- Oct 13, 2000
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Cliff and his notes helped destroy young minds learning the greatest literature written
(Rant for another day)
(Rant for another day)
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No way I'm reading all that
Cliff notes b
Like I've said many times..are Dolphins games password protected or something?
agree with all of this.While there is no doubt in my mind that Alex Smith is currently a better QB than Colin Kaepernick....no problem admitting that.
However, I still wholeheartedly believe the switch was the correct move, and I don't for one second want Alex Smith back. I know he is having some success with KC, but I have no desire to want ANY quarterback who cannot put his team on his back and win games for them. In all honesty, I would rather have no quarterbacks at all, than a QB like Alex Smith. Being stuck in mediocrity is far worse than not having a QB. Alex is just good enough to trick feeble minded front offices that he is good enough to not search for a new QB.
I love KC's defense. WIth that defense and a better QB, they would be able to challenge for a SB spot in that weak *** AFC. But with Alex, I cant imagine they go very far. I don't want my team to be held back by QB play. Sans 2012 and 2013, I have been reading that book since Jeff Garcia was my team's QB.
Well as usual, he always leaves stuff out and writes perspectives to fit his long winded narrative.
Basically he said there's so many factors and unknown variables that go into Football games, so why try to rate anybody.
I don't know...sounds defeated to me, when this same dude was all about ranking players as recently as the beginning of the season.
Basically I respect the methods others use for their evaluation unless I disagree with them... Unless I really disagree with themBut seriously there are so many variables when it comes to wins and losses, pretty crazy to think about it. That said I'm still relying on the old, outdated eye test. Just watching players you get a feel for who is really good, pretty good, average and poor over time. It's opinion based, it's unscientific, but I still think it works
Sure but the "eye test" is also the most subjective thing possible which is why it's used as "Evidence" for the most absurd statements around here. The eye test tells me that Tom Brady is a system QB who relies on Belicheck's play calling, while I see Peyton truly stepping up and commanding the offense as a leader and basically team OC. That's what my eyes tell me. How can you argue with that?the "eye test" is definitely different between different people...but overall, it's tough to argue with. and again, it's not the end all, be all of the discussion either. it's a decently sized factor for me though.
Sure but the "eye test" is also the most subjective thing possible which is why it's used as "Evidence" for the most absurd statements around here. The eye test tells me that Tom Brady is a system QB who relies on Belicheck's play calling, while I see Peyton truly stepping up and commanding the offense as a leader and basically team OC. That's what my eyes tell me. How can you argue with that?
Throughout his career, Ben Roethlisberger has been like a Quentin Tarantino movie: everyone knows he’s great, but no one knows exactly why. That remains true this season. Cam Newton has become the media darling. Aaron Rodgers remains the QB people would most want to build around over the next five years. Tom Brady is the resident icon, on his way to possibly being the G.O.A.T.
Roethlisberger has played as well as any of these guys. The Steelers are 6-3 in games that he’s taken the majority of the snaps, and his 332 passing yards per outing lead the league. And remember, he’s playing in an offense that’s lost star running back Le’Veon Bell as well as starters at the two most important positions up front: center (Maurkice Pouncey) and left tackle (Kelvin Beachum). Yes, others have stepped up. Running back DeAngelo Williams has been fantastic, doing everything Bell does albeit at a slightly less explosive level. Cody Wallace has been steady at center and undrafted 27-year-old Alejandro Villanueva has managed to stay above water at left tackle. Pittsburgh’s pass protection has been among the NFL’s best, particularly in recent weeks.
Effective as the backups-turned-starters have been, the Steelers would not be in playoff contention without Big Ben. Early in his career, Roethlisberger would post sterling numbers—not necessarily on a weekly basis, but fairly often. When he did, it was attributed to his unparalleled knack for extending plays. We’ve all seen him shed would-be sackers, create throwing windows with pump fakes and, like a bull who won’t be corralled, lumber outside the pocket to break down a defense. Roethlisberger has always been dominant if not unstoppable with movement.
But somehow we overlook what happens at the end of that movement: his passes. Roethlisberger is an unbelievable thrower of the football. His arm strength is among the NFL’s very best and so is his precision accuracy. It’s one thing for a quarterback to extend the play. It’s quite another for him to cap it off with a pinpointed deep ball or intermediate strike while under duress. In the early 2000s, Michael Vick was deemed the league’s most athletic quarterback. But it’s Roethlisberger who has always been the most physically gifted man at the position. Because of Roethlisberger’s brutish style, it was presumed that his talents would begin to diminish by his mid-30s, much like it did for Steve McNair, who played the position in a similar way. Instead, Roethlisberger, at 33, is better than ever. That’s because he’s expanded his game in ways that few believed possible. Over the last five years, in fact, Roethlisberger has improved more than any NFL quarterback. And once again, people are failing to recognize the nuances of his greatness.
When offensive coordinator Todd Haley joined the Steelers in 2012, he installed a quicker dropback system with the idea of protecting Roethlisberger from himself. The 240-pound QB wouldn’t suffer so many hits if he threw the ball at the top of a three-step drop. Roethlisberger had played in sharply crafted systems before, but had never been firmly held to the structure of pocket timing. Operating under such rigidity surely felt foreign.
Not surprisingly, there were growing pains. Roethlisberger and Haley are both regarded as alpha males whose personalities can sometimes be like wrecking balls. The two initially had an uncomfortable feeling-out period, but that’s changed thanks to their on-field success.
“He’s as competitive of a guy as there is. I’m the same way,” Haley told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Ron Cook earlier this month. “I think we’re similar personalities. When I meet new people, I don’t let many in right out of the gate. It wasn’t going to happen overnight.” In that same article Roethlisberger said, “I think that we’re understanding each other. We’re understanding what each other is thinking.”
