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!

     

The Bridge Quarterback Debate


Mr. Scot
 Share

Recommended Posts

3 hours ago, Doc Holiday said:

If Josh McCown wasn’t our QB coach I’d be a lot more concerned about this. Literally who could we have better than McCown for this job?

No, I'm sick of hearing people say this, it's clear you don't understand how professional sports work.  There is a massive difference between a coach and a teammate, even if the coach is a recently retired long time player.  

It's the reason Udonis Haslem has stuck around with the Heat for years after his playing ability has gone away instead of being moved into an actual coaching role.  

Yes, McCown will be a huge asset to whoever we draft, but you still need the solid vet presence behind him who is a teammate, and not a coach.  Coaches need to be able to be difficult on a player at times and then walk away, not be difficult on them and then be their friend, it doesn't work to have the coach be the good cop and bad cop at the same time.

It's not saying he can't be a good cop at times, but when he needs to lay into the rookie, and that 100% will be needed at times, you need to do it to the HOF greats at times too.  He can't then say, "okay, tough part over" and put his arm around him and lift him up.

That's why you need that vet presence behind him on the roster, to do that for him.  To take him aside and say this is how you go about being a professional QB, how you study, how you take care of your body, how you do X, Y, and Z.

Again, McCown can help at times with that, but his main job is to coach up the player, on the field, not off of it.

It's why coaches have their own offices and locker room, they don't spend much time in the actual players locker room outside of pre-game and half time.  You need that vet for the rookie to lean on in those times, to take him under his wing and help him become the best possible player he can become.

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sorry but Mr Klein's points for a vet QB to back-up a rookie are rather weak. What to do in his daily routine? What to eat? When to go to bed? How to watch tape when he has been in QB rooms for at least 2 or more years watching tape as a college QB? Is it worth about 5 million for this?. Just bring in his mother or big sister if this is what you need, IMO. Corral or a UDFA can be coached into a capable back-up  when & if the need arrises.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, nogoodbum said:

Sorry but Mr Klein's points for a vet QB to back-up a rookie are rather weak. What to do in his daily routine? What to eat? When to go to bed? How to watch tape when he has been in QB rooms for at least 2 or more years watching tape as a college QB? Is it worth about 5 million for this?. Just bring in his mother or big sister if this is what you need, IMO. Corral or a UDFA can be coached into a capable back-up  when & if the need arrises.

The Cardinals tried to put a film study requirement into Kyler's contract because he spends too much of his time playing video games.

The Jets let Wilson do whatever the hell he wants and it ruined his reputation in the locker room and have seemingly already screwed up their #2 pick in the draft.

And those are just 2 recent examples of top draft picks who can't seem to figure out how to go about their business in a professional manner.  

It seems obvious for grown adults who have had jobs for years about how these kids should be able to do it right, especially when they get paid what they do.  But you seem to forget that they're still 21 year old kids who just got paid tens of millions of dollars and are the face of multi-billion dollar organizations.

It's not something a few years in college prepares you for, even for the best of prospects.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, tukafan21 said:

No, I'm sick of hearing people say this, it's clear you don't understand how professional sports work.  There is a massive difference between a coach and a teammate, even if the coach is a recently retired long time player.  

It's the reason Udonis Haslem has stuck around with the Heat for years after his playing ability has gone away instead of being moved into an actual coaching role.  

Yes, McCown will be a huge asset to whoever we draft, but you still need the solid vet presence behind him who is a teammate, and not a coach.  Coaches need to be able to be difficult on a player at times and then walk away, not be difficult on them and then be their friend, it doesn't work to have the coach be the good cop and bad cop at the same time.

It's not saying he can't be a good cop at times, but when he needs to lay into the rookie, and that 100% will be needed at times, you need to do it to the HOF greats at times too.  He can't then say, "okay, tough part over" and put his arm around him and lift him up.

That's why you need that vet presence behind him on the roster, to do that for him.  To take him aside and say this is how you go about being a professional QB, how you study, how you take care of your body, how you do X, Y, and Z.

Again, McCown can help at times with that, but his main job is to coach up the player, on the field, not off of it.

