Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Grim weather outlook for game


panfanman

Recommended Posts

A slow moving system should be well entrenched over Charlotte by game time with high humidity and over 50% chance of scattered thunderstorms.  Not sure who this benefits but could get ugly with risk of injury.  We certainly don't need this with our O'line depth the way it is.

Screenshot_20180909-101952~2.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, panfanman said:

A slow moving system should be well entrenched over Charlotte by game time with high humidity and over 50% chance of scattered thunderstorms.  Not sure who this benefits but could get ugly with risk of injury.  We certainly don't need this with our O'line depth the way it is.

Screenshot_20180909-101952~2.png

This benefits us more. We are used to the elements. They play in a dome. If Tstorms delay the game though that’ll suck.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As happy as I am in our OL in name right now...the Cowboys are still superior and a wet field + Daryl sounds awful to me. And they have Zeke. While we're great against the run, he's a Top 3 RB.  I don't know if a ground and pound game is the one we want. 

I'd prefer Dak throwing to X,Y, and Z at WR, while Cam has reliable hands in Olsen and short routes to get CMC in open space.  Feel like bad weather also means more CJ Anderson for us. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • some of my favorite mocks i do are trading back with Indy or Miami, but not Arizona, as that lets Hotlanta pick before us.
    • Carter, Graham, and Hunter for me. Other than that I'm listening to offers. Hell, I'm listening to offers anyway. I'm not doing the Gettleman thing of submitting the pick immediately. If the phones are ringing there's no cost to listening. Maybe someone has an offer so good that I can't refuse.
    • These numbers do not measure a player's prime. Do these numbers include OL pulled up from the practice squad for a game or two then cut?  Do they include players who might have been injured or cut for reasons other than they were past their primes?  The average career for an NFL lineman is 3.63 years, and that is because there is a lot of turnover--regardless of a player's prime. In fact, if only 55% of Offensive linemen drafted in the first round succeed, then the failure rates of most offensive linemen drafted and undrafted would be much lower, cause them to skew the average age of the OL.  This suggests that most players' retirement from the NFL is not based on their prime, but other factors.  They are cut, released, injured--and that is based on their level of play compared to others, not their levels of play within their personal skill range--something that peaks during your prime. In this case, I was talking about Moton, an elite offensive tackle, one that avoided the factors that shorten careers unrelated to their primes. I identify Moton as the team's best offensive lineman on an impressive OL--that distinguishes the type of player being referenced, so I did not provide a lot of qualifiers--as you didn't with your stats.   In this article below, one that evaluates established Offensive tackles, it states the following, which supports my comment:  "Most elite offensive tackles start to decline at roughly the age of 32 if they haven’t already."  So to say that Moton was at the end of his prime was not a reach or careless speculation.  If a player has the skill to be competitive and they can avoid injuries, their career expectancy is much higher than an average of all offensive lineman on a fluid roster. https://www.milehighreport.com/2017/2/27/14724674/age-wall-for-offensive-tackles-nfl  
×
×
  • Create New...