Wednesday, February 19, 2014

AFC Championship

Just a random stat:

There are 6 playoff teams in each conference. Since the NFL-AFL merger, 7 teams appear in American Football Conference (AFC) championships consistently, leaving the Bengals vs Chargers match in 1982 and Titans vs Jaguars conference championship in 2000 as the only American Football Conference championships that do not have the Patriots, Steelers, Colts, Raiders, Broncos, Bills and Dolphins.



One of the best football teams - ever?







I even may go on further and say, given the current playoff structure of having 4 division winners and 2 wildcard teams getting to the playoffs, given the trend in the past 10 seasons, the playoffs are up to the Steelers, Patriots, Broncos and the Colts to lose. 

I would like to think the successes the Steelers, Patriots, Broncos and Colts achieved are due to the commitment to long-term stability, as evident in the strong support of their respective owners. If the Bills, Dolphins and Raiders re-orient their teams to organisational excellence, through either sale of their teams to a richer, more committed owner (such as the Patriots), or the succession planning as seen in the Colts or the Steelers, or maybe even full involvement with ex-players and coaches as what the Dolphins and Raiders did in their heyday; then we shall see long-term successes. 

Who knows, a improved version of the Dolphins may match the Patriots can give them a run of its football pedigree, just as what the Ravens are doing currently to a rebuilding Steelers team in the past 3 seasons.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Table of Contents

Best AFC and then NFC teams, ranked alternately


  1. Rationale of ranking by win %, sorted by conference
  2. Pittsburgh Steelers
  3. Dallas Cowboys
  4. Miami Dolphins
  5. Minnesota Vikings
  6. Denver Broncos
  7. San Francisco 49ers
  8. Oakland Raiders
  9. Washington Redskins
  10. Baltimore Ravens
  11. Philadelphia Eagles
  12. New England Patriots
  13. Green Bay Packers
  14. Jacksonville Jaguars
  15. St. Louis Rams
  16. Indianapolis Colts
  17. New York Giants
  18. Kansas City Chiefs
  19. Chicago Bears
  20. Tennessee Titans
  21. Seattle Seahawks
  22. San Diego Chargers
  23. Carolina Panthers
  24. Buffalo Bills
  25. Atlanta Falcons
  26. New York Jets
  27. New Orleans Saints
  28. Cincinnati Bengals
  29. Arizona Cardinals
  30. Cleveland Browns
  31. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
  32. Houston Texans
  33. Detroit Lions
  34. The Lions-Steelers connection
  35. Can teams change their destiny?


Friday, February 4, 2011

San Francisco 49ers: Molding Role Players

San Francisco 49ers: Molding Role Players

I have nothing much to say about the Niners, because they have a new coach in Jim Harbaugh and I do not know his new system. However, I reflect upon their glory period from 1979 to 2002 — and still recall the molding of wonderful players under the great Bill Walsh.

Under Bill Walsh, all players from Ronnie Lott to Joe Montana get to play in their positions well, under a system that best utilizes their talents. Walsh even traded for Steve Young to ensure continuity in the team. Their success continued until the owner that oversees the whole 49er team system, Eddie DeBartolo, stepped down from ownership due to controversial ‘corruption charges’. I need not say anything more about their achievements in the period - 5 Super Bowl appearances with 5 wins.

I am a casual football fan, and I know nothing much about the Niners like many others do, but my opinion is: as long as the team is winning and they score more points than their opponents, it does not matter to me what else they do, other than ensuring that their success last longer, so that the fans will be happier for a longer period of time, too.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Green Bay Packers - Great Legends, Great Spirit

Green Bay Packers

Packers are the Steelers’ opponents in the Super Bowl XLV. They were also old adversaries of the Cowboys, whose stadium where the Super Bowl match-up will be held. The Packers do capture the attention of many NFL fans around the nation, because great people with great spirits characterize the Packers.

Three individuals mark the Green Bay Packers’ history: Curly Lambeau, Vince Lombardi and Mike Holmgren.