It's why coaches have their own offices and locker room, they don't spend much time in the actual players locker room outside of pre-game and half time.  You need that vet for the rookie to lean on in those times, to take him under his wing and help him become the best possible player he can become.

good stuff in here, the issue is cost. sometimes its not possible, but i do agree with a coach being totally difficult than a teammate. 

i think hoyer at or around 2mill could be another cheap option.....ive always wanted minshew and dont see that now....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Basbear said:

good stuff in here, the issue is cost. sometimes its not possible, but i do agree with a coach being totally difficult than a teammate. 

i think hoyer at or around 2mill could be another cheap option.....ive always wanted minshew and dont see that now....

No, Minshew is absolutely not the right guy for that role, he still thinks he can be a starter in this league, just look at how it went with him and Lawrence last year in Jacksonville.

You need a guy like Dalton or Two Gloves, who realizes his career is waning down and knows nobody is giving him a starting role right now outside of injury.  You need "a pro's pro" in that position, someone the rookie will come in and from day 1 have respect for him and what he's done in his career and be a sponge to soak up everything the has to say.

Dalton, Two Gloves, Brissett are the top 3 guys I want in this role.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, tukafan21 said:

No, Minshew is absolutely not the right guy for that role, he still thinks he can be a starter in this league, just look at how it went with him and Lawrence last year in Jacksonville.

You need a guy like Dalton or Two Gloves, who realizes his career is waning down and knows nobody is giving him a starting role right now outside of injury.  You need "a pro's pro" in that position, someone the rookie will come in and from day 1 have respect for him and what he's done in his career and be a sponge to soak up everything the has to say.

Dalton, Two Gloves, Brissett are the top 3 guys I want in this role.

I think foles is a option too. Dont know his deal/contract tho...

I sorta think the backup does need to be able to win a game or two.....such a hard choice given the cost. A few upper level backups are going for 7-8 million, thats not possible with the current panthers cap.

hoyer i think would take around 2 million and be one hell of mentor...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Basbear said:

I think foles is a option too. Dont know his deal/contract tho...

I sorta think the backup does need to be able to win a game or two.....such a hard choice given the cost. A few upper level backups are going for 7-8 million, thats not possible with the current panthers cap.

hoyer i think would take around 2 million and be one hell of mentor...

I said it in another post the other day, but Foles is my guy right after them.  But as I said then, part of that is that I'm an Arizona alum and us signing Foles would put me over the moon.  

If we stay at #1 and then sign Foles to be his backup, I think I'd be the first person to ever be a fan of a team who just drafted a QB at #1 overall and then goes out and buys a custom authentic jersey of the newly signed backup QB, LOL.

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • KC has a very good defense this year. It is 5th overall. Yes, still worse than last year, but their offense is considerably worse. Their passing D may be their "weakness" but they still allow fewer than 20 ppg. BY completed several deep passes yesterday, and he was able to threaten downfield in ways he didn't seem capable of before the benching. I'm not necessarily worried about his ability to connect deep anymore. What to me was impressive was that he did all this without a run game. We used the pass to set up what little running success we had. Wild.
    • Solid and fair assessment.   I will say, one of the big things I noticed yesterday was that he wasn't shy to step up into the pocket in the face of pressure.  He's trusting the IOL.  And they took care of Chris Jones yesterday.  We had clean pockets but also good success rate vs. pressure which just hasn't been the case with Bryce.   If he has more confidence the OL gets it done and he can navigate and step up for throws, that's huge.  It's one of the biggest things that's held him back.  He was previously bailing quickly and just too easily throwing away or making dead plays.     He was finding his 2nd to 3rd reads within structure/without bailing in the pocket.  That was nice to see, as much concern I have with him.  And the overall limitations will always be there. Time to back it up this week against the Bucs.  
    • Suddenly the Cowgirls look like our best chance for a win remaining. I think the Bucs are playing better than the Falcons of late.  Our lone game versus the dirty birds is in the ATL where we always struggle.  The Cardinals are marginally better than I thought they would be. We are not beating the Eagles, they are starting to roll. I'm saying two at most, next week at home versus the Bucs and the Cowgirls.
×
×
  • Create New...