Coverage of the improved coach-quarterback relationship has been scarce, not because the topic is invalid but because, well, harmony is less interesting than strife.
It helps that Haley’s approach has worked better than expected. Not only has Roethlisberger taken less pounding, he’s maintained his sandlot playmaking prowess without having to be reliant on it. He’s become one of the best field generals in football. He even handles much of the play-calling in two-minute situations; the Steelers lead the league with 82 total points in such scenarios.
Roethlisberger now has the acumen to consistently identify coverages and pressure concepts before the snap, whereas before he would often diagnose the defense after the snap. A big aid has been the amount of spread formations called by Haley. Coverage and blitz disguises aren’t available when defenders are forced to follow receivers out wide, putting more ground between the corners, safeties and linebackers.
The spread formations also emphasize Pittsburgh’s overwhelming speed at wide receiver. Deep balls on longer dropbacks can be available when you have Martavis Bryant, Markus Wheaton, Darrius Heyward-Bey and especially Antonio Brown. And for the purposes of Pittsburgh’s down-to-down offense, even more significant is the fact that the receiver’s speed (how long it takes to get from A to B) is blended with quickness (how fast you move around within those two points while, for example, trying to shake a defender.) This is one of the key distinctions between Bryant and previous deep threat Mike Wallace. Besides being lethal on screens and end-arounds, all of Pittsburgh’s wideouts can reach the sticks on three-step-timing throws, presenting the option of post and seam patterns in any circumstance.
A great illustration of this threat mixed with Roethlisberger’s newfound proficiency came in Week 3 on consecutive deep-slant completions to Brown.
Though he’s not mobile in the traditional sense, Roethlisberger embodies what every offensive coordinator wants from athletic, run-oriented quarterbacks. The age-old debate is how often you let a mobile QB rely on his legs versus having him play in the pocket. Fans, analysts and other outsiders tend to say you should let the quarterback run, lest you hinder his greatest strength. Coaches often argue that pocket passing is essential. What outsiders overlook is that when you teach a QB to play in the pocket, you’re not taking away the strength of his running; you’re simply adding strengths to his passing. A quarterback won’t forget how to leave the pocket and improvise just because he’s asked to play more within structure.
Roethlisberger remains as good as anyone at making something happen when a play breaks down. But he’s also as good as anyone at preventing plays from breaking down. It’s this unexpected quarterbacking maturity that makes Pittsburgh the biggest threat to the Patriots in the AFC.
Sure but the "eye test" is also the most subjective thing possible which is why it's used as "Evidence" for the most absurd statements around here. The eye test tells me that Tom Brady is a system QB who relies on Belicheck's play calling, while I see Peyton truly stepping up and commanding the offense as a leader and basically team OC. That's what my eyes tell me. How can you argue with that?the "eye test" is definitely different between different people...but overall, it's tough to argue with. and again, it's not the end all, be all of the discussion either. it's a decently sized factor for me though.
As a Seahawks fan that usually means arguing with people who claim that their "eye test" tells them Russell Wilson is Mark Sanchez despite literally every piece of factual evidence saying they're not even remotely comparable.
Tom > Peyton and it's not even close
No one ever does well in Cleveland so he gets a pass from me there but it is funny that he never had anywhere near the success as a HC that he got once TB came along. I don't buy that one made the other,it's a symbiotic relationship
I don't believe that, I'm just using that as an example of how the "eye test" can be used to claim any opinion you like.It isn't relying on Bill's play calling. It's relying on Bill's teaching. Not Tom, 52 other guys.
Bill takes out player after player after player, NE stays dominant.
Run heavy, defense based team.
To Randy Moss, Wes Welker offensive juggernaut.
They leave, Gronk and murderer based O.
Murderer leaves, Edelman steps in.
RB after RB steps in or out.
Vinateri clutch kicker for life, kicks him out, Gostkowski does job just as well.
Loses Revis, doesn't miss a beat.
Plug and play any defender, Special teamer, olineman, they ALL know their job. They all do it right, and smart.
They know trick plays, formations, situational play calling, how to work sidelines, call timeouts, don't make stupid penalties, they just flat out don't beat themselves.
They attack every weakness you have, and scheme their own weaknesses to limit their damage.
Point being, Tom can just be Tom and do his job, Bill has coached up every single player so well they all have an impact one way or another.
Do all QB's have those same luxuries?
Damn people believe I was making that statement, I guess I was not clear. I think that statement is wrong.easily can argue that. Belichick doesn't call the plays on offense. never has.
Bill has always been a defensive guru. he's never been some great offensive mind.
now style of play (run heavy to stretching the field to double TEs)...that structure is put into place by Bill. But it's Brady and Josh/Bill O'Brien that really have turned those offenses into juggernauts.
and the one constant amongst all the moving pieces on offense (coaches, OC's, players, etc) is Brady.
EDIT: just to add, most people view Brady an on field OC, just like Peyton as well. Belichick has even said he's like another coach other there.
I agree with you that QBs get too much credit/blame for everything, but they do deserve some credit. It's still the most important position in football, and all the surrounding talent in the world can't make a mediocre player elite.
Quite honestly, I'm a firm believer that QB is the most important position in sports. If you don't have a franchise QB, you don't have anything. Of course there's instances where that hasn't been the case. However that's the exception, not the rule. (Not saying 'rule' in a definite way.)
Again, that's my way of thinking.
I'm not gonna act like more doesn't go into it. It's a complex sport and one guy doesn't make team, so simplifying it like that might not be fair. But *shrugs*