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!

     

Some insight into McCaffrey...


Mr. Scot
 Share

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Geronimo said:

I disagree.  I think strength has a lot to do with durability and being able to withstand injuries depending on the person.

I'd say there's an obvious correlation to increased athleticism and ligament tears. Ligaments are not built to be that strong, fast, and explosive and it's leading to more non-contact injuries.

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, mc52beast said:

I love the part where they were “concerned” that Cam was getting the dog crap kicked out of him…

But refused then and are still refusing to assemble a group that looks even remotely like an NFL line.

Or even stand up to the officiating crews for looking the other way when Cam was being headhunted. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

CMC’s talent was absolutely worth a top pick. They way he was planned on being used was NOT.

Let’s just all imagine for a minute and think about how successful coaches such as Reid, McVay, Belicheck and Payton would utilize a player like CMC, who has already shown to be an elite receiving threat. There is not a snowballs chance in hell those intuitive coaches take CMC and premiere him as a run between the tackles player. They would have had another dime a dozen RB doing that.

Those coaches would’ve had him training in the slot and backfield receiving since day 1, with backfield rushing plays lightly sprinkled in utilizing his finest skills - agility and YAC. Aka Welker, except better potential imo. And that’s saying a lot.

The Panther’s dinosaur coaches had zero ability or innovation to do this or even attempt it. Same concept with Cam. Again, another RB could’ve been getting those tough yards, not your franchise QB.

It’s not Fournette vs CMC because they are completely different players. If you are dumb enough to use them the same or look at them the same you really have no business analyzing the picks at all.

For this inept franchise the pick and extension was certainley a waste.

  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Captroop said:

Between Cam, Luke, and CMC, it's hard to believe we squandered an opportunity to win a championship with that many generational talents on the roster at the same time.

Been saying this for the longest time. Rivera screwed the pooch with all that talent. To the point that he allowed them to play while being hurt. For what? To save his job? He rode Cam's talent to the ground, which is why i wish i lived in another timeline where we won that 2015 season because after that, it all went down hill super fast. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, Panthercougar68 said:

I fully believe that Christian is over training. We saw it before with Beason.

I agree 100% with this. Big muscles but it's the tendons that keep getting damaged. Lighten up on the weights just a bit, get up to around 2% body fat, man. Worry more about your health than your next modelling gig. 

Seriously, though, he is over training.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, joemac said:

Heres a crazy idea.  Stop running him up the goddamn gut every single play like hes Earl Campbell or some poo.

On the mind numbingly predictable playcalling I completely agree but as far as utilizing talent if you can't run your 8th overall pick rb up the gut without him breaking you probably shouldn't have drafted him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was all in on team CMC when drafting, thought that someone like him could have won us the Super Bowl had we had him on the team vs. Denver.

That said, extending him, 3 years into a 5 year deal was classic stupidity that has plagued the franchise for decades.  We are a dumb team, always have been.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This whole time our front office wanted to "take pressure" off of Cam Newton by drafting oversized WRs, a verstile RB, when all they needed to do to take pressure off was to build Cam and o-line. That's it. That fuggin simple. It's not hard at all. All those wasted assets year after year drafting "luxury" picks like Vernon Fuggin Butler when you should have been spending high draft capital on o-line. And now we seem to be doing the same godamn thing with the new regime. It just never ends. BUILD A MOTHERFUGGIN O-LINE FOR CHRIST'S SAKE!!!!!!!!! Sh*t is just infuriating when our own fans are legit better talent evaluators and team builders than our people that get paid millions to do it.

  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Castavar said:

This whole time our front office wanted to "take pressure" off of Cam Newton by drafting oversized WRs, a verstile RB, when all they needed to do to take pressure off was to build Cam and o-line. That's it. That fuggin simple. It's not hard at all. All those wasted assets year after year drafting "luxury" picks like Vernon Fuggin Butler when you should have been spending high draft capital on o-line. And now we seem to be doing the same godamn thing with the new regime. It just never ends. BUILD A MOTHERFUGGIN O-LINE FOR CHRIST'S SAKE!!!!!!!!! Sh*t is just infuriating when our own fans are legit better talent evaluators and team builders than our people that get paid millions to do it.

Yup after the 2016 blunder that all but completely guaranteed the end of the run with our 2015 core what do we do in 2020? An all defense draft! 😂

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

    • Sure it does, maybe not every position and not every draft.  You have to admit the hit rate goes down the further in the draft you get.  Would you more readily find a generational talent at the #2 pick or #19 pick?  High picks are considered "busts" if they doesn't pan out, whereas guys drafted later don't have that level of scrutiny upon them.  Different expectation levels.  If Styles does indeed go #2, I already listed the rarefied air that he would be in.  Maybe he doesn't set the League on fire, but my gut feeling is he does.  Again, you don't take an off-ball LB #2 if he is just a 'really good' player.
    • To illustrate my point, I watched (and commented on the Huddle) that Rozeboom would often wait a full second (or close to it) before taking his first step.  I assume that he probably had issues with false steps, a faulty practice that can take an ILB out of the gap completely.  Watch Luke and you see a step with the snap, and rarely was it a false step.  Rozeboom may have had 100 tackles (speculating) but initial contact was 2-3 yards on the defensive side of the ball.  Luke's 100 tackles were made 1-2 yards from the LOS.  Over the course of a year, Luke was much more productive (more fumbles, fewer long gainers, more OL penalties, fewer first downs, etc) that Rozeboom, but on the stat sheet, they both had 100 tackles.  In fact, Rozeboom's inefficiency kept him on the field more (more first downs, fewer OL penalties, turnovers, and punts) so he should have MORE tackles.   I would like to see stats that break down those things.   For example again, Josh Norman was slow--4.68 or so at CB.  However, his anticipation speed was incredible.  He made as many plays as a 4.4 CB.  I had one coach (college--later became the head coach at WCU) tell me that slower players have to use their brains more to still be around.  Elite athletes can just get by on their physical superiority.  He added, "Rarely does a football player run full speed.  Most of the time, they are not, so the 40 time is misleading stat.  Smart players overcome shortcomings--when the elite athlete becomes average (slows with age, advances in level of competition) they struggle against smarter (football IQ) competition.  
    • Obviously tongue in cheek hyperbole. But we do not need a first round RB to compete for a championship. We need intelligent roster building. That to me is the complete opposite of intelligent roster building because it is a prime resource at a devalued plug and play position when we have needs across the defense.
×
×
  • Create New...