Lambeau – Great Pioneer

Lambeau was a founder of the Packers. Lambeau is born and raised in Green Bay, Wisconsin. He played for the famous Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne for a year before dropping out and returning home for the sophomore year. He then worked for the Indian Packing Company, who sponsored the Packers and gave the team their name. He played for the team from 1919 to 1929, and first official pass, first official touchdown pass, and kicked the Packers' first official field goal. He also coached the team, and continued coaching until 1949.

Lambeau was a winner for the Packers. He led the Packers to 6 NFL championships within the first 30 years of his leadership of the team, including 3 in a row from 1929-31. He is a pioneer of many firsts in the NFL and professional football as a whole. He introduced the practices of daily practices, the forward pass in the NFL, implementing pass patterns and flying to road games. All these enable the Packers to concentrate better and focus their energies to pass the ball more accurately, to score more points to win games and championships, and to be more competitive.

He also pioneered the use of a training facility, which unfortunately turns out to be his downfall as the team’s undisputed leader.

Lambeau’s departure from the Packers had been a sad chapter in the team’s long history. He left the Packers is not because of retirement, like maybe Chuck Noll of the Steelers did; he left, more so because of the Packers’ board of directors (made up of Packers fans, to be explained later) did not like the idea of Lambeau building the first self-contained training facility in professional football, known as Rockwood Lodge. When the Lodge burned down in a fire in January 24 1950, Lambeau resigned as coach about a week later. Perhaps this unfortunate incident, in my view, could be seen as a result of disagreements of the usage of funds to spend on such a facility, with the rest of the management, who may not understand the Packers’ on-field needs to remain competitive.

After Lambeau left, although there had been a change in uniform colors, from blue to green, perhaps to emphasize the color ‘Green’ in the Packers. The transition period from Lambeau to the next great coach had not been smooth.  The team had to keep up with the times. The Packers were subject to macromanagement, as they did not meet Lambeau’s demands of new training schemes and grounds, which led to the departure of a fine coach like him in the first place. Also, the Packers have little to offer to contend with the Canadian Football League and the military service. They are too small and too unattractive, to NFL players, who prefer to go to teams with larger audiences and more lifestyle options. Especially for the 1958 NFL season, the Packers finished its worst season up to that point, as they lost 10, tied one and won only one game.  And the Packers had to raise funds to build a new stadium. It is eventually built, and is still used as the Packers’ home ground.

The savior of the Packers turned out to be Vince Lombardi.

Vince Lombardi – Effectively motivational           

When Lombardi was hired as head coach of the Packers, he was the offensive coordinator of the New York Giants, serving the Giants alongside Tom Landry, the defensive coordinator (and later, Dallas Cowboys coach).  The Giants were the NFL champions for 1956, vindicating the effectiveness of both coordinators’ and future coaches’ guidance of the team, before they were better known as the head coaches of their teams.

Lombardi is known to combine spiritual inspiration with military-like execution. He studied at the Cathedral College of the Immaculate Conception for two years, before transferring to St. Francis Prep and thereafter Fordham University, where he became part of the famed ‘Seven Blocks of Granite’. He also had a stint with the U.S. Military Academy, as assistant offensive backfield coach. His influences by both the Catholic Church and the military really shaped his teams on the field.

Lombardi immediately made an impact to the Packers, after his arrival as head coach and his proclamation, ‘as of now, I am in charge’. In his first year of coaching, in 1959, the Packers improved to 7-5 and Lombardi was voted as the NFL Coach of the Year. In 1960, the Packers won the Western Conference title, only to lose to the Philadelphia Eagles. And in 1961, Lombardi won the first of the five titles he would later win with the Packers, defeating the Giants in the Packers’ home ground. In 1962, the Packers won the Eagles in Philadelphia, which they would not repeat again until 2010. They would travel to the Giants’ Yankee Stadium, and win there.

However, the Packers had two sub-par seasons finishing 2nd at their division thereafter. The Packers began to rebuild and win the next three NFL championships, consecutively, from 1965-7. The 1967 NFL championship game was the ‘Ice Bowl’, which the Packers won at home against the Cowboys at home, 21-17. The game included 11 football Hall of Fame players, Tex Schramm, Tom Landry and Vince Lombardi himself.

