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Posted
1 minute ago, Captain Hindsight said:

I’ve never been a Lombardi fan, but this seems like an unnecessary smear piece 

 

Agree.  The Belichick/Kraft relationship is obviously sour and this seems to be a product of that.   Maybe he didnt get a ring from the 49ers fine, but if he was a part of the 2016 draft and didnt get a Super Bowl ring that year, it says more about Kraft's pettiness than it does Lombardi.  

Posted (edited)
4 minutes ago, thenorthremembers said:

 

Agree.  The Belichick/Kraft relationship is obviously sour and this seems to be a product of that.   Maybe he didnt get a ring from the 49ers fine, but if he was a part of the 2016 draft and didnt get a Super Bowl ring that year, it says more about Kraft's pettiness than it does Lombardi.  

 

Also kind of paints Belichick in a different light also in terms of loyalty if he paid for it out of his own pocket.

 

He didn't need to do that.

Edited by Big Turk
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Posted

While the details are new, I remember hearing unflattering things about Lombardi's football acumen years ago.  

 

Lombardi overstating his contributions is sadly no surprise when we live in a society where - according to one source - 55% of job applicants lie on their resumes.  And I've personally had people steal my professional ideas and claim them for their own on multiple occasions.  I know my experience is hardly unique.  Maybe that's how Lombardi justifies his exaggerations: Everyone does it.  

 

 

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Posted

Lombardi always sounded to me like his own biggest fan. Ironically, people who act like they invented something, like the game. Or their resume is unique end up getting caught eventually. People find out they can't do what they said and credibility gets shot. Yes it can get you in the door but not as much as people might think. I know I was fooled one time as a person leading hiring decisions. Never again though. If its too good to be true it likely is.

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Posted
15 minutes ago, D. L. Hot-Flamethrower said:

Lombardi always sounded to me like his own biggest fan. Ironically, people who act like they invented something, like the game. Or their resume is unique end up getting caught eventually. People find out they can't do what they said and credibility gets shot. Yes it can get you in the door but not as much as people might think. I know I was fooled one time as a person leading hiring decisions. Never again though. If its too good to be true it likely is.

 

I've been fooled too - but I wasn't fooled all the time.  Once a job applicant submitted a resume saying he had previously been an army officer.  While it wasn't particularly relevant to the job he was applying for, I was sincerely curious about his experience in the military and asked him a lot of naive questions.  I'll give him this: he had quite the imagination and was a fascinating teller of tales.  

 

When I told him I was a former army officer myself, his face beet red realizing he'd been caught in a web of his own lies, collected his papers, and shamedly said something to the effect of, "Well, I guess I you're not hiring me."  

 

Lombardi is hardly alone in overstating his accomplishments.  

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Posted

I heard he even changed his last name to give himself more credibility.

He used to be named Mike McDermott...

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