Does the NFL really have parity?

FaTaL

Veteran
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
107,455
Reputation
5,577
Daps
213,713
Reppin
NULL
Every team that makes it to the SuperBowl is operating within there 1-3yr window. Each championship squad will have to lose key players due to salary cap and expiring rookie contracts.You give all your money to a quarterback you better draft a good reciever because it's probably not Alot of money to get one. You get my drift OP that's why the NFL has parity.Some organizations are just run for profit and not to actually win (just my opinion)
All nfl teams make money and the revenue is shared
 

HTXBreh

Superstar
Joined
Aug 7, 2019
Messages
7,635
Reputation
-615
Daps
19,883
Reppin
Houston Tx
I know that but if you share profit ,and don't really give a damn about winning then you just got a team to get in on.profit sharing.I don't think it's a even split either ,and they probably keep concession , attendance,etc.Ill do more research on how profits are split.Its definitely some owners who don't care.
 

murksiderock

Superstar
Joined
Feb 12, 2017
Messages
16,927
Reputation
7,575
Daps
52,036
Reppin
SMF and LAX to VA and NC
In the last 15 years (since 2011), there have been 30 spots available to the Super Bowl, 15 AFC representers, and 15 to represent the NFC.

7 teams account for 80% (24 out of 30) of the SB berths:

•Patriots (in their 6th SB since '11)
•Chiefs (5x)
•Seahawks, Eagles, 49ers (3x apiece)
•Rams, Broncos (2x apiece)

This calls into question NFL parity again. The same franchises that are consistently well-run find themselves with repeated trips to the Super Bowl. The 6 teams that made one-off SB runs in the last 15 years?

•Bengals (2021)
•Bucs (2020)
•Falcons (2016)
•Panthers (2015)
•Ravens (2012)
•Giants (2011)

Those 6 franchises all have in common that they are generally poorly managed, except the Ravens.
 
Top