FWIW I think the main difference between the Steelers and Ravens overall record over the past 5 years is that Ben is better than Flacco. I was not playing the ridiculous game that the Steelers offense carries Ben.
And the shortcomings on offense with the available players was a shot at Haley, not Tomlin (as supported by the red zone success this season as opposed to prior seasons under Coach Todd while Bell has been AWOL). Tomlin is regarded as having focused his efforts in recent years on being more involved with the defense - given the results there hard to say that reflects well on his coaching skills.
But on the core issue of Tomlin having the team ready for every game, I will defer to the player I regard as one of the most insightful on the team, as quoted in this 2017 article (written immediately before the Steelers lost to the great Mike Glennon (for the second time after a previous home loss when Glennon played for Tampa) and the Bears in Chicago as 7&1/2 point favorites).
The reputation for playing down to inferior foes was sealed by the Steelers in 2014 and stayed with them (some say their losses at Philadelphia and Miami last year should be included) and they know that’s their reputation.
“Yeah, we definitely do,’’ All-Pro guard David DeCastro said. “You try to treat everyone the same. Human nature is part of it. They maybe give us a better shot because of who we are. I don’t know if they treat the Steelers differently. It doesn’t matter, we have to come out here as professionals and treat everyone the same.”
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/s...s/201709220062
Players obviously should be accountable but IMO that also is on the head coach.
And as far as other examples of being ready to play, add to that incidents from the 2017 season such as: the Steelers standing around on the sidelines while Al Riveron botched the Jesse James replay review rather then be certain of the next two plays to run if the catch was overturned, with catastrophic results; the awful start to the Jax playoff game book ended by the horrible clock management at the end of it; and Tomlin's teams repeatedly coming out flat against inferior teams in 2017 (even in victories such as the Colts win last season where they fell behind 17-0).
So I do not see the proximate cause of the Steelers better overall record than the Ravens during the Ravens recent playoff drought being attributed to Tomlin's superior skills in having his team ready to play, a flaw for which he has been criticized for years. He has worked with a superior roster over the past several years and talent usually wins wins out over the course of a season.
Consider the possibility the Ravens record against the Steelers simply reflects the confidence and familiarity of a division rival that they can beat a team they play twice a year despite not being as talented, just as the Steelers assume they will beat the Bengals regardless of who is wearing the uniform that day.
