
Mr. Scot
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Some insight into the GM hiring process from Albert Breer (MMQB) Panthers owner David Tepper was all parts hedge-fund manager in his GM search. And here’s how to explain it: Tepper made clear to candidates, and those who were part of his search committee, that he wanted the GM hire to be a value add. In other words, after interviewing internal candidates, and having a year working with Matt Rhule, redundancy of skill set to people already in the building would be a strike against anyone. That’s why, through the process, the team took a good hard look in places some weren’t, with cap/analytics candidates coming through (Cleveland’s Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kansas City’s Brandt Tilis interviewed, and Baltimore’s Nick Matteo turned down a shot to) with the normal scouting types. So what does new GM Scott Fitterer add? One, he was on the ground floor in Seattle to see Pete Carroll’s college-to-the-NFL transition. Two, he worked in Carroll’s kingdom, with a coach who had a level power in personnel decisions (for what it’s worth, Carroll’s and Rhule’s styles have similarities, too). Three, he has a vast level of experience, spanning college and pro scouting, cap management and trades. And four, Fitterer got along easily with those in the room—which is why the process moved so fast. In fact, one story from that time really encapsulates it. Fitterer had asked Rhule about developing and playing young players (a staple in early-Carroll Seattle). Rhule responded with example after example from last year of rookies and other young guys growing into big roles fast, and he then explained how important it was to him to maintain a “start-up mentality.” Tepper then jabbed at Rhule, saying the coach had stolen that phrasing from him. At which point Fitterer jumped in and deadpanned to Tepper, “And you stole it from Jeff Bezos.” That brought the room down—and showed everyone the potential for chemistry there. And the best part is that the Panthers knew that was there quickly. Fitterer wasn’t in the first wave of interviews. Last weekend, after meeting with those internal candidates, Carolina decided to reset, and a request went in on Fitterer Sunday afternoon. Monday, he had his Zoom interview. Tuesday, he flew to Charlotte. Wednesday, he had his second interview. Thursday, he got the job. Which is a pretty good indication of how quickly an impression was made.
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I'd trade a fifth rounder for #3 overall too but somehow I don't see it happening. As to Watson, I'd absolutely consider a deal in a heartbeat if it wasn't a Gift of the Magi type transaction. Most of what I see people offering here is exactly that. And do you really think if say, the Dolphins offered a better deal than us, they'd take a worse deal just because of that? (not even mentioning the relationship between Caserio and Flores) The Texans are gonna get hammered and look like fools if they trade him anyway. You're asking them to accept looking even worse.
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Well to his credit, at least he pays for his meals. Go to dinner with Tepper and it might be you that ends up paying
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I have no idea what you're talking about. As far as I remember, Peyton Manning retired as a Colt. (that's my story and I'm sticking to it)
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I'm trying to remember the last big time quarterback I saw go out with a happy ending. Was probably Elway. It doesn't happen often.
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How about Lieutenant Data?
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Also dear Saints fans, next time you face us you won't have Drew Brees and we won't have a roster that was put together by Marty Hurney.
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Mentioned it elsewhere: I once heard someone say that the length of the average NFL career is "one year too long". That probably applies to Brees right now.
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Speaking of Dan Morgan and Fitterer...
Mr. Scot replied to blueandblackattack's topic in Carolina Panthers
I think it's very likely. Lots of things can happen though.