It would be nice to think so Hoxrox. Not sure the #s agree with you.
I grew up to love watching the run game and a great defense. Seahawks fans were weaned on that and Husky fans were. It isn't a lack of appreciation for those things.
But the #s and the results don't seem to indicate balance is good at all.
Are the top teams balanced?
Is balance even needed or just enough to keep the defense slightly behind? (Like PA works even if you never or rarely run the ball, as long as there is the slimmest threat you will run - you can run effective PA, while barely running the ball)
Right now the #s seem to indicate high volume passing teams and top passing offenses are playoff teams. There are exceptions (Chargers, Steelers) but for the most part - you pass often, you win more.
And analytics says that passing is 3x more valuable than running. That is the math.
This is interesting considering:
1 - Losing teams need to pass more because they have to pass to catch up.
2 - Winning teams will tend to run more, because teams with a lead will tend to salt the game away by draining clock - limiting chances for the opposing possessions to stage a comeback.
So there should be a natural bias to running teams being winning teams. Not because running teams tend to win more, but because winning teams should tend to run more (after building leads).
That isn't what happens though. Top passing teams win. Top running teams seem to have no correlation to winning, or maybe a negative one. And balanced teams seem to have no correlation to winning at all.
Can you present good examples of where balanced teams are the most successful? Because it does not seem to be in the playoffs.