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02-16-2010, 06:23 PM | #121 | |
Pro Bowl
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 06:33 PM | #122 |
Playmaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Without using the Skywalker/Solo Halloween Regression Method.... quickly looking at some franchise level QBs taken in the 1st (Brees & Favre may as well have been); Manning x 2, Brees, Favre, McNabb, Palmer, Rivers, Rodgers, all those guys records improved within the 1st-3rd years without a major supporting cast change. Once they understood the NFL and started "getting it". They made those around them better.
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02-16-2010, 08:08 PM | #123 | |
A Dude
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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I just think if you're on the clock and there's a QB there who you think can enter the upper echelon, you get him, no matter what your other needs are. Unless of course you've already got a QB like that. Risks be damned.
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02-16-2010, 08:19 PM | #124 | |
Naega jeil jal naga
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-16-2010, 08:21 PM | #125 | |
Naega jeil jal naga
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-17-2010, 12:31 AM | #126 | ||||||||
Playmaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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Lets just look at the first part of your statement. What if the 'elite QB prospect' goes to a situation that isn't conducive to success? Won't they cease being an 'elite QB prospect'? Here's my point that i think you're missing. The QB position is totally dependent on the other 11 heck the other 21 people on his team doing their job before the QB can be in a postion to have success or become elite. Imo the situation is the most important factor in determining the success or failure of QB. That's why the label of 'elite QB prospect' or 'franchise caliber QB' never made much sense to me. You aren't until you become one. Its like being a No.1 receiver anyone can label Roy Williams a No.1 receiver but Miles Austin's play on the field made him the No.1 Quote:
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And that is why picking a QB is such a crap shot at the end of the day after everything has been measured you still don't know. *(I don't recall any question marks about Shuler and only heard about Leaf's questions marks much after he became a bust) Imo another reason you can't predict a QBs success has nothing to do with the player its about the situation more then the player. Imho it takes a good franchise to create a franchise QB. It takes vision, coaching and personelle. And until a team has the right elements to become a good franchise they can draft 1st round QBs every 3-4 years and never end up with a 'franchise' QB. |
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02-17-2010, 09:41 AM | #127 | |||||||
Playmaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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Here's an example, Manning is an elite QB, he went to a bad situation in Indy. Indy built around him and has been consistently good. Kurt Warner (not an elite QB IMO) has success in the greatest show on turf. He has Marshall Faulk, Torry Holt, Issac Bruce, etc. After that he struggles, then when paired with Fitz and Boldin has success. Warner is not an elite QB, he needs the pieces around him to be successful. (For all you Warner fans, I don't need to see his resume, the guy is good, just not elite).
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02-17-2010, 11:20 AM | #128 | |
Gamebreaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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The reading def needs to be improved, I'll defend him to an extent saying that he might only have time to make his basic reads before he has to get rid of the ball, however with a little more time he might get some extra looks in. He needs to compensate by having better pocket presence or having the pocket move (which obviously would be coming from above his call). |
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02-17-2010, 11:26 AM | #129 |
Gamebreaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Are you an economist or something? Football isn't only a science and it can be hard to measure art. I know that I've said it before but your pretty and obscure numbers can't explain everything for good or for bad. Some things are unquantifiable or just aren't represented well by numbers. There are too many factors to consider to break it down to something so concise; with all of the tape that you watch I figured you'd have this down by now because at times it seems like you only watch the stats board.
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02-17-2010, 11:28 AM | #130 | |
Gamebreaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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we'd never draft a QB, that's for certain |
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02-17-2010, 11:29 AM | #131 | |
Gamebreaker
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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02-17-2010, 04:45 PM | #132 | |
Living Legend
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
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Same deal with any rookie we might draft. The quality of the offense he'd be in from day one is pathetic. The system, however, would be the one proven thing we'd have to work with. We don't have great talent on the outsides or in the backfield, or up front, so in effect what we're looking for is a system quarterback. Can he execute the Shanahan playbook as well as any other player in this draft? If the answer is yes, I don't see why we wouldn't take one at four. I honestly have no idea if a system quarterback drafted in the second round is as good as a system quarterback drafted in the first. I really don't think any team has ever tried to take a system quarterback in the top ten picks. And I don't see why Washington would be any different. But I think Shanahan has to at least evaluate all the options. If his system values accuracy above all, and Sam Bradford and Jimmy Clausen are the two most accurate passers in the entire class (ignoring McCoy), then I think you almost have to take one of them. But are we rebuilding on offense? Or are we just adding Shanahan players to what already exists? And if we're rebuilding, why did we hire Shanahan? And what of 2011? There's so much context I can't answer here, but the one thing I think I can answer is that, context-neutral, Bradford and Clausen are both reaches at No. 4.
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02-17-2010, 04:48 PM | #133 |
Living Legend
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Shanahan's mentor, Walsh, was famous for taking undervalued quarterback prospects and building a system that hid their weaknesses while exposing those of the defense. In a class like this, I find it hard to believe we won't even try that.
And that's why I feel that we will spend a first round pick on a quarterback, but that it won't be at No. 4. It will be at No. 25 or something, and it will be McCoy. But it's an interesting thought that we may do that, and Clausen might still be available at that point. And then there's a legitimate dilemma that we'll have to pick between Clausen and McCoy at the back end of the first round to be our quarterback of the future.
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02-17-2010, 04:58 PM | #134 |
Special Teams
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Location: Originally Portsmouth, VA but now Ocala, FL
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
I Dont see Clausen being available at the end of the 1st round. There are simply too many teams that need a QB this season (rams, bills, seahawks, browns, jaguars, broncos, raiders, maybe vikings, panthers, cardinals). And wit Clausen somehow movin up in mock drafts as of late. i would be EXTREMELY suprised to see Jimmy Clausen around @ the end of the 1st. If we've traded back and he is there then it would be a more logical choice. FOR THE LOVE OF EVERYTHING HOLY, MARY MOTHER OF JESUS, PLEASE DO NOT LET US DRAFT COLT MCCOY!
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02-17-2010, 05:01 PM | #135 |
Uncle Phil
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Re: The Mid Round QB fallacy
Jevan Snead-4th round. You heard it here first...and probably last
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