Zombie... in 1996 we were only fifth in total yards in passing as well.. as DH mentioned... more times than not the only very common stat for all SB champs.. high rankings in defense.. in 1996 were #1 in Def Pts, Yards and 1st downs allowed.. not to mention 2nd in Turnover given and 3rd in taken..
"zombieslayer" wrote:
Take a look more closely at these stats:
The things that mattered - we were #1 in the NFL in Points Scored, and we also we #1 in the NFL in TD passes.
One reason I'm becoming so anti-run is because we rush too much in the red zone. Had we been more aggressive in the red zone, Aaron would have topped 30 TDs passing last year.
The other thing, SB winners, you can generally name the QB more than the RB. It's because passing matters more than rushing. In defense of Brad Johnson, he's a pretty good "game manager." Two guys who didn't belong with SB wins - Trent Dilfer (D was so dominant your Grandma could have started QB and come off with a win), and Roethlisburger (one of the most pathetic showings in QB history, but he redeemed himself the 2nd time around).
There were several RBs who were mediocre and most were less than spectacular. Marshall Faulk was the one elite RB, but he barely ran the ball. Although he did get a lot more yards receiving in the SB win.
http://www.pro-football-reference.com/super-bowl/ This is an excellent reference and you'll see what I mean. QBs win SBs.
Last 10 years - 5 SB MVPs were QBs, 3 WRs, 1 LB, 1 DB, and a whopping ZERO SB MVPs were RBs. So of the last 10 years, 8 of the MVPs involved the passing game, 2 involved the big D.
"pack93z" wrote: