I subscribed to NFL Network finally in 2007. And fell in love with these shows. I could waste an entire day watching these on demand. Both seem outdated today. But in January 2007 it was the latest in cable tech. Funny.
How could they not mention the 1959 Packers? Probably the first prominent turnaround in NFL history. A team that had not had a winning season since 1946, went 1-10-1 in 1958, then Lombardi comes in, and the team goes 7-5, were in the NFL Championship Game in 1960, NFL Champs in 1961, and the dynasty was off and running.
@@bryanglass5818 Absolutely not. For one thing, that team resembles more of the 1970 Dolphins that had a ton of talent but it was adding a coach that turned them around. The 75 Colts were a strip-down, build back up job that was magnificent. Also, the turnaround concept leans more toward a single year turnaround. The Packers took 3 years to win the championship. 1999 Rams went from 4-12 to BOOM Super Bowl win. That's number one period.
Well you literaly just said it. This is a video about single season team turnarounds. You’re talking about a few seasons’ span. A 6 win increase is not significant enough to get on this list.
1:38 The 1979 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 6:10 The 1997 New York Jets. 9:29 The great Memorial Stadium turnaround of 1975. 13:48 The 2006 New Orleans Saints (Rest In Peace Tom Benson). 16:59 The start of Miami's Don Shula dynasty! 21:20 Wow, it's the 2008 Miami Dolphins! 24:35 The 1981 San Francisco 49ers! 28:58 The 2001 New England Patriots! 34:12 Okay, now that's the cue I'm looking for, the 1999 Indianapolis Colts. 39:49 The Greatest Show on Turf!
The original version that premiered in 2007 had that 1996 Carolina Panthers and Jacksonville Jaguars at number 5, before they were replaced by the 2008 Miami Dolphins in the updated version (the 1996 Jaguars and Panthers segment is on UA-cam though).
The 2008 Dolphins were the ultimate iconoclast. They tried one thing that no one at the pro level had seen before, and it worked for one year and one year only. (Shocked that they ONLY mentioned Favre, that was also the year the Patriots went 11-5 with Matt Cassel, but because of the Dolphin Wildcat they somehow were kicked out of the playoffs.)
Yeah the Dolphin one had some luck with perfect timing, Brady was hurt so Patriots weren't the powerhouse they were the year before, The Jets did have Farve but they were collapsing late that season and the Bills weren't going anywhere that year.
My favorite little nugget about that season is prior to them unveiling it in the regular season, that offense got absolutely drilled in practice whenever they pulled it out. To the point the defensive players was mocking the idea of it even existing as an idea by the coaches. They underestimated just how much knowing what it was in those practices, seeing it drawn up in team meetings, how much that made a difference. It certainly wasn't that easy for many teams in the league. Teams studied it as if it was upwards of 80% of the Dolphins playbook, when it simply was a change up at times. That's how shook up much of the league seemed to be. Though it was a flash in the pan, it was still one of the more exciting things you'd ever seen and took advantage of the talent they had.
Maybe he beats his dogs, and we dont know if he is a good person, but I think Kurt Warner is the real deal. If you ever watched, "The Brady Six" documentary about the six QBs taken before Tom, one of those guys was Marc Bulger, who took over for Warner after he got hurt. Bulger had immediate success, and was given the starting job over Warner, even when he returned healthy. In that doc, they have a sideline camera, and after Bulger leads the Rams to a TD, Warner is THE FIRST guy to congratulate him, and honestly, seemed more excited than Bulger was. NO BACK UP, especially an MVP and Superbowl winning one, who lost their job to injury, would be like that. Bledsoe sure as hell wasnt that way to Brady. That says so much about Kurt Warner. Little ego, and team first. Watching him in that REALLY impressed me.
@@chocolatetownforever7537 The only thing I know about Warner in terms of "negativity" he was rather grumpy towards a young Larry Fitzgerald. Larry had caught a meaningless TD and was essentially thinking high of himself in a bad loss and Warner basically said are you here for stats or are you here to win? And that one moment changed Larry into the man we've known as a selfless type player, and arguably is one of the biggest reasons why they would eventually be in the SB. Changed the mindset. And again, that's the meanest thing I can think of is questioning a mans commitment based on the situation. Which is wild when you consider its Larry Fitzgerald. The best thing I think Kurt did, and this is something that attaches super well to your Bulger comment, is the Eli Manning situation. Manning goes in, struggles pretty bad in a losing streak. Kurt told the staff, do not put me back in. Keep the young guy out there and let him take his lumps. And that clearly was huge in terms of helping Eli understand the adversity he'd face in the pros, knowing that the coaching staff wasn't going to give up on him. To be a guy who was a starter and be selfless enough to do that? I don't know many in history who could have made that decision.
This show on NFL network and Prime 9 on MLB network were the best sports shows of the 2000s. They were always on at the most clutch times and would show like 20 episodes in a row lol I've watched over 100 episodes of both shows and I'm still finding ones on UA-cam I'm pretty sure I've never seen
The updated version should include the 2018 Chicago Bears season. From 5-11, to12-4 was incredible and all because of one coach and one player Khalil Mack.
@@tonyarceneaux286 what do you mean? Well, his first season no one knew the kind of tricks he had up his sleeve. Hence why he had some plays that worked when they really shouldn’t have. He kinda was being cute. Then in the off-season they found out his tricks and that’s why some of the plays seemed stupid or asenine in my opinion.
The 2004 Pittsburgh Steelers from a disappointing 6-10 season in 2003 to a franchise best 15-1 record in 2004. The 2004 Steelers season is a credited to several items: - A running game reborn with the addition of Duce Staley and the rebirth of the Bus Jerome Bettis after Staley got injured. - A rejuvenated defense anchored by linebackers Joey Porter and James Farrior and had new stars born such as linebackers Clark Haggans and Larry Foote, a safety named Chris Hope and some safety from USC named ...Troy Polamalu, who would go on to become one of the greatest safeties in NFL History. - A change in coordinators - Ken Whisenhunt being promoted to Offensive Coordinator replacing Mike Mularkey who left to become the head coach of the Buffalo Bills and the return of defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau to Pittsburgh. - The most important a rookie QB Ben Roethlisberger - who never lost a game and took the Steelers all the way to the AFC Championship Game that season. Even though the Steelers didn't win the SuperBowl that year, that 04 team rejuvenated football in Pittsburgh once again.
This is a list about teams that were bad for years who suddenly got good. Not consistently great teams that had a bounce back year after one fluky bad season.
35:28 I can’t help but wince when I see Peyton get hit like that when you consider the neck problems he had later on in his career. Keith Mitchell’s entire body weight was right on the back of Manning’s head for a few seconds
Joey Thomas- I'm a Chicago Bears fan & hate the Green Bay Packers with a passion, but, I'm willing to put that on the figurative back-burner, for now & say that I completely agree with you on that one. If I were to come up with a Top-10 list of all-time greatest team turn-arounds in NFL history, that would most certainly be on mine.
@@MRB16th- Agreed. I'm a Chicago Bears fan & hate the Green Bay Packers with a passion, but, I'm willing to put that on the figurative back-burner & say that I completely agree with you, as well on that one. Joey Thomas was right...
@@phantompinoy the term WORST to FIRST is the category. It means you went from WORST to FIRST in one year. Who cares that the Bills matched their best record ever?
The 72 steelers really were something special in Pittsburgh. The steelers hadn't won a playoff game in franchise history, but thanks to franco Harris, and the steel curtain, Pittsburgh went 11-3, and made the afc championship game
When I found out about the Faulk trade, (my Fave NFL a player) and Tory Holt drafted to the Rams, and based on Trent Green and Isaac …. I picked them to make the SuperBowl. I wrote it down, I wish I said “WIN”. Then Green goes down, Im glad I saved the prediction, cause I almost threw it away
Other turnarounds that deserve mention: * The 1945 Cleveland Rams (after having gone into recess in 1943 due to the exodus of personnel to war service, and otherwise being a very poor team, won the championship with a rookie quarterback, Bob Waterfield) * The 1947 Chicago Cardinals (won the championship two years after a 29 game losing streak, including winless seasons in 1943 and 1944 - the latter as a combined team with the Steelers) * The Packers under Vince Lombardi (team had finished 1-10-1 and dead last in 1958, then went 7-5 in 1959 and were beaten in the 1960 Championship Game, then went on to win five NFL championships and the first two Super Bowls) * The 1970s Steelers (after having one prior playoff appearance in 1947 and being perennial cellar-dwellers, went on to win four Super Bowls in six years) * The 1980s 49ers (after finishing 2-14 and dead last in 1979, went on to win four Super Bowls in the decade) * The 1992-1995 Cowboys (after finishing 1-15 and dead last in 1989, went on to win three Super Bowls)
George Wilson took the Fins swimming to Don Shula not allowing water on the field during four a days. Went from 3-10-1 in 1969 to 10-5 in '70, 12-4-1 in '71 and 17-0 in '72.
The 1976-79 Bucs need to be #1. How do you go from 1-26 and scoring 7 or less points(with 11 shutouts) in over 50% of their games to knocking on the door of the Super Bowl 2 seasons later and not be considered the biggest turnaround in NFL history?
@@yepitsme4065 um, the Rams have been around since the 30's. The Bucs were an expansion team in 1976 back in the day when the expansion player pool consisted of has beens and never was'. Then they lost their first 26 games and they were so incredibly bad. I mean baaaadddd. 16 of their first 28 games they scored 7 points or less including 11 shutouts then 2 years later they're knocking on the door to the Super Bowl. The fact that they did this all from scratch is astounding. If you can't see that you're either just a hater or ignorant of how hard it was for expansion teams to compete in those days.
It doesn't matter if the Rams had been around for a thousand years, worst to champion in 1 year is far better than over multiple years. @@Rockhound6165
I agree, cant believe they let Schottenheimer go after what he was able to do in 04 05 and 06. Didnt we get to the Divisional round twice? Mini dynasty
The 2019 49ers would absolutely be in the top 3 in an updated list I think. Yes, even despite blowing the double digit lead in the Super Bowl. Going from 4-12 to 13-3, and statistically being the strongest team in the league, AND going to the Super Bowl and being up 20-10 in the second half, is a legendary turnaround
2023 Houston Texans From 3 straight 10 plus loss seasons, going through 4 different head coaches and trading away their former franchise QB overall a perennial laughingstock. To coming out of nowhere to finish 10-7 clinch a playoff spot, winning the division and winning a playoff game
Good list. I'd probably put the 1981 49ers behind the 99' Rams, but other than that, solid list. Besides all the stuff everyone knows about Walsh, Montana, and The Catch in 81', it was how terrible everything had been to end that decade, and even the lack of talent when Walsh arrived, which makes that 81' Super Bowl run even more improbable. The franchise had been so bad for so long that it wasn't a given that a GM/Coach in Walsh could save it, let alone make them champions, and revolutionize the way the game is played. That 81' team was one of the more impressive champions of those 49er teams, not only due to the turnaround, but because this was really Joe Montana, Dwight Clark, and a mostly young and very much rebuilt defense. Lott, Rice, Craig, Taylor, all those guys were still a few or several years away from joining the team. Great team..
The 8 weeks ago we stood in this same spot speech by Jonathan Vilma was in 2006 playoffs vs Pats. Jets had played and beat the Pats in New England in week 10 and now the playoff game was 8 weeks later in New England (same spot).
That'd be a good idea for a list. Without all the "comedians" of course. Three examples come to mind of the top of my head. The first is the one mentioned on this list the 1999 Falcons from 14-2 and a SB appearance to 5-11. While they didn't make the playoffs the 2008 Browns going from 10-6 to 4-12. Lastly, and one which pains me to say, the 2003 Raiders who went from 11-5 and a SB appearance to 4-12.
The 1981 Giants and Jets. Both went 4 12 in 1980 to make playoffs after long droughts. Ny jets 1969 , NY giants 1963. Jets bets packers 28 3 in week 16 to clinch the playoffs for both themselves and the Giants
Lee Roy Selmon is CRIMINALLY underrated when talking about the greatest defensive players to ever step on an NFL field. He's up there with ANY of the great pass rushers EVER.
I totally agree with the final four on this list, I turn around season for a team should not just be about getting a winning record, it literally should be about winning it all.
Saint Louis Rams 🐏 1998: under .500 (dead last in the NFC West 😆) 1999: NFL’s number one offense; SBXXXIV champs (Kurt Warner NFL MVP-42 touchdowns; 500 yards and a game winning touchdown-SBXXXIV MVP; Marshall Faulk- 1,000 rushing yards & 1,000 reception yards) Isaac Bruce HOF WR
@@michaelleroy9281 And the Los Angeles Rams 🐏 were Super Bowl champions Thanks to their defense Miller at OLB Donald at defensive tackle Ramsey at cornerback And a pretty good QB WR combo in Stafford and Kupp
Dude, I remember watching NFL Films with my late father, and him absolutely cracking up during the McKay episode where he is complaining about his own team OVER AND OVER, not getting back from the sideline lol. McKay was a great coach, and if I remember right, he had to build that team, not only without free agency, but an expansion draft as well, which is ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE. Yet he made them winners. Lastly, his answer to a reporters question about how McKay felt about his team's execution. Im in favor of it, is just priceless lol. What a man.
In an updated list I'd consider the 2019 49ers with 2011 Niners as an honorable mention. In 2011 in just his first year as HC Jim Harbaugh takes them from 6-10 to 13-3 and made it to the conference championship. Then in 2019 which was the bigger turnaround they go from 4-12 to 13-3 and made it to the SB.
@@JahNuhThunDeeTheOneAndOnly Oh, I know. I'd still put them as an honorable mention though. Simply because they improved to 13-3 with a first year HC, and went deep into the playoffs all the way to the conference championship only losing by three.
Nah they should have a segment, because the Raiders went through 13 seasons of decline after losing Super Bowl XXXVII and 2016 was the best turnaround team in franchise history.
The Chiefs organization for the last decade should be added to an updated list. They went from being 2-14 season under Romeo Cornell, the center of a murder-suicide involving a player, and a campaign to Blackout Arrowhead because of poor play to ... never having a losing season, playoff contenders, hosting 5 straight AFC Championship games, 3 AFC Division titles, 2 Superbowl wins, 3 Superbowl appearances. What a turnaround for sure!
I know somebody else already made mention of it, but, I don't care... If this episode of 'NFL Top 10' were to come out on the NFL Network between mid-2022 & the present day instead of on 4/29/2008, I guarantee you that one of the teams that were ranked between 7-10 would be considered an "honorable mention", or, something like that & be replaced by the 2021-2022 Cincinnati Bengals. You could argue that even though they lost Super Bowl 56, the 2021-2022 Cincinnati Bengals are deserving for a list like this & be able to make a legitimate case for it.
PPS if the Dolphins had won their two playoff games in 1970, they would have went from 3-10-1 to playing in the Super Bowl in their home stadium (the Orange Bowl)..THAT would have been something (50 years before Tampa and LA did it).
I never knew OJ Simpson was on the 49ers. Next thing you are going to tell me that the New Orleans Saints were the only team to pass on Lawrence Taylor in the 1981 Draft. ;)
You can’t really blame the Saints for passing on LT because they drafted George Rogers who set a then NFL rookie record of 1674 yards rushing that lead the NFL that year plus people didn’t know that LT would go on to be the greatest defensive player of all time
25 years before super bowl 36, new england had its turnaround in 1976. The pats went from 3-11 to 11-3 in a flash. That 76 record was the pats best season until 2003
@michaelleroy9281 the pats went 9-7 in 1984. The 85 team shocked a lot of people, but the 76 pats blew everyone's mind. In 75, they were 3-11. The next year, they flipped that record, and were a bad call away from the afc championship
@@Johnmhatheist Idk. Needed QB, and a couple O line men. Didnt take a whole lot to fix them, thats why I said 11. Although 7-9 to Super Bowl champion is very impressive.
An older version of this episode actually had the 1996 Panthers & Jaguars on the list. Two expansion teams have losing seasons their first year in the NFL, then both of them made their Conference Championship games the next year.
1993 New England Patriots Under .500 1994 New England Patriots 10 win season and an AFC playoff appearance Drew Bledsoe at Quarterback (number one overall draft pick out of Washington State University in 1993) Ben Coates at TE Kevin Turner at halfback Vincent Brisby at WR Michael Timpson at WR Bruce Armstrong at offensive left tackle Willie McGinest at defensive end (number 4 overall draft pick out of USC in 1994) Chris slade at OLB Vincent Brown at ILB Eugene Hurst at Cornerback Week 9 of the 1994 NFL season Bledsoe records 46 completed passes (single game record) & 70 attempted passes (single game record) vs Vikings Including a game winning touchdown pass to Kevin Turner in overtime Foxboro Stadium 🏟 Foxborough,Massachusetts
I’m first a Miami Dolphins fan but being from Illinois not far from St Louis what a season in 1999 winning a Super Bowl my uncle had season tickets and playoffs so I got to see every moment my uncle also surprised me with Super Bowl tickets. I do hope the Miami Dolphins have a season like the 1999 St Louis Rams that would be awesome
@@orangefox1231 I kind of agree, and Im a Cowboys fan. This show should be next year only after a bad one, because you shouldnt be comparing other turnarounds that had differing periods of time.
The 2006 Saints should have been number one on this list. With no disrespect, but with what the entire city of New Orleans went through with Katrina and what the Saints did for that city in 2006, no words can describe.
How do you not include Herm Edwards Turning the Jets around from 2-5 to 9-7 and winning the division, and making the playoffs after the "you play to win the game" speech?
The Steelers should be on here when Chuck Noll came to coach for the Steelers. I understand it took them a few years to get all the pieces together but if Noll haven't came to Pittsburgh who knows what the Steelers would've became. Also the fact is that the steelers had only 3 head coaches in the past 53 years tells how good they became when Noll came into the organization.
5:07, lol. Was this the start of an advertisement? 10:40, lol, that was funny, and even cute. 12:26, a cool moment in the fog/snow/night. 17:50, very cute as well. 18:32, nice shirt, very cool. 20:28 10/24/2024, 5:27am
Honorable mention to the 1980 Raiders, yes they were in playoff contention in '79, then they projected to be a old team on the decline who would finish last in their division, but those old veterans put it together and won the SuperBowl
This show needs to come back, I loved watching this in middle school. And still love watching reruns
@BlackWatchAmbush Exactly, the newer episodes just didn’t interest me as much no matter how much I forced myself to watch them.
I subscribed to NFL Network finally in 2007. And fell in love with these shows. I could waste an entire day watching these on demand. Both seem outdated today. But in January 2007 it was the latest in cable tech. Funny.
It was damn good show but it got ruined by all the awful comedians that were on it.
Hell yeah me too
@@DarKKnightt07 haha really? I don't remember comedians on this. Didn't watch this show that often though. Who did they have on that sucked?
The 2021 Cincinnati Bengals would be a great turnaround to add to an updated list.
This is a good one.
2019 San Francisco 49ers too
War Damn Eagle 🦅
Cane to the comments section to add this myself
Agreed
How could they not mention the 1959 Packers? Probably the first prominent turnaround in NFL history. A team that had not had a winning season since 1946, went 1-10-1 in 1958, then Lombardi comes in, and the team goes 7-5, were in the NFL Championship Game in 1960, NFL Champs in 1961, and the dynasty was off and running.
Exactly!! Take the 75 Colts off and put the 59 Packers at number one!
@@bryanglass5818 Absolutely not. For one thing, that team resembles more of the 1970 Dolphins that had a ton of talent but it was adding a coach that turned them around. The 75 Colts were a strip-down, build back up job that was magnificent.
Also, the turnaround concept leans more toward a single year turnaround. The Packers took 3 years to win the championship. 1999 Rams went from 4-12 to BOOM Super Bowl win. That's number one period.
It was actually 1947
Well you literaly just said it. This is a video about single season team turnarounds. You’re talking about a few seasons’ span. A 6 win increase is not significant enough to get on this list.
@@AdamKlownzinger Basically.
1:38 The 1979 Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
6:10 The 1997 New York Jets.
9:29 The great Memorial Stadium turnaround of 1975.
13:48 The 2006 New Orleans Saints (Rest In Peace Tom Benson).
16:59 The start of Miami's Don Shula dynasty!
21:20 Wow, it's the 2008 Miami Dolphins!
24:35 The 1981 San Francisco 49ers!
28:58 The 2001 New England Patriots!
34:12 Okay, now that's the cue I'm looking for, the 1999 Indianapolis Colts.
39:49 The Greatest Show on Turf!
Glad the Saints are higher that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The original version that premiered in 2007 had that 1996 Carolina Panthers and Jacksonville Jaguars at number 5, before they were replaced by the 2008 Miami Dolphins in the updated version (the 1996 Jaguars and Panthers segment is on UA-cam though).
The 2008 Dolphins were the ultimate iconoclast. They tried one thing that no one at the pro level had seen before, and it worked for one year and one year only.
(Shocked that they ONLY mentioned Favre, that was also the year the Patriots went 11-5 with Matt Cassel, but because of the Dolphin Wildcat they somehow were kicked out of the playoffs.)
Because of 2 tie breakers one for the division one for a wild card
Iconoclast. Sick word.
Yeah the Dolphin one had some luck with perfect timing, Brady was hurt so Patriots weren't the powerhouse they were the year before, The Jets did have Farve but they were collapsing late that season and the Bills weren't going anywhere that year.
My favorite little nugget about that season is prior to them unveiling it in the regular season, that offense got absolutely drilled in practice whenever they pulled it out. To the point the defensive players was mocking the idea of it even existing as an idea by the coaches. They underestimated just how much knowing what it was in those practices, seeing it drawn up in team meetings, how much that made a difference. It certainly wasn't that easy for many teams in the league. Teams studied it as if it was upwards of 80% of the Dolphins playbook, when it simply was a change up at times. That's how shook up much of the league seemed to be. Though it was a flash in the pan, it was still one of the more exciting things you'd ever seen and took advantage of the talent they had.
Kurt Warner is the greatest underdog story of all time. I hope you’ll get to watch the movie about it during the holidays.
Maybe he beats his dogs, and we dont know if he is a good person, but I think Kurt Warner is the real deal. If you ever watched, "The Brady Six" documentary about the six QBs taken before Tom, one of those guys was Marc Bulger, who took over for Warner after he got hurt. Bulger had immediate success, and was given the starting job over Warner, even when he returned healthy. In that doc, they have a sideline camera, and after Bulger leads the Rams to a TD, Warner is THE FIRST guy to congratulate him, and honestly, seemed more excited than Bulger was. NO BACK UP, especially an MVP and Superbowl winning one, who lost their job to injury, would be like that. Bledsoe sure as hell wasnt that way to Brady.
That says so much about Kurt Warner. Little ego, and team first. Watching him in that REALLY impressed me.
@@chocolatetownforever7537 The only thing I know about Warner in terms of "negativity" he was rather grumpy towards a young Larry Fitzgerald. Larry had caught a meaningless TD and was essentially thinking high of himself in a bad loss and Warner basically said are you here for stats or are you here to win? And that one moment changed Larry into the man we've known as a selfless type player, and arguably is one of the biggest reasons why they would eventually be in the SB. Changed the mindset. And again, that's the meanest thing I can think of is questioning a mans commitment based on the situation. Which is wild when you consider its Larry Fitzgerald.
The best thing I think Kurt did, and this is something that attaches super well to your Bulger comment, is the Eli Manning situation. Manning goes in, struggles pretty bad in a losing streak. Kurt told the staff, do not put me back in. Keep the young guy out there and let him take his lumps. And that clearly was huge in terms of helping Eli understand the adversity he'd face in the pros, knowing that the coaching staff wasn't going to give up on him. To be a guy who was a starter and be selfless enough to do that? I don't know many in history who could have made that decision.
Kurt warner is cool af...but
That movie is a big steamin' pile of pig sh1t. Definetly a "b" grade movie
This show on NFL network and Prime 9 on MLB network were the best sports shows of the 2000s. They were always on at the most clutch times and would show like 20 episodes in a row lol I've watched over 100 episodes of both shows and I'm still finding ones on UA-cam I'm pretty sure I've never seen
The updated version should include the 2018 Chicago Bears season. From 5-11, to12-4 was incredible and all because of one coach and one player Khalil Mack.
@TheRapper10000 regardless, that was one of the most fun bears teams I have ever seen.
Logan what about the coach?
@@tonyarceneaux286 what do you mean? Well, his first season no one knew the kind of tricks he had up his sleeve. Hence why he had some plays that worked when they really shouldn’t have. He kinda was being cute. Then in the off-season they found out his tricks and that’s why some of the plays seemed stupid or asenine in my opinion.
This aged well
When he disappeared in the 2nd half of games and the playoff game?
The 2004 Pittsburgh Steelers from a disappointing 6-10 season in 2003 to a franchise best 15-1 record in 2004. The 2004 Steelers season is a credited to several items:
- A running game reborn with the addition of Duce Staley and the rebirth of the Bus Jerome Bettis after Staley got injured.
- A rejuvenated defense anchored by linebackers Joey Porter and James Farrior and had new stars born such as linebackers Clark Haggans and Larry Foote, a safety named Chris Hope and some safety from USC named ...Troy Polamalu, who would go on to become one of the greatest safeties in NFL History.
- A change in coordinators - Ken Whisenhunt being promoted to Offensive Coordinator replacing Mike Mularkey who left to become the head coach of the Buffalo Bills and the return of defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau to Pittsburgh.
- The most important a rookie QB Ben Roethlisberger - who never lost a game and took the Steelers all the way to the AFC Championship Game that season.
Even though the Steelers didn't win the SuperBowl that year, that 04 team rejuvenated football in Pittsburgh once again.
@@williamkerfoot8039 from 6-10 to 15-1 is pretty damn good. Especially, when much wasn’t expected from that season. That’s a 9 win turnaround
@@williamkerfoot8039 San Francisco is in the list after turning it around from 6-10 so why not Pittsburgh?
One of *very* few teams to win a Superbowl (the next year in 2005) w/a RB by committee rotation.
Don't belongs on here
This is a list about teams that were bad for years who suddenly got good. Not consistently great teams that had a bounce back year after one fluky bad season.
35:28 I can’t help but wince when I see Peyton get hit like that when you consider the neck problems he had later on in his career. Keith Mitchell’s entire body weight was right on the back of Manning’s head for a few seconds
Doug Williams threw a sweet long ball...effortlessly.
Vince Lombardi took the 1-10 packers and won them 5 championships in 9 years. Should’ve at least made the list.
Considering the Packers had been in the NFL's basement for 13 years prior to Vince's arrival, yes, it should be.
Joey Thomas- I'm a Chicago Bears fan & hate the Green Bay Packers with a passion, but, I'm willing to put that on the figurative back-burner, for now & say that I completely agree with you on that one.
If I were to come up with a Top-10 list of all-time greatest team turn-arounds in NFL history, that would most certainly be on mine.
@@MRB16th- Agreed.
I'm a Chicago Bears fan & hate the Green Bay Packers with a passion, but, I'm willing to put that on the figurative back-burner & say that I completely agree with you, as well on that one.
Joey Thomas was right...
1-10-1
the goat for reuploading this quality content
They need a second part of this where it includes:
2011 49ers
2011 Texans
2016 Raiders
2020 Browns and Bills
2019 49ers too
Bills shouldn’t because they were in the playoffs the season before and that’s not really a turnaround if you make the playoffs prior
The bills were already on an upward trajectory they shouldn’t count as they didnt turn around simply improved over the years
@@BiG_JJ227 Well they won the AFC EAST with their best record of 13-3
@@phantompinoy the term WORST to FIRST is the category. It means you went from WORST to FIRST in one year. Who cares that the Bills matched their best record ever?
The 72 steelers really were something special in Pittsburgh. The steelers hadn't won a playoff game in franchise history, but thanks to franco Harris, and the steel curtain, Pittsburgh went 11-3, and made the afc championship game
I feel like an updated version of this list should be made with the 2019 49ers.
Yessir! It would’ve been a hell of a story if they came through.
@@grantmcgee6163 I know 😑
Balls in your court, let me know when it’s done.
😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 aka the team that choked
@@rileykazama3145 2011 49ers also
Doug Williams is a legitimate hero and role model.
not really
He was part of the original " Worst to First " team in the NFL
When I found out about the Faulk trade, (my Fave NFL a player) and Tory Holt drafted to the Rams, and based on Trent Green and Isaac …. I picked them to make the SuperBowl. I wrote it down, I wish I said “WIN”. Then Green goes down, Im glad I saved the prediction, cause I almost threw it away
Thanks for posting these they’re very enjoyable
Other turnarounds that deserve mention:
* The 1945 Cleveland Rams (after having gone into recess in 1943 due to the exodus of personnel to war service, and otherwise being a very poor team, won the championship with a rookie quarterback, Bob Waterfield)
* The 1947 Chicago Cardinals (won the championship two years after a 29 game losing streak, including winless seasons in 1943 and 1944 - the latter as a combined team with the Steelers)
* The Packers under Vince Lombardi (team had finished 1-10-1 and dead last in 1958, then went 7-5 in 1959 and were beaten in the 1960 Championship Game, then went on to win five NFL championships and the first two Super Bowls)
* The 1970s Steelers (after having one prior playoff appearance in 1947 and being perennial cellar-dwellers, went on to win four Super Bowls in six years)
* The 1980s 49ers (after finishing 2-14 and dead last in 1979, went on to win four Super Bowls in the decade)
* The 1992-1995 Cowboys (after finishing 1-15 and dead last in 1989, went on to win three Super Bowls)
6:53 push the button, push the button lol
Thanks for posting these man🙏🏽 so fun to watch
Love this series. Thanks Isaac
The dolphins in training camp when Shula arrived went from taking the day off of practice when it was hot outside to running four a days
George Wilson took the Fins swimming to Don Shula not allowing water on the field during four a days. Went from 3-10-1 in 1969 to 10-5 in '70, 12-4-1 in '71 and 17-0 in '72.
The 1976-79 Bucs need to be #1. How do you go from 1-26 and scoring 7 or less points(with 11 shutouts) in over 50% of their games to knocking on the door of the Super Bowl 2 seasons later and not be considered the biggest turnaround in NFL history?
Especially before free agency and salary cap became prominent.
Agree
That's over several years. Rams did it in 1
@@yepitsme4065 um, the Rams have been around since the 30's. The Bucs were an expansion team in 1976 back in the day when the expansion player pool consisted of has beens and never was'. Then they lost their first 26 games and they were so incredibly bad. I mean baaaadddd. 16 of their first 28 games they scored 7 points or less including 11 shutouts then 2 years later they're knocking on the door to the Super Bowl. The fact that they did this all from scratch is astounding. If you can't see that you're either just a hater or ignorant of how hard it was for expansion teams to compete in those days.
It doesn't matter if the Rams had been around for a thousand years, worst to champion in 1 year is far better than over multiple years. @@Rockhound6165
Please keep posting these nfl top 10 videos I love them I don't care how old they are
5:09 super informative 😂
2004 Chargers need to get up there, they went fron 4-12 in 03 and drafting Philip Rivers in 04 and Drew Brees started the entire season and went 12-4.
I agree, cant believe they let Schottenheimer go after what he was able to do in 04 05 and 06. Didnt we get to the Divisional round twice? Mini dynasty
@@outdoorfanatics4596 we? Losing in the 2nd round is only an accomplishment if you’re a loser
love your top ten videos bro , greatly executed all of them, been watching one after the other ha
You're not smart
The 2019 49ers would absolutely be in the top 3 in an updated list I think. Yes, even despite blowing the double digit lead in the Super Bowl. Going from 4-12 to 13-3, and statistically being the strongest team in the league, AND going to the Super Bowl and being up 20-10 in the second half, is a legendary turnaround
I'm pretty sure it was 15-1
12:19 Anyone know the background music at the end of the 75 Colts segment?
One of my favorite shows love these countdowns
I’m a Cowboys fan and will have to say the 1981 Niners are one of the greatest turnaround teams. I have to be honest.
2023 Houston Texans
From 3 straight 10 plus loss seasons, going through 4 different head coaches and trading away their former franchise QB overall a perennial laughingstock.
To coming out of nowhere to finish 10-7 clinch a playoff spot, winning the division and winning a playoff game
Good list. I'd probably put the 1981 49ers behind the 99' Rams, but other than that, solid list. Besides all the stuff everyone knows about Walsh, Montana, and The Catch in 81', it was how terrible everything had been to end that decade, and even the lack of talent when Walsh arrived, which makes that 81' Super Bowl run even more improbable. The franchise had been so bad for so long that it wasn't a given that a GM/Coach in Walsh could save it, let alone make them champions, and revolutionize the way the game is played. That 81' team was one of the more impressive champions of those 49er teams, not only due to the turnaround, but because this was really Joe Montana, Dwight Clark, and a mostly young and very much rebuilt defense. Lott, Rice, Craig, Taylor, all those guys were still a few or several years away from joining the team. Great team..
That team gets forgotten compared to the later 80s 49ers teams I feel
Exactly, they went from 2 wins to 6 wins to the best team in the league in 3 seasons
The 8 weeks ago we stood in this same spot speech by Jonathan Vilma was in 2006 playoffs vs Pats. Jets had played and beat the Pats in New England in week 10 and now the playoff game was 8 weeks later in New England (same spot).
On the flip side, what would you consider the biggest reverse team turnarounds (first to worst)?
That'd be a good idea for a list. Without all the "comedians" of course. Three examples come to mind of the top of my head. The first is the one mentioned on this list the 1999 Falcons from 14-2 and a SB appearance to 5-11. While they didn't make the playoffs the 2008 Browns going from 10-6 to 4-12. Lastly, and one which pains me to say, the 2003 Raiders who went from 11-5 and a SB appearance to 4-12.
1999 Broncos
1999 Falcons
2016 Panthers
2020 49ers
2011 Colts
2005 Packers
@@Jekyll08 1994 Houston Oilers: 12-4 to 2-14
Isaac uploaded a list similar to this. Biggest mid season collapses I think
@@Jekyll08 2005 Rams
The 2023 lions would be on this list now lol
These teams were kind of surprise teams a lot of people picked the Lions to win NFC North going into the season
Dan Campbell Lions please!
As a Packer fan, going from 6-9-1 to 13-3 was pretty fun.
Did you have fun watching them lose to the Broncos in the super bowl??
@@yourdaddy6030 I was born in 2001.
The 1981 Giants and Jets. Both went 4 12 in 1980 to make playoffs after long droughts. Ny jets 1969 , NY giants 1963. Jets bets packers 28 3 in week 16 to clinch the playoffs for both themselves and the Giants
I always say the 1980 Giants were the best 4-12 team in NFL history, look who they got to draft for 1981
2022 Jags and Lions if there’s ever an updated list
I’ll always remember holmgren coming to Seattle And turning the team around and making a Super Bowl
*losing the Super Bowl. What an accomplishment!!
@@sethsassy for a team that had never been to one, going from last in the division to making the playoffs pretty much every year. Yea it was.
Sethsassy your definitely a fake nfl fan
The 2017 Cleveland Browns went 0-16. Three years later, they win a playoff game on the road. It is an honorable mention for sure.
0:00 - Jesus. Is that Carson Palmer with the Raiders?! This is so old. Lmao…
Why am I not seeing more Keyshawn Johnson Jets highlights?!
He was their best WR in 97
That's because they wouldn't give him the damn ball
Lee Roy Selmon is CRIMINALLY underrated when talking about the greatest defensive players to ever step on an NFL field. He's up there with ANY of the great pass rushers EVER.
2023 Houston Texans
18:33 Home of the Dolphins 🐬;)
Anyone know the name of the song that starts at 18:32? Been looking for it for ages
I totally agree with the final four on this list, I turn around season for a team should not just be about getting a winning record, it literally should be about winning it all.
