Ok, people complained about a lack of topics and Patler suggested one close to my heart so here goes.
I vote TT. To make it even more controversial I don't honestly think its that close. I have felt this way for a long time, but had to bite my tongue, much like I was sick of Brett Favre back in 2004 but had to wait for things to play out.
TT built the Seahawks into the team that went to the Superbowl (only to have the franchise take a dump after he left) and he has now built the packers into a Superbowl champion that is primed for multiple opportunities.
Wolf had the benefit of being able to buy a lot of proven veterans to vault his team to primetime, whereas TT hasn't had that many opportunities in todays FA market. Wolfs prize FA catch was the greatest DE of all time, and everyone KNEW he was the greatest when we signed him. TT's prize FA catch was a CB who was considered washed up as a CB and ready to be moved to safety.
Parallels and similarities are many. TT's first move as GM was drafting a franchise QB then hiring a westcoast coach who was hungry. Wolfs was hiring a hungry westcoast coach and then trading for a franchise QB.
Wolf struggled to assemble a solid line, whiffing on 2 LT's early on. TT struggled to assemble a solid line whiffing on a handful of guards, but when he drafts early he seems to have better success than Wolf did.
Both GM's paid a lot of attention to the defense and talked about the importance and both eventually put a marquee product on the field.
The main reason I give TT the edge is his ability to find gems in undrafted FA's, and trades. Guys like Tramon, Shields, Grant were all guys that no one really desired but all have turned into exceptional players.
I also give the nod to TT for constantly stressing chemistry and not taking in the NFL's problem children like Andre Rison and Keith Jackson.
I'll leave it at that and open up the discussion to my dysfunctional rat family.
I vote TT. To make it even more controversial I don't honestly think its that close. I have felt this way for a long time, but had to bite my tongue, much like I was sick of Brett Favre back in 2004 but had to wait for things to play out.
TT built the Seahawks into the team that went to the Superbowl (only to have the franchise take a dump after he left) and he has now built the packers into a Superbowl champion that is primed for multiple opportunities.
Wolf had the benefit of being able to buy a lot of proven veterans to vault his team to primetime, whereas TT hasn't had that many opportunities in todays FA market. Wolfs prize FA catch was the greatest DE of all time, and everyone KNEW he was the greatest when we signed him. TT's prize FA catch was a CB who was considered washed up as a CB and ready to be moved to safety.
Parallels and similarities are many. TT's first move as GM was drafting a franchise QB then hiring a westcoast coach who was hungry. Wolfs was hiring a hungry westcoast coach and then trading for a franchise QB.
Wolf struggled to assemble a solid line, whiffing on 2 LT's early on. TT struggled to assemble a solid line whiffing on a handful of guards, but when he drafts early he seems to have better success than Wolf did.
Both GM's paid a lot of attention to the defense and talked about the importance and both eventually put a marquee product on the field.
The main reason I give TT the edge is his ability to find gems in undrafted FA's, and trades. Guys like Tramon, Shields, Grant were all guys that no one really desired but all have turned into exceptional players.
I also give the nod to TT for constantly stressing chemistry and not taking in the NFL's problem children like Andre Rison and Keith Jackson.
I'll leave it at that and open up the discussion to my dysfunctional rat family.


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