Regarding Super Bowls, there was a tremendous amount of pressure for the Packers to not just win, but to win big. And they did win convincingly in these two match-ups. They won the Chiefs 35-10 in the first NFL-AFL match-up and a 33-14 victory against the Raiders, in the second such match.

Lombardi later retired from the Packers in 1967. After serving a year as the Packer’s team manager, Lombardi took up the head coaching position for the Washington Redskins for the 1969 NFL season, and broke a string of 14 consecutive losing seasons. Then Lombardi died of colon cancer, dying at the age of 57.

From Lombardi’s retirement in 1967 to Mike Holmgren’s appointment as Green Bay Packers head coach, the Packers had only won one division title, in 1972, and also having just one paltry winning season along the way In addition, poor draft picks eluded the Packers, as they missed out the chance to choose players such as Barry Sanders, Franco Harris and Howie Long in various NFL drafts. It was not until Mike Holmgren’s appointment, in the 1992 NFL season that things began to change.

Mike Holmgren – Spurring the Packers renaissance

Holmgren is the leading catalyst to the Packers’ current success.

Under Holmgren’s watch, the Packers acquired rookie Atlanta Falcons quarterback Brett Favre, who had earlier won broken significant statistical records, as quarterback of Southern Mississippi. Holmgren also signed free agent and defensive end Reggie White, in 1993. The Packers were able to reach playoffs from 1993-5, but for these three consecutive years the Packers did not manage to get through the Dallas Cowboys in playoffs, resulting in their fierce rivalry.

However, the Cowboys lost to the Carolina Panthers in 1996, while the Packers won their wildcard game against the San Francisco 49ers at the same season. This resulted in a NFC Championship Game match-up between both teams. The Packers prevailed, and reached Super Bowl XXXI, to play the New England Patriots. The Packers won the championship game. The Packers did attempt to defend the Super bowl title the next season, while they play against the Denver Broncos, who had 4 record Super Bowls earlier. The Broncos finally won a Super Bowl in Super Bowl XXXII. The following season, the Packers lost to the San Francisco 49ers in a wildcard playoff game, and Holmgren decided to leave the Packers as head coach.

In total, the Packers clinched consecutive playoff berths for 6 consecutive seasons, in Holmgren’s tenure as head coach.

Holmgren’s Packers did find continual renewed success on the field, based on the team he built in the 1990’s.

Great spirit off the field

The Packers are characterized by a strong fan culture. It is attributed to the Packers’ periods of ‘dark ages’, in the 1950’s as well as in the 1970’s and 1980’s, but it is still nevertheless mostly great for the team.

The Packers are the only team in the NFL to be owned by its fans. Its unique ownership structure allows only fans to buy, at most, 200,000 shares. And all proceeds of the sale of the Packers are supposed to go towards the Green Bay Packers Foundation, the recipient of any remaining asset involved in the sale of the Packers. The Foundation works with a wide variety of activities and programs that benefit education, civic affairs, health services, human services and youth-related programs. The Packers are also the only major-league sports team to release a balance sheet every year.

Probably because of its dispersed ownership structure, it is safe to say that there is no dominant owner that characterizes the affairs of other teams (especially the Rooney family of the Steelers or Jerry Jones of the Cowboys, etc). As fans often are involved in stock sale, Packers fans directly own a team. However, this is not replicated in other NFL teams – NFL ownership policies currently prohibit all other teams to have more than 32 owners, and amongst these 32 owners, only one is allowed to have more than 30% shares in the team.

The Packers had two stock sales in 1950 and 1997, to raise capital to re-develop their stadium, in which the fans vigorously and strongly supported, by buying the team’s stocks.

However, because capital is only raised and approved in major occasions, as well as the Packers’ own unique voting structure that decides management decision making; these have resulted in past shortage of funds, as well as extremely close scrutiny by the fans, in the Packers.

They could not afford, in 1950, a new team training ground for the team. They were not able to continue Lombardi’s coaching system intact, as there was no coherent system to ensure good replacements to continue succession to Lombardi’s teams. In addition, the whole team is rudderless – there had been no vision, and only searches, for a coherent Packer team idea, at least until 1992 when Holmgren is hired.

