11-03-2009, 05:10 PM | #1036 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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Earl Bennett WR 25 rec. 334 yards Devin Hester WR 35 rec. 454 yards Johnny Knox WR 24 rec. 310 yards Greg Olsen TE 22 rec. 215 yards Matt Forte RB 24 rec. 185 yards Malcolm Kelly WR 7 rec. 73 yards Devin Thomas WR 7 rec. 71 yards Santana Moss WR 28 rec. 453 yards Antwaan Randle EL WR 23 rec. 248 yards Chris Cooley TE 29 rec. 332 yards Clinton Portis RB 9 rec. 57 yards |
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11-03-2009, 05:17 PM | #1037 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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No matter what, he's done just like this season. He's shell shocked. There are only two more important games for me. The rest is a throw away season. If anything, I'd rather have the #1 draft pick.
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11-03-2009, 07:23 PM | #1038 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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It's because other things -- like a sense of loyalty -- matter that we put up with an organization we know to be inferior. Of course, you also have to consider that one of the reasons we don't win as much as they do is because we are much slower to plug the non-quarterback holes in our roster. You don't have to make the assumption that Campbell and McNabb are equal players to see the similarities. I'm certainly not making that assumption, but a lot of the Campbell criticisms apply to McNabb as well.
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11-03-2009, 07:55 PM | #1039 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
I'm late getting involved in this thread, but i can't see how there is anything to even compare Jason Campbell to Donovan McNabb.
Even if we look at only their NFL careers, McNabb has been surperior in every aspect to Campbell. That's obvious. His multiple Pro Bowls, Championship Games, and lone Superbowl Appearance all attest to that. Dating back farther, in college, McNabb also put up the surperior numbers and people knew that he would be going to the NFL. It's shocking how Jason did much of the same thing he does here down in Auburn, according to Al Borges... No comparison between Campbell and McNabb...
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11-03-2009, 08:05 PM | #1040 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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I frequently ask myself if there's anything that he does so consistently well, game in and game out, that makes him such an irreplaceable part of the Philly offense. And I've come to the conclusion that: McNabb is a very, very good player, and has been so for a long time, but there's nothing Philly couldn't replace if, say, he went to go play overseas. They proved this, I think, with the Kolb pick. I doubt Kevin Kolb is ever going to be a hall of fame player, but he's a functional piece in a bigger machine, who happens to be blocked by McNabb. None of this is meant to be disrespectful, as Donovan is valuable year in and year out in the Philly offense. Of course, if the Eagles had taken Ricky Williams instead, McNabb could have gone to the Bengals or the Bears, and you would have never heard from him again. On the other hand, he's a big reason that the Eagles have been able to remain so good for so long. By ignoring the QB position every year, they've been able to build a team that could easily survive a QB swap. Ironically. For a much shorter time, Campbell offered us stability at the QB position, but if the difference between his career and McNabb's is that, when the going got tough, McNabb labored through it and Campbell fell victim to his teams' offensive suckitude, well, then you'd have to conclude that McNabb is the better player. I'm just not sure that the going ever got tough on McNabb, which is where the comparison falls apart.
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11-03-2009, 10:35 PM | #1041 | |||
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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JC has all the incentive in the world to do the little things and big things right. No matter what the Redskins' record is, this season is an NFL-wide job interview for JC. One he's not performing too well in right now. Quote:
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11-03-2009, 11:05 PM | #1042 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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You seem to imply that Borges said something negative about Campbell. But, that is far from the truth. http://www.nfl.com/news/story?id=090...s&confirm=true Borges isn't buying that Campbell can't run the scheme because the West Coast system is what he ran at Auburn when Campbell blossomed. However, Borges said he tweaked the offense to take advantage of the powerful run game and Campbell's big arm. So, instead of dinking and dunking horizontally and relying on timing and receivers to make yards after the reception, Borges implemented more play-action and vertical passing. "As much as we threw that underneath stuff, we could get it downfield," Borges said. "He could make all the throws; short, intermediate, deep. When he played in 2004, he played lights out. This kid threw almost 70 percent of his passes complete. What's phenomenal about it, his completions were over 10 yards an attempt. That's just not done. He's accurate. Matt Leinart won the Heisman at a 66 percent completion rate with a lower yards-per-catch." |
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11-04-2009, 07:21 AM | #1043 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
You've also posted the part that paints the best picture of Campbell.
