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!

     

Rank the NFCS WRs


MVPccaffrey

Recommended Posts

In no order:

Kelvin Benjamin
Devin Funchess
Ted Ginn Jr.
Philly Brown
Willie Snead
Brandon Cooks
Michael Thomas
Brandon Coleman
Julio Jones
Mohamed Sanu
Taylor Gabriel
Justin Hardy
Mike Evans
Cecil Shorts
Adam Humphries
Vincent Jackson

IMO:

Tier 1 -- the Julio tier, no explanation needed:
Julio Jones


Tier 2 -- stars in the making?
Mike Evans
Michael Thomas
Kelvin Benjamin
Brandon Cooks
 

Tier 3 -- JAGs:
Funchess
Ginn
Snead
Sanu
Gabriel
Coleman
Humphries
Jackson

Tier 4 -- Meh:
Brown
Hardy
Shorts

 

---


Julio obviously gives Atlanta the division edge, but it's a lot more even across the division than I came into this post thinking.  Each team has a potential star, then 1-2 JAGs, then a 'meh' player who most fans wouldn't care if cut.
 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, gorillamilitia13 said:

The KB hate on this huddle is too real, he could join this group. If homie just gets his ass in better shape and improves his route running a little more he can become a major force in this league. We need the coaches to get on his ass to improve these things.

IMG_4979.PNG

KB needs a better #2 WR,  Devin is a decent WR but we need a smaller shifter WR like, Tyler Lockette or Sterling Separd that can create separation.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • You're not understanding what I'm saying. I'm saying that truly elite players will always have a market because they're elite difference makers and that at the "devalued positions" the NFL has discovered that those are spots where unless you have an elite talent there you have an opportunity to get similar results out of run of the mill talent for run of the mill money compared to good talent for good money. The drop off in overall unit performance isn't dramatic dropping down from "good" to "JAG" and it saves money to invest in the premium positions. It's about skill sets and what is hardest to find, simple supply and demand. There's just more serviceable LBs and RBs and safeties out there than their are CBs and pass rushers and QBs. And honestly, a big part of our historic lack of consistent success has been investing too many premium draft and cap resources into those devalued positions. Yeah, we've had a lot of great off the ball LBs and RBs on our way to be a franchise with an overall losing record. Pointing to our success at those positions is proving my point because I just point to our W-L record and overall lack of historical quality at premium positions like QB, WR, CB, etc. We've sucked in large part because we've valued the wrong position groups. In a vacuum it doesn't matter. But in actuality every high pick or big chunk of cap you spend on an off the ball LB or RB or IOL is a high pick or big chunk of cap you couldn't spend on a QB or CB or WR or OT.
    • Right before Kuechly retired, we had some of the worst D line play that year.  We were ranked 29th against the run in 2019.   I remember even Kuechly struggled to get off the blocks at times because the linemen were on second level so quickly due to our porous line made up of Kyle Love, Vernon Butler and a washed up Gerald McCoy.   
    • fingers crossed for BlueSky embeds to come with the board update at least all the schedule reveals will be on the youtube  
×
×
  • Create New...