Fortunately, the Packers community learnt from their glory eras, by having the luck of installing Holmgren as the head coach, and entrusting and even standing to the team’s decisions. From 1992 onwards, the Packers found their rhythm, and they began to build a natural team structure that ensues till today. This has enabled the Packers to move on from the succession of Rodgers as quarterback. Although Holmgren did not draft Rodgers, he was considered to be the successor to Favre, for the system that is set since Holmgren’s helm.

So far, this arrangement worked quite well – Rodgers played for a 2 postseasons out of his 3 seasons starting at quarterback, played in the 2010 Pro Bowl and also will play Super Bowl XLV (though he hasn’t won a division title yet), whereas Favre had won one division title in 2010, reaching the conference championship in the process, but not progressing further to reach Super Bowl.

But i think, at least, in the long run, the Packers management, at least as seen in the quarterback issue, will sustain the Packers momentum longer.

With the fans’ (and hence, in this case, the management’s) patience and common vision for the team, with their unquestioned loyalty to buy team ownership shares as well as packing Lambeau Field to create a 100-year wait list for season ticket.

I expect the Packers to have continued success, in time to come, as their fans had been exceptionally sharp and supportive of their team all these while.

Reference:


Friday, January 21, 2011

Miami Dolphins - A Once-Great Groundbreaking Team

The Steelers is the old guard of AFC, as they are the oldest and undisputedly number one team in the conference. The Cowboys, on the other hand, is the model team for all expansion teams, as they are undisputedly the most successful expansion National Football League team, in terms of Super Bowl wins, conference championships, division titles and playoff berths. Both teams are the golden symbols of success in the NFL.

However, in terms of winning percentage since the AFL-NFL merger, one team stands between the Cowboys (3rd) and the Steelers (1st) currently. The team is Miami Dolphins.

Groundbreakers

Miami Dolphins are a groundbreaking team, just like the Cowboys.

First of all, the Miami Dolphins are the oldest professional sports franchise to play in the state of Florida. No other team in other professional leagues can beat that.

The expansion of AFL to Miami is itself significant, because it signals the arrival of Florida as a large state on its own, to challenge the established states of the North and the East. As late as the 1920 United States population census, Florida has less than 1 million people and is the least populated state in the South. But there had been a railroad boom after that census, in the 1920’s, and cities such as Miami began to sprout. By the 1960 census, Florida has 5 million people and it became the 2nd largest state in Southern United States terms of population, after Texas.

Perhaps the reason that explains Miami Dolphins’ birth is changing economics of sports, particularly football. Just 6 years ago before the AFL was formed, no team could ever financially survive south of the Mason-Dixon Line. Although Texas is the 6th-ranked state in population in 1960, while Florida is 10th and Georgia 16th, these three states have no professional sports team on the year before. The smallest state to have sports franchises was then Missouri, which happens to be the crossroads between the Midwest, West and the South, and yet there is no NFL team then locating there. AFL, sensing opportunities to expand in new markets, added new professional football franchises in New England (New England Patriots), and in two unknown territories: the Rockies (Denver Broncos) and Texas (Houston Oilers and the relative failures Dallas Texans). Later, the Texans moved to Kansas City, Missouri and gained success as the Chiefs, while the Los Angeles-based Chargers moved to San Diego. The four teams mentioned above opened new markets for the eight-team league. Hence it served as an impetus for the AFL to continue exploring expanding in new territories. AFL made a choice – they chose Miami as the next location for their next expansion team, in March 1965, for reasons including good weather, growing populations and the lack of a football team.

Don Shula

The reason why the Dolphins became successful in the 1970’s, following the AFL-NFL merger, was simply summed up in a name, in two words: Don Shula.

