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!

     

Reasons to be on the Stephen Hill bandwagon


Jakob

Recommended Posts

 

The Jets cut wide receiver Stephen Hill, a 2012 second-round pick, on Saturday and Hill’s agent Alan Herman was less than thrilled with the team’s decision.

Herman argued that the team’s quarterbacks and offensive schemes were to blame for his client’s struggles in his first two seasons. Hill had 45 catches and four touchdowns in 23 games for the Jets.

“He didn’t have a chance that first year with that whole The Golden Calf of Bristol-Mark Sanchez fiasco,” Herman said, via USA Today. “His second year, Geno Smith was learning how to play quarterback. So they never threw the ball deep because they wanted to simplify things for Geno.”

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/08/30/stephen-hills-agent-disappointed-in-ryan-and-idzik-thinks-browns-will-be-interested/

 

It's not everyday you see an agent go out and blame a team for their clients failures and I don't blame him. Stephen Hill ran a 4.36 in the combine and an unofficial 4.26 in college at Georgia Tech. You rarely ever see 4.3 speed at 6'4. In 2012 as a rookie Hill was plagued by having Mark Sanchez and Greg McElroy as his quarterback. Last season he was even worse off having Geno Smith as his QB. As his agent said “His second year, Geno Smith was learning how to play quarterback. So they never threw the ball deep because they wanted to simplify things for Geno.” I just watched nearly every pass thrown to Hill by Geno Smith, Smith couldn't hit Hill if his life depended on it. From wildly off target passes to completely underthrown balls, he just couldn't get it to him. Don't listen to anyone who says this guy can't catch. Hill dropped 5 passes his rookie season and 1 last year. 6 Drops out of 45 receptions really isn't bad, especially for his first two seasons. Hills only real problem in my eyes is route running which is something that is coachable, I'm confident it's something ricky proehl could improve.

 

Seriously, who wouldn't want a 6'4 deep threat for cam?

 

HILLCATCH.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would be on board if he had shown something hell anything over the past two years. But he's shown nothing to show he's capable of being an NFL receiver let alone a 2nd round pick.

 

I agree... 

 

Although, somehow some way guy's like this end up coming to Carolina to resurrect their careers. We have just never been fortunate enough for a WR to do this.. Perhaps this is the time if we can land him for a bargain deal..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's only so much you can do in a Sanchez/Geno Smith lead offense. I wouldn't mind if we signed him. We have the best WR coach in the NFL so why not pair him up with Proehl and see what they can do? You can't teach 6'4, 4.3 speed. Plus, he is still young as hell.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Uggh forgot about that
    • I am curious to see if Warren is the elite player that the Huddle Warren stans believe. I am always fairly wary of these first round TE's.
    • The Rossi things isn't going away, either... https://www.thescore.com/nhl/news/3312416/unfinished-business-7-players-to-watch-in-back-half-of-nhl-offseason The Wild and Rossi shouldn't be having any trouble hammering out an extension. Rossi, an RFA turning 24 in September, recorded the second-most points on the team last season (60 in 82 games). The smart, skilled, highly competitive 5-foot-9 Austrian is a homegrown top-six center. Minnesota has $10 million in cap space and no other significant spots to fill to finalize its 2025-26 roster. Problems lurk below the surface, however. Coach John Hynes demoted Rossi to the fourth line in the playoffs, dropping his nightly usage from 18 minutes in the regular season to 11 in the first-round series loss to Vegas. GM Bill Guerin's top to-do list item at the moment is to lock up Kirill Kaprizov. The superstar winger, who's been eligible for an extension since July 1, is due for Leon Draisaitl-type money (around $14 million average annual value) starting in 2026-27. Guerin has said there's no rush to sign, trade, or match an offer sheet for Rossi. If he stays, a short-term extension makes sense, since it gives both player and team flexibility. If he leaves, a trade is far more likely than an offer sheet. Half of the league could use a second-line center, and Rossi still has upside. The Hurricanes desperately need to upgrade at 2C (Jesperi Kotkaniemi isn't going to cut it) and have plenty of cap space. Ditto for the Sabres, who picked Jack Quinn one spot before Rossi went to the Wild in the 2020 draft. Mammoth bench boss Andre Tourigny coached Rossi in junior, and they don't have as much wiggle room, but trading top-six winger Nick Schmaltz (plus a pick) could make the math work. Guerin wants to make a so-called "hockey trade" here.
×
×
  • Create New...