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Everything posted by Krovvy
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Now the choice. It's harder than you think, after watching all of the top quarterbacks games. Time to watch them all, again, and again until draft day.
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These were great.
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Well, just from what I've seen, he has a tendency to walk into sacks and not climb the pocket at times, instead taking off backwards for negative yards.
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Of course he can run? He's very athletic. It's just that he makes such poor decisions, holds onto the ball for too long, and doesn't navigate the pocket well enough to elude pressure.
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It's actually his best trait. He maneuvers so well in the pocket keeping his eyes downfield under heavy pressure. The game I linked has him missing receivers left and right from poor mechanics, but it shows him standing tall the entire game going through his reads.
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How is this one read and go?
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His offensive line was better in 2021 for sure.
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Richardson ran a pro-style offense with very little spread from what I've seen. The amount of RPO I saw wasn't much considering how good of a runner he is. They really underutilized him running the ball from what I watched. Which games do you want me to look at where his legs were the offense?
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That's interesting, more accurate? I'd like to see how they argued that. The stats thing though, they're very comparable other than completion percentage. Will Levis Completions: 185/283 (65.4%) Yards: 2,406 Touchdowns: 19 Interceptions: 10 Rushing Yards: -107 Rushing Touchdowns: 2 Anthony Richardson Completions: 176/327 (53.8%) Yards: 2,549 Touchdowns: 17 Interceptions: 9 Rushing Yards: 654 Rushing Touchdowns: 9 Production wise it's pretty similar until you look at rushing statistics.
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There's a scenario where Lamar Jackson doesn't sign until after the draft. Imagine if the Panthers come out of the draft being the odd one out, missing on the top four quarterbacks. I would assume that Lamar Jackson becomes plan A, B, C, and D at that point. It's not like the Panthers didn't go down this road before last year with Watson, and that was a much more riskier free agent to pursue.
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Another fun statistical anomaly from Will Levis. Aaron Rodgers trade to Jets could be facing one major hurdle, plus five moves the Cowboys should make - CBSSports.com
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His decision-making drives me wild watching him. He had so many poor scrambles that he had over a hundred negative rushing yards last year.
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The days of players destroying their bodies to benefit billionaires without proper compensation seems to be fading. The idea a player would risk their career to possibly win a game isn't logical when they've yet to be paid. There's a reason the Ravens already reportedly already made Lamar Jackson an obscene offer, and it isn't because he's not worth it and the best years are behind him. At the same time there's a reason why a lot of players have been vocally supporting him on Twitter. The NFL is a business, and I don't blame players for starting to think of it as the owners do.
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I think his teammates and the players understand. After RG III I think it made a lot of these guys more cautious with what they were willing to do for their teams, especially when it comes to ligament injuries. They know Lamar hasn't really been paid for what he's done in the NFL yet. I think a majority of the players see Jackson's side when it comes to sitting out the playoffs while he didn't have a contract.
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Ryan Poles trying to drive up the cost of the #1 pick
Krovvy replied to NAS's topic in Carolina Panthers
Absolutely. I'm not a trade Burns guy, but it's entirely possible that both the Bears and Cardinals would want him in a trade scenario. If these teams said there's no way we're accepting a trade without Burns being included, I would think the Panthers would have to relent. Contingent on free agency, the Panthers could be going into the draft with an injured Coral as an option at quarterback.