kalibane wrote:I wanted to sit this one out but Future c'mon dude stop skewing the facts here. The entire core of your team was on the roster before Harbaugh was hired.
1. 4/5 starting offensive linemen: Staley, Iupati, Boone, Davis
2. Your top 2 receiving threats: Crabtree, Davis
3. Your starting RB: Gore
4. Your entire starting defensive line: Justin Smith, Isaac Sopoaga, Ray McDonald
5. 3/4 of your linebacking corps: Bowman, Willis, Brooks
6. Tarell Brown at CB
That's over 60% of the starting lineup. It also doesn't take into account lost FA's like Dashon Goldson, guys who started and logged significant time but just aren't that good like Kyle Williams. Or guys/assests who aren't with you but brought back significant value to help augment the roster like Alex Smith fetching a 2nd round pick.
There is no comparison. There are 2 guys on the entire Seahawks roster that were there before Carroll got there (3 if you count Red Bryant who left this year). And don't come to me with this coaching nonsense like Harbaugh's coaching staff is what made Bowman the best ILB in the league. 1. The talent was there period. 2. If Harbaugh and the 9ers don't reach an extension we all know that Jim Tomsula will be the next head coach and he was in the 49ers organization before Harbaugh too.
Honestly it doesn't matter who is better, and the fact that Carroll had a bigger undertaking than Harbaugh did doesn't necessarily mean that Caroll and Schneider are hands down better than Baalke and Harbaugh but don't misrepresent the facts. There is no escaping the fact that Harbaugh had just about the entire core of this team intact the day he put ink to paper.
It's not just the numbers of holdovers Hairball had, take a look at the quality of players he inherited...Frank Gore, Patrick Willis, Joe Staley, Justin Smith, Vernon Davis. That's 5 players that have been to multiple Pro Bowls. The few holdovers Pete had from his regime, with the possible exception of Max Unger, were not anywhere near the caliber of players that are still heavy contributors to the Niners cause.
I argued with many Pete Carroll jock sniffers that Harbaugh did a more impressive job at Stanford than Carroll did at USC because he had to virtually start from scratch, rebuild a program that had won just one game, that the experts said was impossible to build a consistent, dominant football program, that Pete was the beneficiary of an enormous recruiting advantage over Harbaugh's Stanford, and so on. It's a complete 180 degree reversal of the situations the two coaches faced here in the NFL.