Shula was a long-time head coach of Miami Dolphins from 1970 to 1995. He crossed over from the Baltimore Coach, where he was as head coach since 1963. He coached the most games in NFL as head coach of both the old Baltimore Colts and the Dolphins, at 526 games.  He won the most games, with 347 victories. He coached consecutively in 33 football seasons. He won 2 Super Bowls and 5 conference championships.  He posted winning records against all the coaches he played against as head coach, except former Chiefs and Bills head coach Marv Levy. He is the only head coach to post a perfect season, without a loss, which is not repeated, even till today. His 1985 12-4 Dolphins team was the only team that won the 1985 Chicago Bears team, which went 15-1 in the season, ranked by ESPN as the greatest NFL team ever.

Can anyone break new grounds better than Shula?

Shula has won his Super Bowls in a distinct golden period in his long football career, from 1971 to 1974. Since 1974, the Dolphins have been able to keep posting winning records, as he only had 2 losing seasons in the 20 seasons, after 1974. However, the Dolphins somehow did not win a Super Bowl afterwards. The AFC powerhouses Steelers and Raiders in the late 1970’s, then the NFC teams, such as 49ers, Bears, Giants, Redskins and Cowboys in the 1980’s and 1990’s, began to dominate, and deprive the Dolphins from clinching the Vince Lombardi Trophy. Shula was unable to untangle these teams’ stranglehold on the Super Bowl in his last 2 decades.

However, despite a lack of achievements, Shula is still regarded as the undisputedly best head coach of the Dolphins; as of 2011, Shula coached and won 65% of all Dolphins games, 85% of all Dolphins playoff games and all of the Dolphins’ conference championships and Super Bowl rings. Shula’s Dolphins teams alone can also rank in the top quartile in total division titles and playoff games won. Shula has never coached any team that won only 5 games, in his seasons with the Dolphins, which explains the high 5 or less losses: 5 or more wins ratio, which is 2nd to the Steelers.



Why would he not continue to coach in the Dolphins, if he consistently can field winning teams?

End of Dolphins’ success?

No matter how many games Shula had won, he cannot battle the change of ownership that the Dolphins faced, in the 1990’s.

Wayne Huizenga, the head of Blockbuster Video, had earlier bought the Dolphins from Joe Robbie, the original owner, in 1990. He also eventually bought 50% of the Dolphins’ home stadium. He bought all shares of the team in 1993. He eventually sold a 45% of Dolphins’ Stadium and 95% of the Dolphins’ shares to Stephen Ross.

With a strong owner, the coach’s position is undermined. Hence Shula did ‘agree to step aside’ in 1996 and retire, after 33 seasons at the helm of his teams. This move was interpreted as Huizenga firing him in a slimy manner.  Jimmy Johnson replaced Shula as head coach, who won 2 Super Bowl rings with the Cowboys, replaced him.

Never did Huizenga expect that Johnson did not achieve the sky-high expectations of winning the Super Bowl, as Johnson did not win a division title, and only managed to reach the conference divisional games stage. In the process, long-time quarterback Dan Marino also began to show relationship strains with Johnson, resulting in both Marino and Johnson retiring from football in 1999. It is noted that Johnson did not attend Marino’s retirement ceremony.

The Dolphins later fared rather well with a core team, inherited from Shula and Johnson’s eras, under the lead of head coach Dave Wannstedt. But he only managed to win one playoff game in his tenure. He later left to head the University of Pittsburgh Panthers college football team.

Since the departure of Wannstedt, however, the team had been in ruins, rudderless without a sense of winning order. The Dolphins only managed to reach the playoffs once under Nick Saban, who later left to head the Alabama Crimson Tide. Later, two-time Super Bowl-winning coach Bill Parcells did tried to revive the team, as Executive Vice President of Football Operations, and this resulted in a 10-game improvement to a 11-5 season in his first season in charge, in 2008, resulting in the only division championship since the departure of Wannstedt. But then, he only yielded 2 consecutive 7-9 3rd placing in the AFC East division, in both the 2009 and 2010 seasons.

It is my hope that the Dolphins will somehow find their winning touch again, through consistency. Wish them all the best.
  
Reference:



Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Dallas Cowboys --- Winning It First and Right




Dallas Cowboys

The Cowboys are the star of Dallas, Texas, and even America. They are ‘America’s Team’. No other team has more glitz than them. Indeed, it can be seen that the Cowboys are really the focus of attention.


