salmar80 wrote: ↑21 Jan 2022 15:04
I personally think MM kinda not-quite burned out in the latter years. He tried his best to innovate along with holding the ship together, and just didn't have enough energy/time to do a full self-analysis and an innovative re-design of his scheme. I have a lot of respect for him. Too bad we didn't give him the chance to rest and regroup a bit earlier.
McCarthy was like the author who writes a great book and spends the rest of their career trying to come up with another great idea.
He had a scheme. It worked in his era. He was really good at implementing it and getting QBs ready to play it at a high level--I mean really good at it. Rich Gannon credits MM for his career revival. Favre's career revival and Rodgers' initial development, as well as strong performances from the likes of Matt Flynn in-house are clear evidence of it.
But the game started catching up to that and McCarthy was a little slow to adjust. But then when he DID adjust, he just... wasn't very good at these new concepts. He turned to analytics but misinterpreted correlation and causation and started pushing for the wrong plays (emphasis on creating big plays to improve the offense instead of improving the offense to facilitate big plays was a prime--and the most damaging--example). He tried to do some motion or create some gadget looks and players (the TyMo era) and just... not great.
As MM tried to implement these not-quite-right reforms to keep up with modern football, Rodgers--whose football IQ probably got him to modern concepts a little more smoothly and a little faster (but who
TOTALLY bought in to the big play = good offense fallacy, in public comments and obvious impact on his play style) started losing respect for him. Clearly, what MM was trying wasn't working.
Once the inability to win with scheme broke down, his long-term flaws in terms of game and clock management, lax on penalties, and pass happy play calling started mattering a lot more because he had diminished his strengths without strengthening his weaknesses. And while he still had strength as a leader--no one can ever tell me he doesn't know how to get teams used to winning because he wins a ton of games), that, too, diminishes as younger generations come in unless you keep it fresh.
It doesn't dilute how good his first book was. It doesn't make that book any less of a classic, or undermine his skills as an author in that book.
But it just means he had
one good book in him and when the world changed, he didn't know how to write for the new audiences.