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!

     

PFF grade on throws past first read since 2019


 Share

Recommended Posts

3 hours ago, LinvilleGorge said:

Just my opinion, but honestly Fields would be the slam dunk #1 QB in most other draft classes. This is just the best QB draft class in a loooooong time.

 

3 hours ago, Varking said:

I agree with this opinion. And a part of me thinks that around year 3-4 he might be the best QB in this class regardless. Just not drafted first. 

Neither of these things would surprise me one bit. 

Lance has the most potential, but is also the biggest risk.  Put him on the Jest and the odds are it is an epic fail. 

Wilson looks good, but his durability worries me.  Physically, Cam he is not. 

Lawrence's biggest concern is where he winds up.  The Jacksonville stables are not known for grooming thoroughbreds.  They are more known for turning thoroughbreds into plow horses.  Not as efficient at it as the Jest for that, but still.

If nothing else, Fields may have the best chance just because he is not immediately sentenced to a QB graveyard.  I think he has the talent, and if he is brought along on a sane timetable, he can do well.  Unfortunately, a lot of QBs drafted in the top 10, especially in the top 5, wind up in situations that the depth chart of Montana, Marino, and Brady would strike out.

  • Beer 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, stbugs said:

Please, Lawrence’s go to WR this year was Amari Rodgers. Fields WR talent had been as good or better. Olave and Wilson will be drafted higher than any 2020 Clemson WR.

I don’t know why Lawrence is lumped into Jones” bucket of Waddle, Smith and Meche or Burrow of 2019 with Chase, Jefferson and Marshall.

Lawrence had Huggins and Ross as a freshman in 2018 and beat Tua, Jeudy, Waddle, Ruggs and Smith, but that’s not in this data. Ross didn’t play well in 2019 and didn’t play at all this past year.

Only Lance and Wilson had worse WRs than Lawrence this year and they didn’t play loaded Ohio State (twice) and LSU defensive backfields.

It feels weird defending him so much but people who think Clemson was loaded with WRs this year and even 2019 (Okudah took Higgins out of that game with an early hard shot) anywhere close to Jones just didn’t actually watch the games. Again, Fields in 2020 had as much WR talent as Lawrence did at any point in his career. I like Fields too, but neither of them come close to Tua, Jones and Burow in terms of legit NFL studs WR corps.

Thanks for the perspective. You make good points.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, stbugs said:

This is another misnomer like Jones being the most cerebral/etc. Lawrence and Fields have huge ceilings. I think because Lance has been mocked to us he was given other accolades. Fields and Lawrence are extremely mobile and have definitely shown they are elite passers. Sometimes when they’ve been 1/2 since they were HS seniors (they were the top two ESPN prospects at any position), the new toy gets lauded as better because we’re so used to Fields and Lawrence being in the CFP every year.

Lance's upside is based on raw talent and the unknown.  His ceiling and floor would be better defined if we had more of a body of work to look at, especially if some part of that was against tougher competition (or perceived tougher competition).  Put him at Ole Miss or Wisconsin (for example) and both his ceiling and floor would be better known.

Raw QB talent in the hands of a good offensive coaching staff (dear gawd, not "Quarterback whisperers") who has the luxury of patience can yield huge results.  Trial by fire usually does not work in the NFL for raw prospects, unless the team is stacked.  There is a reason some NFL teams are notorious for swinging and missing on high first round QB selections, and it is not all on who they selected.  Most of the time, their development process is best defined as desperate.  Had Tom Brady been drafted by the Bengals or Browns, it is quite possible he would be a footnote.

As to your earlier post about the receivers each QB had available, I don't understand when Lawrence's receivers became among the upper crust of recent receiving corps, either.  They were more than adequate, but when the money games came they were generally not head and shoulders above who was on the other side of the field and against Bama or LSU they were not at all above.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, stbugs said:

Lol. You had to have misread my post on this as I have been preaching this that Lawrence gets the assumption of having Jones’ WRs and in 2020 it wasn’t even close. Fine against FSU but even Higgins was easily checked by Okudah. I’m 100% in agreement with you on this.

I just don’t get the Lance has a higher ceiling than Fields or Lawrence. I don’t know Fields anywhere near as well as Lawrence and I’d say Lawrence has a Peyton Manning HOF ceiling. Not sure how you can get higher. Lawrence and Fields have the highest ceilings IMHO. Might not work out but their talent level has been well known since HS.

No, I read it right, I expressed my point poorly.  I am agreeing with you completely.  They were the better WR group on the field against a lot of teams, but not when the opponent was Auburn or Bama.  They were perhaps as good as Fields had, but that is about as much credit as I can give them as a group.

