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Mr. Scot

HUDDLER
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Everything posted by Mr. Scot

  1. Team released a bonus clip of Fitterer being given the "Draft game ball".
  2. That's the one I was thinking of, but apparently not her.
  3. In fifty plus years, I've been wrong plenty of times so it's so it's not a big deal. That, plus my relationship status guarantees I'm gonna be told I'm wrong on a regular basis More to the point though, it's just football. Not like we're arguing over something important As for me, I just prefer to make an informed opinion. I'm not trying to be Miss Cleo... or Jim Rome, for that matter.
  4. Longstanding tradition here For my part, I'm hopeful but I have no idea how good (or bad) Darnold is going to be. I do think people acting like the Panthers were basically forced to take him at gunpoint are being kinda silly though Will he work out? Don't know, but the team wanted him and they got him, so here's hoping.
  5. I thought Simms predictions for Fields were kind of silly. Actually figured there was a decent chance someone would trade up and take him before us, but that didn't happen.
  6. Fields as a trade back option doesn't really make sense, especially from a team who thought he could be used as bait for someone else to trade up.
  7. Yep. Likes to be kept informed of the process but doesn't inject himself into it, which is consistent with what we'd heard about him from Rhule and Gantt. And yeah, I'm pretty relieved about that.
  8. Not really. Voth's tweet would seem to indicate it wasn't Fields. Klein generally has good connections and info too.
  9. Would Fields be a reasonable possibility after a trade back though? Given that the team thought that could at least potentially get a trade up offer for him, that doesn't seem logical.
  10. Dude, you sound seriously butthurt over this stuff (yikes!) I've already said if he doesn't work out, I think our next QB comes from the draft.
  11. I'd love to extend Anderson but I'm not expecting it. Very possible the Marshall pick was to backfill for that eventuality.
  12. Makes sense. When Rhule went to the board, he was talking about "guys they love" at 8. The others would fit as fallback options.
  13. Also have to remember that Stafford being available for trade was made known. Darnold's availability was a question mark. Bottom Line: We know they started talking about Darnold early and kept at it till the deal was done, chose to forego two available draftees and now they're building around him. That's not a weak commitment.
  14. There's a big difference between being wrong about what you think might happen and telling a story about something that did.
  15. No, because we didn't get an offer we liked as much as we liked Horn. Not sure what you thought you were getting out of that post. You're starting to sound like Sizzlebuzz.
  16. Some folks would be. When the news of what we offered for Stafford was posted here a few months back, a few folks just about lost their minds.
  17. Did we draft Fields? Person confirmed in a post draft Q&A that the quarterback talk was to fish for offers.
  18. Just like there was "way too much talk" about Justin Fields? There was a whole bunch of rumor that turned out to be nothing, but cling to that if it makes you feel better.
  19. Not quite correct. They didn't discuss terms in the initial contact because the Jets wanted to wait. Had they not, the deal might have happened then. Breer did confirm elsewhere that once the Jets started talking, they suggested a swap of first round picks. The Panthers did balk at that suggestion because at that point, they didn't want to give up the 8th pick. There were other discussions, and other options, but the Panthers ultimately decided Darnold was their best option. So not first, but not last. "Second tier" might be the most accurate description.
  20. This is how I know you didn't read the article.
  21. Stafford was definitely the first option, but the team started talking to the Jets about Darnold right after that deal fell through. Had the Jets not wanted to wait, that deal could have gone through way sooner than it did. So no, not the first option, but also not (as you're trying to characterize) the last resort. Again, you don't think Donald will succeed. I get it. Everybody gets it. But arguing that the Panthers only got him because they "panicked" or "felt they couldn't do any better" ignores the facts of the story.