Green Bay Packers - Lombardi’s first season went from 1-10-1 to 7-5
Saint Louis Rams 🐏
1998: under .500 (dead last in the NFC West 😆)
1999: NFL’s number one offense; SBXXXIV champs (Kurt Warner NFL MVP-42 touchdowns; 500 yards and a game winning touchdown-SBXXXIV MVP; Marshall Faulk- 1,000 rushing yards & 1,000 reception yards) Isaac Bruce HOF WR
41 touchdowns
They went from" The Greatest Show On Turf" to the greatest show that left town
@@michaelleroy9281
And the Los Angeles Rams 🐏 were Super Bowl champions
Thanks to their defense
Miller at OLB
Donald at defensive tackle
Ramsey at cornerback
And a pretty good QB WR combo in Stafford and Kupp
That 2006 Saints team gave the residents of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast of Mississippi hope after Katrina
And then they finally won a Super Bowl 3 year later. Sean Payton and Drew Brees saved that franchise
6:35-6:42 what’s the song?
I could listen to John McKay coach all day.
Dude, I remember watching NFL Films with my late father, and him absolutely cracking up during the McKay episode where he is complaining about his own team OVER AND OVER, not getting back from the sideline lol. McKay was a great coach, and if I remember right, he had to build that team, not only without free agency, but an expansion draft as well, which is ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE. Yet he made them winners.
Lastly, his answer to a reporters question about how McKay felt about his team's execution. Im in favor of it, is just priceless lol. What a man.
My favorite thing about these videos, is the NFL ticker at the bottom of the screen. Man, I used to love football.
2022 Jaguars 100% the latest entry. What a rise.
2023 Broncos
Allowed 70 points in week 3
1-5 start
Than
Snapped 16 game losing streak to Chiefs
Going 6-1
Now 7-6 and may make postseason
In an updated list I'd consider the 2019 49ers with 2011 Niners as an honorable mention. In 2011 in just his first year as HC Jim Harbaugh takes them from 6-10 to 13-3 and made it to the conference championship. Then in 2019 which was the bigger turnaround they go from 4-12 to 13-3 and made it to the SB.
Believe it or not, the 2010 49ers weren’t the worst team in their division.
@@JahNuhThunDeeTheOneAndOnly Oh, I know. I'd still put them as an honorable mention though. Simply because they improved to 13-3 with a first year HC, and went deep into the playoffs all the way to the conference championship only losing by three.
We should also include the 2016 Oakland Raiders!
@@phantompinoy They'd be an honorable mention. They were competent, the offense anyway, in 2015 and went 7-9.
Nah they should have a segment, because the Raiders went through 13 seasons of decline after losing Super Bowl XXXVII and 2016 was the best turnaround team in franchise history.
40:28 don't worry, those bags came back in style here in STL believe me...
Jim Harbaugh in his first NFL season as 49ers coach
2011
NFC championship game appearance
2010
No playoffs
The Chiefs organization for the last decade should be added to an updated list. They went from being 2-14 season under Romeo Cornell, the center of a murder-suicide involving a player, and a campaign to Blackout Arrowhead because of poor play to ... never having a losing season, playoff contenders, hosting 5 straight AFC Championship games, 3 AFC Division titles, 2 Superbowl wins, 3 Superbowl appearances. What a turnaround for sure!
7:10 - The exact attitude that I have with my work life.
It is now 2025. It’s time to remake this video with number 1 being Sheila Ford Hamp, Dan Campbell and the Detroit Lions.
Honestly I think the 2024 Commanders deserve to be on a revised version of this list.
That 06 Saints team hits differently now that Drew Brees retired
I know somebody else already made mention of it, but, I don't care...
If this episode of 'NFL Top 10' were to come out on the NFL Network between mid-2022 & the present day instead of on 4/29/2008, I guarantee you that one of the teams that were ranked between 7-10 would be considered an "honorable mention", or, something like that & be replaced by the 2021-2022 Cincinnati Bengals.
You could argue that even though they lost Super Bowl 56, the 2021-2022 Cincinnati Bengals are deserving for a list like this & be able to make a legitimate case for it.
What about the 2000 Washington Sentinels led by Keanu Reeves?
Since the Dolphins only beat the Ravens in 2007 it was only fitting for the Ravens to beat them in the playoffs the following year
6:58-a Fireman Ed sighting (wearing the 42 Bruce Harper jersey).
PS on the Bucs, all we needed was the "I'm all for it" quote from McKay when asked about his team's execution (LOL)
Ok and?
PPS if the Dolphins had won their two playoff games in 1970, they would have went from 3-10-1 to playing in the Super Bowl in their home stadium (the Orange Bowl)..THAT would have been something (50 years before Tampa and LA did it).
I never knew OJ Simpson was on the 49ers.
Next thing you are going to tell me that the New Orleans Saints were the only team to pass on Lawrence Taylor in the 1981 Draft. ;)
You can’t really blame the Saints for passing on LT because they drafted George Rogers who set a then NFL rookie record of 1674 yards rushing that lead the NFL that year plus people didn’t know that LT would go on to be the greatest defensive player of all time
Didn’t New Orleans already have Rickey Jackson at OLB anyway?
1978 and 1979 OJ was with the Niners
In 1980 the Giants had the best 4-12 team in NFL history, look who they got to draft for 1981
@@robertsmith3872 I have never ever heard NFL Films or any reliable sports critic who have ever blamed the Saints for their decision on Rogers.
I started watching this in the early to mid 2000. Makes me feel like I did then 😁
25 years before super bowl 36, new england had its turnaround in 1976. The pats went from 3-11 to 11-3 in a flash. That 76 record was the pats best season until 2003
1985 season they went to Super Bowl XX
@michaelleroy9281 the pats went 9-7 in 1984. The 85 team shocked a lot of people, but the 76 pats blew everyone's mind. In 75, they were 3-11. The next year, they flipped that record, and were a bad call away from the afc championship
2020 tampa could be #11 on this list.