Identity

In Dallas itself, all the teams’ identities seem to center around the Wild West theme, that brings justice and control to the vast grassland plains in the West. Both the baseball (Rangers) and the basketball (Mavericks) evoke an American Old West feel, just like the football Cowboys do. In addition, all these three teams have a white-and-blue color scheme, and all three teams seem to exude a feeling of law enforcement. The hockey transplant team from Minnesota, the Stars, is appropriated into the Dallas context through their logo. The star forms the basis of the sheriff’s badge, policing the vast rural outposts of the Wild West. All team names and symbols seem to suggest the influence of taming the West. Or should I say, trying to tame America as a whole?

Indeed, the Cowboys are always trying to blaze new territories, and are always the first in achievements.


Pioneering new winning boundaries

The Cowboys were the first NFL team to achieve a few milestones related to winning. The ‘Boys had an unprecedented 20 consecutive winning seasons from 1966 to 1985. The Cowboys were the first NFL team to win three Super Bowl rings in four years, from the 1992-5 NFL seasons. The Cowboys were the first wild card team to go to Super Bowl, in 1975.

The Cowboys had broken new ground in the past with increasingly dazzling star-power, as they manage to have many stars in their rosters.  In different times, they have superstar players, from the Super Bowl VI-winning Roger Staubach and Bob Lilly to the 1990’s ‘The Triplets’ Troy Aikman, Michael Irvin and Emmitt Smith. In the 2007 NFL season, the Cowboys even had a record-breaking 13 Pro Bowlers in NFL.  The D even managed to had a great Doomsday Defense which, despite losing Super Bowl V in 1970, managed to bag a Super Bowl Most Valuable Player award in Linebacker Chuck Howley. He is the first defensive player to win the award. He managed to intercept two passes and force a fumble in the game.

Leading with steady guidance

Somehow, the Cowboys managed to achieve success initially, especially in the Clint Murchison era from 1960 to 1984, due to unwavering support to the main people, and entrusting them to do their tasks well.  Murchison even entrusted Schramm so much in that Schramm held the voting rights of the franchise at league meetings, which league owners usually have. This is probably the reason why Tom Landry managed to become the head coach of the Cowboys for 29 years, in effective partnership with President Tex Schramm, and Vice President for Player Personnel Gil Brandt throughout the years.

Together, they created lore in the Dallas Cowboys culture. Schramm created the Cowboy Ring of Honor, which inducts the most prominent Cowboys with character who contributed to the team's success. Only 7 players were inducted in the Cowboys Ring of Honor in the first 20 years of the Ring’s existence. To be inducted into the Ring is an honor, as there are 20 Cowboys in the NFL Hall of Fame, but that there are only 12 amongst the 20 in the Ring.


If not for Clint Murchison's bankruptcy in 1985, perhaps the Cowboys would enjoy more years of success. Indeed, under him in charge, the Cowboys achieved a state of stability, even with so many stars on the team.

The Cowboys do indeed try to play the right style of football as they deem fit to win, to bring supreme control in new winning territories.


Largest and shiniest

The Cowboys are also larger than life. They have the largest stadium in NFL, holding up to 110,000 people, in the Cowboys Stadium. The stadium is currently the largest domed stadium, has the largest column-free interior and it has the largest high-definition video screen, used as the scoreboard, at 11,520 square feet. Put it in comparison with a basketball court, which hosted the 2010 NBA All-Star game, actually the scoreboard is even larger than the basketball court.

Maybe as a result of their glamour, glitz and largesse, the Cowboys are the 2nd most valuable sports team in the world (to the more globally popular Manchester United soccer team), at $1.65 billion. The Cowboys are also the wealthiest and most profitable team in the NFL, netting $269 million every year.

Indeed, even if the Cowboys are having a down season, they will still find ways to wow audiences and assert order in the NFL world, just as what law enforcement officials do.

Reference:


Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Winners look the same?


The Cowboys and the Steelers have much in common. In this article, I hope to explore their link, and find how success can be achieved, through consistency and continuity in both clubs.