  22. You didn't actually read it, did you? If you did, and that's what you came away with, you didn't understand it. (or just don't want to admit it)
  23. I'll let you guys argue with Albert Breer. A while back, Breer told the story from both the Panthers and the Jets perspective. Breer is one of the best football writers out there and he's got no reason to try and spin anything positive for the Panthers. Here's the full story from the Panthers side. WHY THE PANTHERS MADE THEIR MOVE In last week’s GamePlan, we gave you the A-to-Z on the Sam Darnold trade from the Jets’ perspective. So in the interest of equal time, I thought it was important to give you the same sort of look at the deal from the other side. And really, there is one place where the stories match up perfectly: Both started with an important new hire coming from the NFC West on Jan. 14. That’s right, only a few hours separated the Jets’ striking a deal to make Robert Saleh their head coach, and the Panthers’ tabbing Seattle exec Scott Fitterer to be their new general manager. So that’s where Carolina’s quarterback pursuit began. • The Panthers’ big swing for Matthew Stafford—an offer that included the eighth pick, a fifth-rounder and Teddy Bridgewater—fell short. From there, Fitterer and coach Matt Rhule started to reset at the quarterback position. Deshaun Watson was the biggest fish in the pond, but through January and February (before news broke of his legal situation), Texans GM Nick Caserio hadn’t shown, to any team, an appetite for even discussing a trade, telling them some variation of “You can ask me about anyone but the quarterback.” • Darnold’s name first came up in February meetings, along with other potentially available quarterbacks, as the team worked through its offseason plan at all positions. Both Fitterer and Rhule had interesting background on Darnold—since Fitterer interviewed for the Jets’ GM job in the spring of 2019 and the Jets had made a run at poaching Rhule from Baylor a few months before that. The Jets had Rhule meet with Darnold, and it struck Rhule how Darnold seemed to have as good a handle of what it took to win as anyone, with all his questions centered on culture and team-building, rather than X’s-and-O’s. For his part, Fitterer remembered feedback from Jets owner Christopher Johnson, president Hymie Elhai and coach Adam Gase, and how each thought of Darnold as a person. • Fitterer also had his own evaluation from Darnold’s time at USC, having written up the former first-team All-Pac 12 quarterback as an even-keeled guy beloved in the Trojans’ program, who consistently rose to the occasion when the stakes were high, and a very good athlete capable of making throws to every level of the field. Rhule and Fitterer’s subsequent look at Darnold’s tape showed flashes of what everyone saw in him at USC, where he could get outside the pocket and rip it to wherever he wanted. • The initial phone call to the Jets was … interesting. Fitterer and Rhule called from director of player personnel Pat Stewart’s phone, since Stewart was closest with New York GM Joe Douglas. Douglas answered in a sort of ditzy voice—“Stu-ert?”—and Fitterer and Rhule were caught off-guard. Stewart wasn’t. It was an inside joke referencing the Stuart character on Saturday Night Live’s Californians skit. After the initial awkwardness, Douglas told the Panthers’ crew that he needed to get through the pro days for the top quarterback prospects in the draft and get medicals for all of them, but to stay in touch. And through natural conversation in the weeks to come, the Jets and Panthers did. • Since the Jets and Panthers were among the teams to send full crews to the big quarterback pro days, Fitterer, Rhule and Douglas found themselves in the same place at the same time a bunch. But for a while, there wasn’t a ton to talk about. In fact, at Trey Lance’s March 12 pro day in Fargo, there wasn’t much communication between GMs, other than a quick hello. • That changed on March 26 in Provo, Utah. That morning, Fitterer was standing next to 49ers assistant GM Adam Peters when Carolina PR chief Bruce Speight texted him that San Francisco had made a massive move up the board to land the third pick from Miami. Fitterer flashed the text to Peters, who flashed a smile back at him. (The Panthers had previously kicked around the idea of dealing up, but decided fairly early on that the price would be prohibitive for where they were in building the team.) As BYU QB Zach Wilson finished throwing, Fitterer found Douglas, asked about Darnold, and they agreed to talk during the week to follow, with both teams sending sizable groups to Columbus for Justin Fields’s Ohio State pro day. • The Jets and Panthers talked again on March 29, the night before Fields was to throw, then lingered afterward in Ohio State’s field house to continue the conversation. By that Friday, April 2, both