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!

     

Bryce Young Cannot Make Basic NFL Throws


BIGH2001
 Share

Recommended Posts

The first half, the O-line held up well. Young missed wide open receivers multiple times. I think at 1 point he was like 1/8 18 yds……definitely Jamarcus level bust….fire everyone involved in the evaluation process who let this transgress. Gonna be a long winter….

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, CBird said:

The first half, the O-line held up well. Young missed wide open receivers multiple times. I think at 1 point he was like 1/8 18 yds……definitely Jamarcus level bust….fire everyone involved in the evaluation process who let this transgress. Gonna be a long winter….

He was 3/15 for 29 yards at halftime. 

  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Panthercougar68 said:

He had 3 of his most impressive throws today, one was a drop, one was a receiver with their head turned the wrong way, and one was a completion. There’s a reason why everyone outside this dumbass  forum is saying Bryce doesn’t have a chance.

Agreed. Hell I'd like him to throw more interceptions - receivers aren't open so he's throwing away/ overthrowing to avoid picks.  Nothing to lose by seeing if one of these bums can catch a 50/50 ball 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He has an defense and a running game now. Prior to all that I was very much in the camp that it's not Bryce's fault, but again, you have to show the people something now. We've ran the ball great the last two games, affording Bryce plenty of 3rd and shorts and he hasn't delivered. Part of it is the playcalling (shotgun runs etc) and part is on him. I

'm still not on "I think he's a bust" bandwagon yet, but I'm also not on the "He can be a franchise guy with good weapons and coaching" bandwagon either. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, LinvilleGorge said:

1/9 on 20+ yard throws today.

9 of his 13 completions were less than 5 yards in the air.

That's right. 70% of his completions were under 5 yards. That means that when throwing for over 5 yards he went 4/27 since he was a perfect 9/9 when throwing for less than 5. 

Screenshot_20231210-213200.thumb.png.8074734e20baf5bc15f650104f44888d.png

 

Thats what happens when you fuging suck. He is not going to get 4+ seconds of pocket time and all pro WRs in the NFL, just ride his sorry ass to the #1 pick in 2025. Thats all we have to look forward to, no way Tepper admits Bryce sucks yet.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Selltheteamtepper said:

I’m still seeing tons of people defending his play. All the Panthers YouTube guys are still totally on board 😂

It's pure cope. Hell, plenty of analysts are still parroting the "Bryce will be fine" mantra while at the same time admitting that his footwork is all over the place and he's missing throws he should be hitting during the game. It's like they can point out all of the bad on a play by play level but can't get themselves to take the next step and admit that this guy probably ain't gonna be fine.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, LinvilleGorge said:

1/9 on 20+ yard throws today.

9 of his 13 completions were less than 5 yards in the air.

That's right. 70% of his completions were under 5 yards. That means that when throwing for over 5 yards he went 4/27 since he was a perfect 9/9 when throwing for less than 5. 

Screenshot_20231210-213200.thumb.png.8074734e20baf5bc15f650104f44888d.png

 

Lots of white dots beyond 20 yards.  They can't say shots aren't being taken anymore, Bryce just can't hit them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

All I'll add is: I thought this last fall, winter and spring. I said the guy is not accurate and he doesn't have a strong arm.

I've seen nothing this year to change my mind. It's not hate. I like the guy. It just is and no amount of coaching will change it.

  • Pie 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

    • There are very few players in this draft that don't have a concern that could cause someone to not like them---I think the longer a player hangs around the top 10 (beginning in February) the more their flaws could withstand the scrutiny. Some fall too far, in my opinion, and are thrown into the scratch and dent bin.  Jack Sawyer (Ohio State) comes to mind, Shavon Revel (East Carolina), Restrepo (Miami).  I wonder if it is not that we found things through research, it could be that we exploited trivial things.  You can't measure the "it" factor. Those three just mentioned--I would have no problem drafting them at a discount.  Restrepo ran a 4.8--not as big a deal as people think--he is going to be a chain-moving slot--he will be sliding underneath, finding a hole in the zone, etc.  Great hands, great attitude.  I take him in the fourth.  Jack Sawyer is the high motor over-achiever.  I think he can be a 8-10 sack guy, block a lot of passes, and hold the edge.  I take him in round 3 if they let him fall that far.  Revel could be one of the top 3 CBs--if he is there at 58, I take him.  When the flaw is what you see when you hear their names, you are blind to their other talents.
    • Sims has to do a little outrage marketing to make the engagement numbers go vroom, but there's been a few analysts that have commented on how Walker is ultimately going to be depending on whomever drafts him to properly develop him. Whether that's starting him off of as a rotational edge guy on obvious passing downs or settling him at ILB will be up to whoever ends up with him. A lot of folks like to point out Isaiah Simmons, and as much as I like Isaiah as a Clemson fan he's not the guy that Jalon Walker is between the ears (this isn't to say Isaiah isn't bright, but didn't seem to breathe football like Jalon does). The kid's got a shot; he's just going to need it somewhere that's going to aim first before firing him off.
    • Evero runs Vic Fangio's scheme and leans heavily on cover 4 with disguised coverages. It is not predominantly cover-2 as suggested. This means that the box safety is going to likely be covering 1/4th as opposed to 1/2 of the field. Whomever the team brings in to be the boundary safety (unless they stay with Demani) is going to be covering the 1/2 part. Though with Evero's scheme, that box safety can also be one of the three underneath coverage guys depending on how they've got it disguised prior to the snap.
×
×
  • Create New...