is leadership. Bad leaders
accumulate losses and good ones rack up the wins. And
teams tend to take on the character of
the leader. Our country seems arrogant
and hurtful and even stupid to the world right now.
We must hope….. no, pray, that either
candidate will be better….. much better.
As much of an influence, though, as a
good solid leader can
have on a baseball game, and a baseball team, that influence pales in
significance compared to that of the head coach in professional
football, and
major college football too, for that matter.
The days when a quarterback could call
his own plays are
gone, of course, almost beyond recall. (Not
for me but for many of you, I’m sure). The
head coach puts together the game plan
and usually calls each play. But, beyond
that enormous influence, he also determines the type of players a team
will
acquire and dictates their behavior on the field.
It’s the worst thing that ever
happened to football. A team can have a
great passing quarterback
such as Kurt Warner, for example, and he’ll be forced to run the
football until
his team is almost hopelessly behind.
Conversely, there are countless
stories of the great running
quarterbacks, such as Michael Vick and Vince Young, who are shackled to
the
pocket by coaches more interested in their system than winning, or, too
limited
mentally to figure out that the system that worked with their previous
team
won’t necessarily work with the team they have now.
The best coaches adapt their styles to
their personnel. That is why Bill
Belichick can win with
overpowering defense, or win with an overwhelming passing attack, or
win with a
hard-hitting running attack. He adapts
his style to his personnel, unlike Mike Martz and
the new genius in Arizona.
Another mark of good leaders is that
they can adapt to
changing styles of play and new ideas that work. That
is why we are seeing a lot more emphasis
already this year on rushing the passer. The
Giants’ convincing win over the supposed team of
the century was
accomplished by maintaining a constant
stream of pressure on Tom Brady. The
better teams with the better coaches will copy that style this year. And already this young season, we’ve seen Tom
Brady get hurt and Peyton Manning fail to beat the Bears.
It seems to me that this new
philosophy will prove a very
dangerous one indeed for the quarterback population.
Vince Young is hurt too, and maybe mentally
as well as physically, if Coach Fischer can be believed.
Fantasy footballers especially will feel the
pinch when the better quarterbacks go down. Will
Romo be next?
But the better coaches will already
have been thinking about
adaptations. More screens and draws
maybe, more quick releases; the running backs who can catch the ball
should see
an increase in their usefulness and productivity, as will the Wes
Welkers of
the world. Especially against teams with
the big pass rush, those quick hitters will be the only way to survive.
We might see teams loading up on
quarterbacks, or see them
feature better backups or perhaps younger backups.
We’ve certainly seen already an adaptation to
the injury factor with the almost universal switch to dual running
backs. We’ve already seen the better
teams, and
smarter teams, put a more pronounced emphasis on the offensive line, at
least
if their increasing salaries is any indication.
Whatever changes are incorporated into
the game, though, it’ll
be the head coaches with smarts and imagination who will carry the day,
and the
season, as Belichick has, and Parcells, and a few others, if perhaps to
a
lesser extent. In a way, Parcells’s
style or system already incorporates the injury risk factor, calling
not only
for big linemen but also for big linebackers and even a big secondary.
Sports emulates life and it’ll be a
different type of
season. Leadership will determine the winners, and the losers too.
