USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Teams worthy of ‘Dance’ treatment

- Nate Davis Columnist USA TODAY

(Note: “The ’85 Bears” has already been done by “30 for 30,” hence that team’s notable exclusion from this list.)

9. 1978 Oakland Raiders: This was the final season of coach John Madden’s 10-year run with the Silver and Black, when they basically won 75% of their games and Super Bowl XI at a time when they were competing against Pittsburgh’s Steel Curtain dynasty and Don Shula’s Dolphins, among others. The book “Badasses” provides great insight into these renegade Raiders, but it would be even better to hear tales from those players, whose ranks have been sadly thinned by the losses of such colorful personalit­ies as QB Ken “Snake” Stabler, CB Willie Brown, DE John Matuszak and LG Gene Upshaw.

8. 2011 Denver Broncos: Admittedly, these one-year wonders would likely require two episodes ... max. But how delicious would it be to get the inside scoop on QB Tim Tebow’s magic carpet ride, one that consistent­ly left GM John Elway appearing like he was dealing with agita as the unorthodox southpaw led the .500 Broncos to the unlikelies­t of AFC West crowns. Definitely going to need a few segments to break down the wild-card

ELAINE THOMPSON/AP stunner of the defending AFC champion Steelers and their top-ranked defense ... before Tebowmania was snuffed out 4510 by the Patriots.

7. 2018 Pittsburgh Steelers: For half a decade, they sported one of the greatest sets of triplets in league history. QB Ben Roethlisbe­rger and WR Antonio Brown will likely wind up in the Hall of Fame, and RB Le’Veon Bell has time to polish his own Canton résumé. But these “Killer B’s” never reached a Super Bowl together, and the flameout in 2018 was spectacula­r. Unhappy with his franchise tag, Bell skipped the season. Big Ben led the league in passing yards (career-high 5,129) but was at loggerhead­s with Brown, who was benched for the regularsea­son finale even though the collapsing Steelers were still vying for a playoff spot. The “he said, he said” recollecti­ons could be ... delightful.

6. 1990 New York Giants: Bill Parcells’ initial retirement from coaching coincided with his team’s narrow escape from the Buffalo Bills to win Super Bowl XXV. It was a masterful job by Parcells, who led this team to glory – Big Blue’s path included a derailment of the San Francisco 49ers’ three-peat bid – even after losing starting QB Phil Simms to a broken foot in Week 15. And with storytelle­rs such as Parcells, Simms and Lawrence Taylor delving into this past, who wouldn’t want to relive it?

5. 1999 Dallas Cowboys: It was the last time “America’s Team” was underpinne­d by “The Triplets.” And even though an 8-8 record was good enough for a wild-card spot, Dallas was waxed by the Minnesota Vikings in the playoff opener. A Week 5 spinal injury prematurel­y ended WR Michael Irvin’s career. CB Deion Sanders bolted after the season, and concussion­s would force QB Troy Aikman to walk away following the 2000 campaign. Still, so much to explore with the NFL’s dynasty of the 1990s, which was well chronicled in Jeff Pearlman’s “Boys Will Be Boys.”

4. 2007 Green Bay Packers: Brett Favre’s sterling final season with the Pack was plenty memorable, a surprise run to the NFC title game summarily extinguish­ed by one of his ill-advised intercepti­ons in overtime as the Giants prevailed at Lambeau Field. But the real fireworks occurred in the subsequent months – when Favre retired, the franchise anointed Aaron Rodgers as his successor, Favre unretired and was controvers­ially offloaded to the New York Jets.

Plenty to unpack here, including the genesis of a cold war between Favre and Rodgers that took years to thaw.

3. 2017 Seattle Seahawks: The final time CB Richard Sherman, S Kam Chancellor and DL Michael Bennett would play for Seattle, it was effectively the swan song of the “Legion of Boom.” And there are stories to be told, from the transition of a team that had been reliant on its defense to one that depended on QB Russell Wilson ... not to mention latent feelings from the Seahawks’ infamous Super Bowl XLIX loss to New England, one that aborted any dynastic aspiration­s in the Pacific Northwest. Sherman always teems with unvarnishe­d honesty, but this truly becomes must-see TV if RB Marshawn Lynch opts to opine in any meaningful manner.

2. 2010 Indianapol­is Colts: Whenever there might be an opportunit­y to tap into Peyton Manning’s memory bank, you take it, right? This, of course, represents Peyton’s final on-field ride in Indy, one that occurred after an unpreceden­ted decade of success but ended ignominiou­sly with a wild-card defeat at the hands of Mark Sanchez’s Jets. It’d definitely be riveting to hear Reggie Wayne, Dallas Clark, Dwight Freeney, Robert Mathis and Pat McAfee – you’d hope Tony Dungy, Edgerrin James and others who were instrument­al to building this powerhouse would also participat­e – regale us with stories about how Manning maniacally drove the Colts while simultaneo­usly trying to keep things light in the locker room. Yet the Favre-esque aftermath in 2011, when Manning was still listed on the roster but unable to play while trying to cure his injured neck, would be just as engrossing – especially as the team cratered, laying the groundwork for Manning’s inevitable departure and Andrew Luck’s arrival. Definitely potential for docu-gold here.

1. 2019 New England Patriots: We’re already wondering, right? The friction between coach Bill Belichick, QB Tom Brady and owner Robert Kraft near the end of their epic 20-year run together had long been rumored. TB12 finally bolted to freedom (aka Tampa) after engineerin­g a contractua­l escape hatch following this season and seems rejuvenate­d by his new challenge (and assortment of weapons, including old buddy Rob Gronkowski). Like Jordan’s Bulls, might be a minute before Brady, Gronk, Belichick (would he?), et al, are truly willing to take viewers into this inner sanctum. But it’d certainly be worth any requisite wait.

 ??  ?? Tom Brady, left, and Richard Sherman, shown in 2012, would be worthy of in-depth looks.
Tom Brady, left, and Richard Sherman, shown in 2012, would be worthy of in-depth looks.
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