sides felt like a deal was close. They talked again on Saturday, paused on Easter morning, with more texts back-and-forth late on that Sunday afternoon. And on Monday morning, the final hurdles were being cleared. • For the Panthers, based on how their draft board sets up and their needs, it was important to hold onto their slotted picks in the first (No. 8), second (No. 39) and third (No. 73) rounds. So the compromise, with the Jets asking for “a second-rounder plus,” was to have the two come in 2022. And initially, the concept Carolina was working off was to have two later 2021 picks as part of the deal, but the sides couldn’t quite make the terms work under those parameters. So Carolina moved the sixth-rounder it was offering this year down (Carolina has three sixth-rounders and gave the Jets the last one), and the 2021 fifth-rounder they were offering up to a fourth-rounder and into next year. That leaves the Panthers with seven picks in this year’s draft, which gives them a shot to fill needs and potentially move some picks to 2022 to replace those they just dealt away. • The relationship between the Panthers and Teddy Bridgewater was already strained (trade rumors will do that), but Carolina’s doing its best to manage the situation now. Bridgewater has permission to seek a trade, and Rhule has left the door open to having Bridgewater back to compete with Darnold for the job. One important nuance here: $10 million of his $17 million base salary for 2021 is fully guaranteed, so there’s a ceiling for how big a pay cut Bridgewater would be willing to take to help Carolina facilitate a trade. • Acquiring Darnold gives the Panthers a lot more flexibility with the eighth pick—but it does not preclude them from taking a quarterback. The 49ers’ deal certainly sparked the last set of talks between the Jets and Panthers on Darnold. All Fitterer and Rhule had to do was start to count the quarterback-needy teams in front of them to know the chance one they valued would fall to them had dwindled. And yet, if the right one gets to them, they’d likely still pounce. This just allows Rhule and Fitterer to be true to the board, with the ability to fill corner and tackle needs (and not press the QB need) there, and good players at those positions expected to be available when Carolina’s on the clock. And tucked in there is the Panthers’ all-in approach to getting the quarterback spot right. At first, it was an aggression to look for an upgrade in Stafford, even though Bridgewater was, for the most part, fine last year. In the middle, it was turning over every rock, from Watson to Darnold. In the end, it could mean overstocking the position a little, and if you look at Fitterer’s history it’s not hard to figure where he’d have gotten that idea. Fitterer worked in Seattle for 20 years, was there for the duration of the Matt Hasselbeck era, and then saw how his boss, John Schneider, kept taking swings at quarterbacks. Seattle had Hasselbeck back for a year. The Seahawks dealt for Charlie Whitehurst and they signed Tarvaris Jackson. And then they inked Matt Flynn to relatively pricey deal in 2012, with Schneider having been a part of drafting Flynn in Green Bay in 2008. At that point, most figured the Seahawks were done for that offseason at quarterback. But Schneider didn’t let his pride get in the way of his draft board—and he didn’t hesitate to take an intriguing, undersized QB prospect out of Wisconsin in the middle of the third round. That prospect, Russell Wilson, beat Flynn out to start in camp, and the rest is history. History, clearly, that Fitterer is carrying with him. Breer's discussion from the Jets side also confirms a couple of things. One, the Panthers were not the only team interested in Darnold (several other teams had been in contact) but they were the only one that struck around long enough to make it happen rather than going in a different direction. It also verifies that if this were a normal year, the trade probably would have happened sooner, and potentially with someone else. Another team had a first round pick as part of their offer, but same as with us, the Jets wanted to wait until they'd done all their evaluations. So again, if you guys wanna believe your own narratives (I know CRA has Tepper in the room next to him and all) over someone with actual inside access, feel free. It makes you look delusional of course but hey, that's your right.
  24. This is the same stuff you told me to explain why we weren't picking up his option yet and to assure me we were taking Fields. How'd that pan out? Basically, you're desperately trying to spin the story in such a way that the Panthers agree with you about Darnold based on "hunches" and theories when all the actual evidence says they don't. Sorry, but I can't take your hunches as seriously as I can actual reports.
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