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02-16-2010, 02:02 PM | #106 | |
Naega jeil jal naga
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Atlanta, Georgia From: Silver Spring, Maryland
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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1. Work on his deep ball accuracy: Despite his strong arm Jason is horrible when it comes to throwing the deep ball. 2. Reading defenses better: From what I've seen and heard Jason is only average in this category. If he wants to stay around he'll need to do a better job of looking off safeties and not staring down receivers as well as making proper pre-snap reads. It might only be two bullet points but they're easily two of the most important aspects of being an NFL QB.
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02-16-2010, 02:53 PM | #107 | |
A Dude
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Location: Newtown Square, PA
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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In fact, the uncapped year is the best time to dole out large bonuses. In an uncapped world like baseball, you have contract risk with signing players to big contracts for long terms. But this rookie QB would not have a guaranteed contract like a Vernon Wells does. Cap consequences are irrelevant, and cash consequences are not a concern with Dan Snyder in charge. The risk you run with a QB is not financial in any way. It is only that you'll miss on the player. But higher risk, higher reward. An LT might pan out more often, but I don't really care to go 8-8.
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02-16-2010, 03:08 PM | #108 | ||
Playmaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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He needs to work on his deep ball accuracy on the go route/9 route. There are some factors from a coaching stand point that will help JC improve also: -better pass protection o will help because he'll be more confident in the pocket o there will be more chances to throw deep -the receivers maintaining a more consistent 5 yard cushion from the sideline -better running game to set-up play action Quote:
Being able to dictate the coverages any QB faces greatly improves there success; and historically this something that Mike Shanahan has done in the past and i'm sure Mike has passed some of his tips along to his Kyle. Further there will be huge difference in our current coaching staff's level of knowledge when it some to predicting and attack defenses then the previous on the job training offensive staff displayed. There is no doubt in my mind that Kyle/LeFleur and Mike S. will have JC better prepared to read and attack any defenses this year. |
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02-16-2010, 03:17 PM | #109 | |
Franchise Player
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 03:21 PM | #110 | |
Naega jeil jal naga
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Location: Atlanta, Georgia From: Silver Spring, Maryland
Age: 39
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 03:34 PM | #111 | ||||
Playmaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 03:50 PM | #112 | |
Living Legend
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Evanston, IL
Age: 36
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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With that said, I don't believe the agreement that they will eventually come to with the players association in 2012 is going to include a salary cap. Maybe some form of a luxury tax, which wouldn't be an issue for this franchise. The crux of my argument, and it was poorly stated, was: even though any signing bonus we would pay to the 4th overall pick becomes a sunk cost at the point it is spent, we can't assume that the team would act rationally in the face of facing a potential sunk cost. I think it's a very safe assumption that, if the pick is poor, we will lose games over what we would have had if we had just never used the pick at all. (This, is of course, if we assume the level of the replacement player to be equal to Jason Campbell). Basically, I should have just stated that I am rejecting the premise it's just money and a pick that we would be spending on the high-volatility selection. If the selection was poor for any reason, either poor player evaluation or poor evaluation of environment conditions, it's not just a pick or money that's sunk (in a rational world, it would be), it's also many football games. The practical figure of guaranteed money for a quarterback is far beyond what the actual figure is. If the actual figure is $25 million, his salaries for three or four years are also guaranteed. If you look at Russell, it's hard to see any other rational move for the Raiders than to cut ties with him. But the Raiders are going to throw $13 million more at the problem, plus the salary of a new quarterback coach, to not have to eat the $45 million or whatever they've already sunk into one of the worst QB prospects of the decade. Without getting into all the reasons that the Redskins have a greater chance of succeeding with a QB at No. 4 overall this year than the Raiders had at No. 1 in 2007 (a very poor QB draft to this point), I think the above very clearly is a case of contract risk. Large contracts and irrational decision making have gone together since the beginning of the free agency era. There's no real reason to suggest that the new brain trust is above that influence. But, of course, if you guess right on a great quarterback, then the contract is, in some ways, a value. But the problem is that you're guessing at all. You really do have to know, to justify the pick, and a No. 1 or No. 2 ranking on the big board constitutes knowledge (as opposed to hope) to me.
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02-16-2010, 04:01 PM | #113 |
Camp Scrub
Join Date: Feb 2010
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
I like Jevon Snead as my 3rd choice of a QB if we don't pick up Bradford or Clausen. Snead arm is a good good canon and plays sorta like a Bret Favre in college( just alot less accurate).
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02-16-2010, 04:02 PM | #114 |
Living Legend
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Location: Evanston, IL
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
I think this is a very well presented, concise, intuitive theory. Is there a method I could use to test this? Is this relevant to draft position, or pre-draft perception of the prospect in any way?
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02-16-2010, 04:14 PM | #115 | |
A Dude
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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It's really not much more complicated than this: Okung is safer, but a QB has a higher ceiling in terms of the potential impact on future win/loss record. Money isn't an issue, they'll both command a large amount, and neither poses any salary cap impact. For me, I'll get behind whatever Shanahan decides. If he sees that elite QB prospect and he gets him, I can never fault someone for daring to be great. If he doesn't see said prospect and takes Okung, I'll be comfortable knowing we just filled one of the most important positions on the field for years to come.
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02-16-2010, 04:15 PM | #116 |
A Dude
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Your tendency to want to quantify the unquantifiable is tiring at times, GTripp.
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02-16-2010, 04:25 PM | #117 | |
Living Legend
Join Date: Mar 2006
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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But a scheme evaluation is not a player evaluation. It's probably a lot more complicated. I don't know, I've never really tried to do one. Player evaluation wise, these aren't high ceiling prospects. I think I have a very good (if not complete) idea of who these two guys are. And to reach towards that franchise quarterback level, I think you need to be willing to scale a playbook away from the things that Clausen and Bradford struggle with. With Bradford, that may be harder because I don't think the things he struggles with are readily apparent (different than saying they do not exist -- a lot different). If you create a QB friendly system for them, I think either of these guys is capable of reaching their top level potential. Of course, you could do the same thing for Chad Pennington or Jason Campbell or Dan Lefevour. I fully support Mike Shanahan's ability to evaluate all possible options in this draft...but the point comes when you make so many concessions in your offense to try to create a great player out of a top prospect, that you wonder exactly why these are the top prospects in the draft. Maybe we think about it the wrong way.
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02-16-2010, 04:25 PM | #118 |
Uncle Phil
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 45,256
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Does anyone else get the feeling that if GTripp were the General Manager of the Skins we would always miss the 15 minute deadline to submit our pick?
"No! I'm not ready yet. I still have to run a regression analysis on the running backs based on who wanted to be Han Solo and who wanted to be Luke Skywalker for Halloween in 4th grade and then measure that against the weighted average of mixed tapes made for their girlfriend in 10th grade per Wide Receiver. I need more time!!!!"
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02-16-2010, 04:45 PM | #119 | |
Living Legend
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 04:46 PM | #120 |
Uncle Phil
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Figured just as much
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