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Trade the farm to the Jets 2nd pick ASAP


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3 minutes ago, ForJimmy said:

The good news is there are a lot of good QBs in this draft. After workouts fans are going to get fired up about Lance. I’ll be happy with Lance, Fields, or Wilson.

Yep. Get me a QB. As much as I'd love to have Howell next year, this overall class is much stronger and we're going to have a top 10 pick. Go get a QB now.

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10 hours ago, Sean Payton's Vicodin said:

I still say we gotta trade up for Fields, and I STILL don't care if we lose CMAC in the process.

You may have had a leg to stand on if the front office didn't pull it's mastery making him the highest paid running back ever 2 years early. Now he's missed an entire year with injuries. He has little to no trade value as it stands right now.

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On 12/27/2020 at 6:28 PM, WarHeel said:

The dude played 98% of snaps for 50 games consecutively without injury. Your sarcasm is noted but it doesn’t resound as loudly as you think.

One thing I noticed as a college football player is this--an injury can often relate to a different injury.  When you get injured, you get out of conditioning mode to some degree and go into rehab mode.  In college, rehab mode was the training room once we all went to practice--it was the stadium steps, it was the weight room working with 1/10th of the normal resistance.   You come back based on your injury's readiness, but your body is behind the others on the field.  You are playing catch up--and your mind is on the knee, shoulder, ankle, etc. that you injured as much as anything else.  So you use the other parts of the body to compensate for the rehabbed area--that throws off your technique and balance, and your mindset is different.  You are now defensive in an offensive game--even if you do not realize it.  So it often leads to other injuries.  You need an off-season to completely heal, but remember, when you are healing others are getting stronger and faster.   So a string of injuries that seem unrelated is not uncommon.  Don't believe me, spend a year with the trainers and doctors.  I should add that by this time of year, there are many injured players who are getting shots or are being mummy-taped and braced as much as possible--so the degree of players on the edge of IR is unreal. 

 

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9 minutes ago, MHS831 said:

One thing I noticed as a college football player is this--an injury can often relate to a different injury.  When you get injured, you get out of conditioning mode to some degree and go into rehab mode.  In college, rehab mode was the training room once we all went to practice--it was the stadium steps, it was the weight room working with 1/10th of the normal resistance.   You come back based on your injury's readiness, but your body is behind the others on the field.  You are playing catch up--and your mind is on the knee, shoulder, ankle, etc. that you injured as much as anything else.  So you use the other parts of the body to compensate for the rehabbed area--that throws off your technique and balance, and your mindset is different.  You are now defensive in an offensive game--even if you do not realize it.  So it often leads to other injuries.  You need an off-season to completely heal, but remember, when you are healing others are getting stronger and faster.   So a string of injuries that seem unrelated is not uncommon.  Don't believe me, spend a year with the trainers and doctors.  I should add that by this time of year, there are many injured players who are getting shots or are being mummy-taped and braced as much as possible--so the degree of players on the edge of IR is unreal. 

 

I don’t disagree with any of this. Was actually the point I was making in regards to CMC in that a string of unrelated injuries doesn’t equate to him “being done.”

 

FYI, rehab is my profession :tongue:

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