@@Johnmhatheist Idk. Needed QB, and a couple O line men. Didnt take a whole lot to fix them, thats why I said 11. Although 7-9 to Super Bowl champion is very impressive.
@@Johnmhatheist yes. Thats what i was getting at in the last bit of my comment
They just needed a QB who didn't throw 30 picks. Tom clearly didn't do that and he is the GOAT so he has influence in that front office
Not really lol.
@@jarvasedundy1 how so? They went from 7-9 to Super Bowl Champion.
Hey the 2008 Lions had a 7 game turnaround from 2007 too.
I’d put the 96 jags on this list. They went from 3-6 to beating Denver and making it to the AFC championship.
It's about from year to year not midseason turnarounds.
An older version of this episode actually had the 1996 Panthers & Jaguars on the list. Two expansion teams have losing seasons their first year in the NFL, then both of them made their Conference Championship games the next year.
2022 Jaguars
Especially now
Is it me or is it ironic that 3 of the best coaches in nfl history are named Bill? You got Bill Parcells, Bill Walsh and Bill belichick
Add Bill Cowher to that list for #4.
@@erikbunty2016 Oh yeah! totally forgot about Cowher!
And all 4 are hall of famers!
Was the guy at 12:49, the host of Sprockets on SNL in the late 80s early 90’s or am I mistaken.
An under appreciated one: 2018 Colts
2017: 4-12
2018 (Week 6): 1-5
2018 (Week 17): 10-6
@Harry Engel All thanks to Chris Ballard drafting the best guard in the NFL and one of the best linebackers back-to-back
Ryan Grigson should be arrested for not being able to give Andrew Luck a good offensive line. Grigson robbed us of more Andrew Luck
11:25 that's two things
1993 New England Patriots
Under .500
1994 New England Patriots
10 win season and an AFC playoff appearance
Drew Bledsoe at Quarterback (number one overall draft pick out of Washington State University in 1993)
Ben Coates at TE
Kevin Turner at halfback
Vincent Brisby at WR
Michael Timpson at WR
Bruce Armstrong at offensive left tackle
Willie McGinest at defensive end (number 4 overall draft pick out of USC in 1994)
Chris slade at OLB
Vincent Brown at ILB
Eugene Hurst at Cornerback
Week 9 of the 1994 NFL season
Bledsoe records 46 completed passes (single game record) & 70 attempted passes (single game record) vs Vikings Including a game winning touchdown pass to Kevin Turner in overtime
Foxboro Stadium 🏟
Foxborough,Massachusetts
They did win their last 4 games in 1993 after starting 1-11
5-11= still under .500
Won the last home game of the 93 season against Miami
I’m first a Miami Dolphins fan but being from Illinois not far from St Louis what a season in 1999 winning a Super Bowl my uncle had season tickets and playoffs so I got to see every moment my uncle also surprised me with Super Bowl tickets. I do hope the Miami Dolphins have a season like the 1999 St Louis Rams that would be awesome
Former Bucs coach: "We can't win at home and we can't win on the road. What we need is a neutral site."
@@krell2130 John McKay. That guy sure had a way with words.
Somebody update this list for the Detroit Lions !!!
The 1989 Dallas Cowboys, 1-15 to 13-3 Super Bowl champions in 3-4 years
Thanks to " The Great Train Robbery" as Jimmy Johnson likes to call it
I'm a Cowboys fan and I say heck no. That's not a turnaround. That's just building a team. A turnaround is like a U-turn on a highway. *Snaps fingers*
@@orangefox1231 I kind of agree, and Im a Cowboys fan. This show should be next year only after a bad one, because you shouldnt be comparing other turnarounds that had differing periods of time.
The 2006 Saints should have been number one on this list. With no disrespect, but with what the entire city of New Orleans went through with Katrina and what the Saints did for that city in 2006, no words can describe.
At least switch with 2008 dolphins
32:10 - left unmentioned is Bledsoe having to step in for an injured Brady in the AFC Championship Game
NFL Top 10 needs to come back with new episodes on the NFL Network.
Forget all the turnarounds i am just glad hearing in this video that an airline has planes
So appropriate that Parcells is the thumbnail. He’s so underrated. And I say that knowing that most people consider him to be a great coach.
He’s in the Hall of Fame, he’s not underrated. Grow a brain.
4:27 that quote is still true in 2021
How do you not include Herm Edwards Turning the Jets around from 2-5 to 9-7 and winning the division, and making the playoffs after the "you play to win the game" speech?
Last years jags could be here too. From 2-6 to 9-8 and winning a wild card game
The Steelers should be on here when Chuck Noll came to coach for the Steelers. I understand it took them a few years to get all the pieces together but if Noll haven't came to Pittsburgh who knows what the Steelers would've became. Also the fact is that the steelers had only 3 head coaches in the past 53 years tells how good they became when Noll came into the organization.
5:07, lol. Was this the start of an advertisement?
10:40, lol, that was funny, and even cute.
12:26, a cool moment in the fog/snow/night.
17:50, very cute as well.
18:32, nice shirt, very cool.
20:28
10/24/2024, 5:27am
How can you not incude the 76 patriots 11-3 from 3-11 in 75?
Because they're a bunch of cheaters. Even before Tom Cheady and Bull Belicheat.
@@yourdaddy6030 salt
@@PFM719 nah my broncos owned brady and beli in the playoffs. Look it up sandy v
@@yourdaddy6030 And you've been mediocre ever since.
@@yourdaddy6030 Its the NFL every team has cheated before
Honorable mention to the 1980 Raiders, yes they were in playoff contention in '79, then they projected to be a old team on the decline who would finish last in their division, but those old veterans put it together and won the SuperBowl
The 2022 Giants would be perfect for this list. Going from 4-13 to a playoff win is amazing
Yes, who was that guy who took over for Bledsoe, he might be pretty good
38:13 u can see AJ Hawk got fined😂 love seeing that here
Huh?
@@TL2354 bottom of the screen AJ hawk gets fined 10k
2020 Cleveland browns going from 1-31 to 11-5 making the postseason to the divisional round
From 30-30 eating W’s and crab legs to winning Super Bowls. 2020-2021-2022 Bucs💀 🏴☠️