The part i was talking about Borges saying is how they constantly had to motivate Jason and make him believe in himself. How Jason didn't necessarily play 'scared', but he was overly cautious and they had to convince him mentally that things were going ok and he would be ok. Jason had issues with his self-confidence and mental state and it would affect him and what they did on the field. The coaches and players always had to motivate him. Here's from the article: "So much of getting Jason to play well was just trying to work with him from the neck up," said Borges, now the offensive coordinator at San Diego State. "We worked fundamentals and all that but just trying to get his psyche right, to convince him that he was a good player, the player people thought he could be, was how we got so much out of him." Borges said he hasn't seen Campbell play this season and he hasn't spoken to him for months. However, he knows the introverted Campbell functions best when he's confident and when he has a running game to ease the pressure on him. He also said Campbell needs support from his coaches, which coach Jim Zorn seemingly gave him until he benched him against the Chiefs. "He has to know that you believe in him," Borges said. "When I got him after two years there, he was pretty beat up mentally. He played 'concerned.' Not scared, but he played like he was afraid to make a mistake, so he didn't play well. We had to get him to take a 'let-it-rip' mentality. If he made a mistake, I took the blame. Bad play call. Once he realized we believed in him, he played to his capability. He did whatever we told him to. We told him not to do certain things, he didn't do them. "Ninety percent of teaching is believing in the pupil and him knowing you believe in him. He believed that we believed in him." If that doesnt sound like a guy who had self-confidence problems i dont know what did.
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11-04-2009, 11:02 AM | #1044 | ||||||
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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Because he needs support to succeed? Borges describes what any QB or PG/SG primary ball handler in basketball(which i used to coach) needs to succeed. If you don't understand that your star player has to know that you trust them implicitly you don't understand team sports. Here's an example from Brett Favre watch this video from NFL.com: Watch the 1:38 mark to the 2:03 mark Green Bay Packers Favre on Favre NFL Videos: Favre on Favre "The coaches that he [Holmgren] hired for me couldn't have been better. I can tell you numerous times when those guys would take the heat for me. He [Andy Reid] covered for me (refering to the clip)...Mike knew...but somebody had to get yelled at fortunately it was them most of the time" Quote:
Borges said that Jason was a mentally beat up QB when he[Borges] came to Auburn after splitting time as a freshman and having different OC each season. Quote:
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Remember your orginal statement? The casual passer by would read that statement and take you at word that Borges said something negative about JC's play here or at Auburn, which isn't the case. |
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11-04-2009, 11:14 AM | #1045 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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I would add that McNabb seems more comfortable in a leadership role. McNabb also got through his early years by running a lot as he was not very accurate w/the ball. As for the going getting tough on him, I think he's endured his fair share of negative publicity and handled it extremely well. Start w/draft day when the philly fans wanted R. Williams. Then the Rush Limbaugh & TO comments. Plus the philly fans are just brutal. WE may be passionate, but they are passionate neanderthals. |
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11-04-2009, 11:49 AM | #1046 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
Had JC played that entire season I doubt the Skins would have made the playoffs.
As for comparing JC to McNabb, that's the funniest thing I ever heard. Its like comparing Secretariat to a $5000 claimer at Charles Town, there is no comparison. |
11-04-2009, 12:06 PM | #1047 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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11-04-2009, 12:14 PM | #1048 | |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
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11-04-2009, 12:44 PM | #1049 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
Or kind of like comparing Todd Collins to Jason Campbell. It's like we know one to be better than the other, but some nimrods still think we we unlikely to make the playoffs with Campbell. It's just a bad comparison, you're right.
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11-04-2009, 12:52 PM | #1050 |
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Re: Campbell's numbers dont lie
Just my last 2 cents - the smartest thing I think that anyone can do now is to stay away from this discussion.
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