Dresden wrote:ATRAIN53 wrote:
Bottom line is that it doesn't matter to the McCaskeys.
I find it hard to believe that any owners don't care whether their team wins or loses, or if they are loved by the fan base or hated. I think it's quite possible they are just incompetent owners, and are out of touch and clueless as to how to turn things around.
If you ever met someone involved with a team at a professional level and had a real conversation with them, you'd be embarrassed for ever quoting the "they don't care" thing that fans sometimes do. I've met lots of execs over the years, and they are all fanatical about how much they care about their jobs and effort they put in.
The other thing I'll say is that there isn't some magical approach to turn things around in para-mutual endeavors like pro-sports. One teams victory is another defeat. There is a lot of skill but a lot of luck involved. Being in the NFL without a stud QB is like being in the NBA without a superstar, your ceiling is capped, and there is no obvious, repeatable method to get a stud QB, because even if you draft 1st every year, in most years, there isn't an obvious one in the draft. You just have to get lucky. Even the "obvious" ones often end up being only average.
This isn't to say what the Bears are doing is good or great or anything whatsoever (same with the Bulls, Cubs, Sox, or any other team), it's just to say that people generally vastly underestimate the amount of pure dumb luck winning in sports has. There's a reason why you don't see great coaches/GMs from one org move to another and then build it from the ground up successfully over and over again and why teams don't just pay 50 million to get that coach or GM (because if the Hornets believed they could pay Pat Riley 50M and get a title, they sure as hell would do so).
All this is neither here nor there, you still make judgments on your coach/GM talent and move on or not based on how you think they are doing, but all of these guys are generally both extremely competent and care deeply. There are exceptions to that of course, Boylen seems to have been one with the Bulls. While I'm not in love with Pace at all and have my qualms with Nagy, I believe both meet the bar of caring/competent. Still might move on from either, sometimes you need a change, but I don't think either of these guys are straight terrible.