yet Denver ran over that #5 rated Packer defense, didn't Davis have over 100 yrds? I can't remember ( I'll have to go look it up now) but neither defense held the score below 20 ptsRingoCStarrQB wrote: ↑17 Dec 2022 11:57Interestingly to me at least, the 1996 Packers D was ranked #1. And the 2010 Packers D was ranked #2. The 1997 Packers D was ranked #5 (Denver's 1997 Defense was ranked #6).Yoop wrote: ↑17 Dec 2022 10:43that could be, being good on both sides of the ball obviously is the goal, but that article I brought in the other thread shows that in the last 3 or 4 years the best defenses in the league didn't even make it past the WC round, couple that with the resources used to produce those defenses, and it went to waste.go pak go wrote: ↑17 Dec 2022 10:10I posted last spring the data of SB teams (conference champs) the last 20 years and what they have in common.
It showed that SB teams usually had a top 5 unit, either offense or defense and the other side of the ball was generally top 10 but occasionally top 15 unit.
Top offenses had more cushion for the defense to be top 15 whereas top defenses generally needed closer to a top 10 offense and especially a good STs unit. However, more SB teams had top 3 defenses than top 3 offenses...meaning top 3 offenses didn't make the big game as often as a top 3 defense did.
The overwhelming theme was SB teams didn't have a liability. Usually the other side wasn't lower than top 15 in any of the categories.
just look what we've spent to get what we have this year, defense is to inconsistent to rely on year to year, and our team is a great example of that, and actually our team is sorta the norm, one year to the next is almost impossible to predict concerning defense.
I realize we have to spend to have the best defense possible, thing is there are few defenses that can hold any offense to under 20 pts and offenses average more then that.
yep, Davis ran for 157 yrds with 3 TD's, our defense couldn't make a goal line stand, 3, 1 yrd TD's