The Cowboys-Steelers Connection


The previous article I wrote was on the Pittsburgh Steelers. Their successes are only rivaled by the Dallas Cowboys, who are interdivisional rivals. The Steelers currently have a 2-1 lead over the Cowboys in Super Bowl, but the Steelers won their games during their 1970's dynasty era, while the Cowboys won their sole game so far, in Super Bowl XXX.

The fates of the Steelers and Cowboys are also intertwined. The Cowboys' first regular season opponent was against the Steelers. But the Steelers later were placed in a difference conference from the Cowboys with the existing 10 AFL teams, resulting in inter-conference Super Bowl match-ups. Both teams, though, are scheduled to play every four years in regular season, and their all-time competitive matchup is split at 15-15.

However, despite the evenness of the competitiveness of the Steelers and Cowboys, some Cowboys fans still maintain that they are still the greatest team in NFL history. (Packers?) Nevertheless, they are still the best team in NFL since the NFL-AFL merger, if we look at their overall playoff berths, playoff wins and Super Bowl bids. In each of these three categories, the Cowboys have one more of each as compared to the nearest competitor, the Steelers.

The Steelers and Cowboys are not just compared by results alone. They have similarities in various areas, such as relative stability in coaching and leadership, while they are different in some aspects of football, such as playing styles. 

Comparisons between Cowboys and Steelers

As said earlier, the Cowboys are successful, and they can be mentioned in the same breadth as the Steelers, in terms of success. The Cowboys have one more playoff berth, one more playoff win and one more conference championship than the Steelers. While the Steelers can equal the Cowboys in terms of the last two categories, from the NFL standings since the AFL-NFL merger, the Cowboys will still lead in playoff berths anyway, albeit marginally. This shows that the Cowboys managed to field competitive teams in the past 41 seasons or so, just like the Steelers.

Both teams also have a similar delegated management system that persists, under supportive owners.

The Cowboys, especially in their first 29 years, also had a hands-off approach of management that the Steelers also practice. The Cowboys rallied on the trust the owner Clint Murchison Jr. gave to his three main men to run the club - Tex Schramm (general manager and president), Tom Landry (head coach) and Gil Brandt. 

Similarly, for now, the Steelers also depended on their current set-up of Mike Tomlin, Director of Football Operations Kevin Colbert and defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, since Tomlin's appointment as head coach in 2007. Colbert and LeBeau were hired at the previous head coach Bill Cowher's tenure. Tomlin and the Rooney family (the Steelers' owners) had ensured  the same football operations core, without the Rooneys' interference.

The Cowboys are also similar to the Steelers, in that their host regions are known football hotheads. Both Western Pennsylvania and Texas support football, not just at the professional level, but also in the college and high school levels. Pennsylvania hosts a Big Ten team, the Penn State Nittany Lions, and Pittsburgh itself has the Pittsburgh Panthers, that plays in the Big East. West Virginia Mountaineers and Ohio State Buckeyes play in neighboring states to Pennsylvania. Texas is also big in the college football scene. Texas is home to four Big 12 football programs, and the Big 12 is regarded as one of the most competitive football conferences in college football. Both states also have large high school football followings, that spawned popular culture works such as 'Friday Night Lights' and 'All The Right Moves'.

Culture Clash

However, the Cowboys are all too different from the Steelers.

The Cowboys are known for the white jerseys, classy and dazzling on-the-field performance, based on big, bold and beautiful passing. They are seen as the star of NFL, as they managed to achieve a whole lot as the first expansion team in the NFL, in terms of wins and also date of founding. On the other hand, Steelers are always seen as the men in black, stopping others and having a lot of stars, making strong fundamental plays on the field. They are also seen as the force of continuity, as an old-time NFL team founded in the 1930's, in contrast to the relatively upstart Cowboys.

Perhaps it is in the different styles that they exude, not the wins they generate on the field, is the real determining factor in separating both great teams.

Note: It could be possible that the Steelers could overcome the Steelers as the team with the most playoff wins and equal the Cowboys in terms of Super Bowl bids, in Cowboys' home field. Don't hold our breaths!
  
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