My belief on Lance's ceiling is that he is getting the same benefit of the doubt as any QB from a small, off-the-Radar school.  People question the level of competition, and rightly so as it is a concern.  His unknown is compounded because he has been even more invisible the past 12+ months.

The idea of taking him at #8 worries the heck out of me.  That high, I want somebody that can be on the field now, not in a year or two if we are lucky.  Based on what the projections are for who will do what on draft day, that boils down to Sewell, Slater, or Fields (in no particular order).  People can make the case for Pitts, but while TE is a position of need for us, I don't think it is as high on the list as those three.  I'd probably make a better case for a CB, ala Surtain, but there may be some good ones available later.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Sgt Schultz said:

Lance's upside is based on raw talent and the unknown.  His ceiling and floor would be better defined if we had more of a body of work to look at, especially if some part of that was against tougher competition (or perceived tougher competition).  Put him at Ole Miss or Wisconsin (for example) and both his ceiling and floor would be better known.

Raw QB talent in the hands of a good offensive coaching staff (dear gawd, not "Quarterback whisperers") who has the luxury of patience can yield huge results.  Trial by fire usually does not work in the NFL for raw prospects, unless the team is stacked.  There is a reason some NFL teams are notorious for swinging and missing on high first round QB selections, and it is not all on who they selected.  Most of the time, their development process is best defined as desperate.  Had Tom Brady been drafted by the Bengals or Browns, it is quite possible he would be a footnote.

As to your earlier post about the receivers each QB had available, I don't understand when Lawrence's receivers became among the upper crust of recent receiving corps, either.  They were more than adequate, but when the money games came they were generally not head and shoulders above who was on the other side of the field and against Bama or LSU they were not at all above.

This is a great post.  I just think Lance has to go to a team that has a clear plan for him.  His lack of reps and game experience is going to be really hard to overcome.  2-3 year project at best.  I guess the staff figured we didnt have the time or stomach to figure that out

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, JARROD said:

Does PFF get a list of called plays, audibles and targets on each play, break down tape knowing these?

because otherwise you are just guessing reads and making poo up

this. 

literally impossible for outsiders to know what the read progressions were on each play. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • There always has been collusion, as long as I have been a fan. It sure looks like they tweaked outcomes too. Good luck proving it. As much as I despise a lot of the ownership I'm still not sure what would happen if it was forced to change.
    • I had started typing my post hours ago and didn’t finish it and just came back to finish it, posted it, then saw yours and saw we were pretty much saying the same thing - even the games that stick out to us most.  I don’t think a lot of people remember that SF playoff game, but I felt like I had just got mugged in broad daylight.  I remember them calling Mitchell for unnecessary roughness, and then I remember watching Boldin take a super late cheap shot, dead in front of the ref and then showing him watching the whole thing in replay…  the refs let them have a fuging field day and didn’t do jack poo, but if we so much as breathed the wrong way it was fuging 15 yards.  Each team playing under two completely different sets of rules.  poo hurt.  I was enraged.  I’ve never went back to watch either that game or SB50 and never will.  fuging robbery.
    • I’ve said it a million times since, but it’s impossible to keep them from affecting the game.  In SB50, they literally took the game from us, and they did it early.  Cotchery’s no-catch?  The miraculous amount of times we converted for a first down only to have it suddenly called back make it a 3rd down and 15+ against the best defense in the league that specialized in rushing the passer and man coverage on the back end?  And you do that enough times, you kill the morale and confidence of the team you’re doing it against.  It’s telling the one team “you can do whatever with impunity” and the other “you can’t do whatever they’re allowed to do.”  It changes the aggression level.  It essentially neuters one team and allows the other to do whatever the fug they want.  Imagine you call the police for help and they get there and tell you to sit still while the other party beats the poo out of you and you can’t defend yourself.  That’s what the officials do.  There is no way to avoid them affecting the game.  And more often than not, it’s the most subjective calls they use to do so.  Even in SB50…  you saw the Broncos commit more egregious penalties than anything we did, and barely any of it was called.  Their OL was holding all fuging game and the refs did nothing.  We already had our work cut out for us against two future HOF edge rushers and the refs played to their advantage with that.  From what I remember, both Oher and Remmers were called for holding at various times and their hands were in the INSIDE of the defender.  It was garbage, but all by design. Also, if there is any video of it anywhere, go look at what the refs did against us back in 2013 against SF.  The fix was in there too.  They stepped in early and often and ensured we knew we were not allowed to play with the same aggression or intensity SF was.  It was disgusting as well. at this point, I hope Vince McMahon, errr, I mean Goodell just finally scripts us to win it, because this poo is not won via competition or off merit.
×
×
  • Create New...