The Arizona Republic

7 teams who have let fans down in 2021

- Barry Wilner

A year ago, the Seahawks and Steelers were heading toward the playoffs. So were the Saints, Browns and Bears.

Now? Well, even if any of them stumbles into the postseason, the likelihood of doing any damage there is slim.

Those five teams have been particular disappoint­ments in 2021, and they’re joined by the experience­d Vikings, who have more talent than they’ve displayed, and the Panthers, whose 3-0 start to the schedule has been blurred by their mediocrity and even ineptitude since.

“It’s all about trying to keep it together throughout whatever you are up against,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll says.

NEW ORLEANS (5-7)

Life without Drew Brees didn’t figure to be a Big Easy, but at least the Saints were prepared for not having him. The Michael Thomas saga has been especially disruptive and robbed whichever starting quarterbac­k – Jameis Winston, now injured; Taysom Hill; Trevor Siemian – of the only viable receiving weapon. Losing do-everything running back Alvin Kamara also has been problemati­c.

The Saints are on a five-game slide that is their worst since Sean Payton became coach in 2006. Payton seems more annoyed at his defense.

“Just put the tape on,” Payton said. “I don’t think the effort’s where it needs to be, either, just watching the big plays.

SEATTLE (4-8)

At 70, Pete Carroll is the NFL’s oldest coach. The always-enthusiast­ic Carroll probably is feeling that old watching his broken offense with no running game, a weak line, and an inconsiste­nt Russell Wilson at quarterbac­k.

At least the defense has improved recently under Ken Norton. Now the heat is on offensive coordinato­r Shane Waldron.

CLEVELAND (6-6)

Some believe this is the AFC North’s most talented team. So why are the Browns so mediocre?

Start with the passing game, which struggled when it had Odell Beckham Jr., and after he forced a trade. With Jarvis Landry, Kareem Hunt and solid tight ends, Cleveland should be a force with the ball. When it’s using the ground game, it often is. But Baker Mayfield’s up-and-down performanc­es have stymied the air attack.

PITTSBURGH (6-6-1)

As their Thursday night loss to Minnesota displayed, the Steelers can’t win in the trenches. So uncharacte­ristic for this franchise, too.

Pittsburgh ranked 29th running the ball and 27th passing it through 13 weeks. A rebuild of the offensive line hasn’t worked, and the defense has been damaged by injuries or illness for key performers such as T.J. Watt and Minkah Fitzpatric­k.

CAROLINA (5-7)

The value of running back Christian McCaffrey was emphasized this season. He was available for the 3-0 start and hardly ever on the field after that. When Sam Darnold went from promising in those wins to flopping, getting hurt – and then being replaced by free agent Cam Newton returning to Charlotte – the Panthers plummeted.

MINNESOTA (6-7)

A team that loaded up on the D-line to stop the run has been a sieve. Injuries have hurt, but they were 31st in the league with an average of 4.72 rushing yards allowed per game going into the win over Pittsburgh.

CHICAGO (4-8)

With coach Matt Nagy on the precipice all season, the Bears needed to be ultra-stingy on defense as the offense – particular­ly when first-round draft pick Justin Fields took over at quarterbac­k – tried to find its way. But the offense has been lost, with Chicago ranking 30th in scoring and with a minus-8 turnover margin.

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