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Peyton Manning on Will Levis and the Panthers


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2 hours ago, Martin said:

If you draft someone like Lewis, bringing his OC along would be a great way to ensure a smooth transition. As long as the OC is NFL ready of course. But coming in already knowing the language etc. would be a huge advantage and enable starting day 1.

His OC from last year is presently the Rams OC right now.

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28 minutes ago, rmoneyg35 said:

Honestly I don’t see what is so great about Levis. His stats aren’t that good. He doesn’t wow me on tape. I think a top qb should dominate in college

If not for Cam and Josh Allen Levis would be good prospect. Decent accuracy great arm. The thing is Levis can run like a bull and he's a load at 6'3" 230lbs so he's also a running back type in the open field every bit a Cam, Josh type.

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6 minutes ago, rippadonn said:

If not for Cam and Josh Allen Levis would be good prospect. Decent accuracy great arm. The thing is Levis can run like a bull and he's a load at 6'3" 230lbs so he's also a running back type in the open field every bit a Cam, Josh type.

Josh Allen is the thinking behind it for sure aka anther QB who didn't have "Great stats in college"

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2 hours ago, rippadonn said:

If not for Cam and Josh Allen Levis would be good prospect. Decent accuracy great arm. The thing is Levis can run like a bull and he's a load at 6'3" 230lbs so he's also a running back type in the open field every bit a Cam, Josh type.

Have you seen Levis rushing stats?

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    • This.  He knows where the seam is about to open, cuts, and accelerates hard. He’s slippery and tacklers always seem to be taking awkward angles to get to him. No dancing. Runs low and powerful. Almost never goes backwards for a loss. We’ve rarely had the guy who bounces off of tacklers. It’s nice seeing another one. 
    • I can't speak for others but yes I read it. The conclusions are based heavily around the use of the statistical metric DYAR created by football outsiders and used by ESPN for this article. It only includes players whose production began in 2000. But excluding HOF running backs who produced BIG in an iteration of the NFL that was not yet catered to making things much easier for offenses in order for them to prop up more recent candidates is rather absurd and seems like just playing favorites regardless of where one might fall on their opinion of the use of the metric in question. 
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