
Originally Posted by
MrPgh
I have made several suggestions on other threads. But since you missed them I'll be happy to repeat.
For starters (and this should've started happening after Super Bowl XLV IMO) stop with the restructuring of contracts to keep old veterans on defense. Yes, we're all in awe of how good they were in 2008, but it isn't 2008 anymore. In a salary cap era you can't keep guys out of loyalty. If guys can't play anymore, or you can get the same out of a cheaper, younger player then it's time to say goodbye. Keeping Ike Taylor over Keenan Lewis is the most egregious example of how the Steelers have been managing their roster and cap in recent years. In the cap era, you have to be more cut throat when making personnel decisions. No more can they keep kicking the can down the road.
Who's in charge? Colbert is the GM, but he doesn't have final say on draft picks, and Art II has been talking about the state of the team over him for quite some time now. Shouldn't the GM do that since an owner is supposed to entrust a GM with that responsibility? Tomlin seems to be able to overrule (or at least has much more sway than) Colbert on who he wants to draft and which aging veterans he wants to keep, but at the same time he isn't allowed to pick his own coordinators. The Steelers say they make decisions "as a team," but that sounds like an easy way to avoid assigning blame when things go wrong. So have one voice, one person who makes the decisions. No, that person should not be Art II. Even though he owns the team, bad things happen when owners get too involved with the football operations of their teams (Davis, Jones, Snyder). That voice should come from the general manager. If the owner cannot trust that GM, then that GM should be fired and replaced with another GM the owner can trust.
After two mediocre seasons, the Steelers need to stop convincing themselves that "they're close." Usually when mediocre teams try to convince themselves they're close to being in contention and don't need to make many changes, they continue to be mediocre. Everything and everyone has to be under a microscope. It shouldn't matter who is who's son, what someone did for the team 5 years ago, who's from Pittsburgh, or how the team from 40 years ago played. Did the Steelers do a thorough enough job of this so far? Are they keeping the right coaches? Are they keeping the right players? Are they adjusting their philosophies? We'll see. If they have another mediocre season in 2014, then we'll know the answers to those questions and we'll know that the Steelers made monumental errors this offseason.