Mike Zimmer is in good company today.
Bill Belichick got outcoached, too.
The Eagles' well-engineered victory in Super Bowl LII at U.S. Bank Stadium taught an unusual lesson about building a championship team.
Usually in early February, the NFL lesson is that you need a star quarterback and a star coach, and maybe the painstaking collection of homegrown talent, to win a Super Bowl.
What the Eagles accomplished will place even more pressure on the rest of the league's coaches and general managers, because the Eagles were not deterred by key injuries or a coaching change. They filled their roster with key players anyone else could have acquired. And they hired as a head coach a guy who 10 years ago was running a high school program.
Doug Pederson outcoached Zimmer, then Belichick, to win the Eagles' first Super Bowl title.
And he did it after losing a great left tackle and a quarterback who might have won the league MVP award.
NFL excuses never again will sound reasonable.
Need a long, slow, build? Nope. The Eagles were 7-9 the past two seasons and fired Andy Reid and Chip Kelly within a three-year stretch.