Curbelo Fanboy
BERTBALL IS LIFE
Charles Martin was the main reason for no repeat in 86. Tho that wasn't guaranteed cause that Giants team was a load. Without McMahon tho it took that chance away.Sorry for my hot take to what I saw as your hot take.
Shame on Charles Martin - no place for that. But those Bears were more than McMahon.
Buddy Ryan moved on. Guys wanted $$$ and disfunction grew. Ditka-Harbaugh was nuts.
But you are right also. By the end of 86, the Bears were returning to their cheap ways. Buddy left after 85, and then after 86 the stream of free agents started to leave & Payton retired at end of 87. Talent left & wasn't replaced with as good a grade of talent. A slow progression to mediocrity that fully took hold by early 90's.
Another factor was the 85 team was a bit of a "lightning in a bottle" effect. The 46 scheme was revolutionary at the time. The "zone blitz" concept was not as much of a thing prior to then. Buddy crafted a scheme & perfected it just at the right time when they had the mix of talent that was perfect for that reckless aggression blitz like crazy style. After 85, the league started to figure out the scheme a bit. Also, in response to that scheme the more pass heavy west coast style started to become more widespread across the league. The offensive geniuses like Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, etc devised ways to to neutralize what the Bears were doing. Namely lots & lots of short passes to beat the blitz. All those things combined with the sense of complacency in the organization (including Ditka & many players) caused the steady decline.
As an aside, as someone who remembers that era, the 80's was a real transitional time for how football was played at all levels. The game was a "run heavy" game back then. Most teams had a run/pass breakdown where run was well more than 50% of the plays. Heck New England made the Super Bowl & only threw 12 passes IIRC in the AFC title game. To you younger folks that style would be virtually unrecognizable today. By the late 80's there were some teams (Houston & Buffalo in the NFL, Houston in NCAA) starting to use the run n shoot concept as their base offense. 4 wides, 5 wides QB in the gun all the time. The type of stuff that seems so common place today was revolutionary back then. A real fascinating period of football history.
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