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Hall of Famer Bill Parcells on Bryce Young's Size: 'He Better Walk on Water'


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The trends show that average player weight in particular is dropping across the board. Height is a factor still primarily for purposes of pass defense and pass offense. There was also a time when backs under 5’ 10” was considered somewhat problematic. Certainly a time when a WR couldn’t be shorter than 6’1 or so. In modern times, there aren’t hardly any Top 25 WR that are taller than 6’2”. Chase, Hill, etc. being right at or under 6’. It’s a speed game now. 
 

when we talk about QB speed, it’s not about how fast they run. It’s about speed of processing, speed of release, speed of identifying blitzes, and speed of getting the ball out of their hands. Bryce is almost inarguably the top available in all those categories. Stroud is an amazing prospect and his size makes you feel a lot better about his chances, but Russell Wilson and Kyler Murray have both won games in this league. Drew Brees won games. In bygone times, teams wouldn’t even consider allowing a player under 6’ to win their QB job no matter what. Parcells is from that school. It’s an antiquated position. The point is that if you’re special, you’re an exception. Bryce Young is special. Imagine the difference between a basketball player that was 6’10” and dominant and a team refusing to draft them because there was another player who in most respects was seen as inferior, but was 6’11.5. Get a ruler out and visualize how much 1 inch and 1/8th actually is and see if you should define a player on that. To me, the hand measurements are a bigger concern by and large because they make a play by play impact on ball security and off schedule throws. That isn’t the issue here. 
 

Seattle put forth the blueprint. Have a line full of big nasties and in combination with the rules regarding touching the QB, it shouldn’t be a career altering problem. Again, it’s more about speed from snap to release than it is about 40 time. NFL offenses are run now to move at high percentage and not entirely by long developing plays down the field. Luke was talking about this and talked about how frustrating it was to never be able to touch Brees because the ball was already gone. That’s the same type of football brain you have here and the testing supports it. 

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4 minutes ago, SameDamnThing said:

when we talk about QB speed, it’s not about how fast they run. It’s about speed of processing, speed of release, speed of identifying blitzes, and speed of getting the ball out of their hands. Bryce is almost inarguably the top available in all those categories. 

Where are you seeing the stat he has the best release throwing the football in this class and speed of getting the ball out of his hands? One of the things he is praised for is not giving up on plays and hanging onto the ball while scrambling looking for something to open up. Which is great in college, for his running speed, but we will see how well that translates to doing that against NFL defenders. 

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7 minutes ago, SameDamnThing said:

The trends show that average player weight in particular is dropping across the board. Height is a factor still primarily for purposes of pass defense and pass offense. There was also a time when backs under 5’ 10” was considered somewhat problematic. Certainly a time when a WR couldn’t be shorter than 6’1 or so. In modern times, there aren’t hardly any Top 25 WR that are taller than 6’2”. Chase, Hill, etc. being right at or under 6’. It’s a speed game now. 
 

when we talk about QB speed, it’s not about how fast they run. It’s about speed of processing, speed of release, speed of identifying blitzes, and speed of getting the ball out of their hands. Bryce is almost inarguably the top available in all those categories. Stroud is an amazing prospect and his size makes you feel a lot better about his chances, but Russell Wilson and Kyler Murray have both won games in this league. Drew Brees won games. In bygone times, teams wouldn’t even consider allowing a player under 6’ to win their QB job no matter what. Parcells is from that school. It’s an antiquated position. The point is that if you’re special, you’re an exception. Bryce Young is special. Imagine the difference between a basketball player that was 6’10” and dominant and a team refusing to draft them because there was another player who in most respects was seen as inferior, but was 6’11.5. Get a ruler out and visualize how much 1 inch and 1/8th actually is and see if you should define a player on that. To me, the hand measurements are a bigger concern by and large because they make a play by play impact on ball security and off schedule throws. That isn’t the issue here. 
 

Seattle put forth the blueprint. Have a line full of big nasties and in combination with the rules regarding touching the QB, it shouldn’t be a career altering problem. Again, it’s more about speed from snap to release than it is about 40 time. NFL offenses are run now to move at high percentage and not entirely by long developing plays down the field. Luke was talking about this and talked about how frustrating it was to never be able to touch Brees because the ball was already gone. That’s the same type of football brain you have here and the testing supports it. 

It's not about how fast they run it's the fact that a guy like Corral statistically is a better QB AND can run the rock. THATS the modern game.

Don't worry, someone will show you with AR.

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49 minutes ago, MechaZain said:

Extending plays in and out of the pocket? Have you read or seen anything about him? His game’s compared mostly to Mahomes and Wilson are they old school pocket passers too?

Any NFL DC worth his paycheck can take that away. Then what? He's not Kyler.

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10 minutes ago, rippadonn said:

Public service. Getting us SB ready, not set back on an experiment with the smallest instead of experimenting with the biggest.

I have more time to poke holes in fanboy theory these days...

top gun deal with it GIF

Talk to Steve Smith.

 

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1 hour ago, Varking said:

Where are you seeing the stat he has the best release throwing the football in this class and speed of getting the ball out of his hands? One of the things he is praised for is not giving up on plays and hanging onto the ball while scrambling looking for something to open up. Which is great in college, for his running speed, but we will see how well that translates to doing that against NFL defenders. 

It’s not really a stat in traditional sense. But scouts have long been discussing his quick progressions, throwing mechanics, and decision making. Most QB guys I’ve seen scout him talk about the mechanics as being really strong. If he holds the ball too long that will have to be coached out of him if possible. Honestly there’s a lot about Bryce that will be trial and error to see if it translates, but nobody is questioning his football brain. To me, that’s a really strong base. I think Stroud has one as well despite the testing stuff, but it hasn’t been touted at the same level as Bryce. I think both will be good players but Bryce has special potential that’s almost intangible. 

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    • Who believes after Rico went off that Dave will go back to Chuba, go very pass happy again, run Chuba 7 times, and give Rico 5 carries?   he has a weird obsession with wanting to pass it over and over with Bryce. 
    • I never once said I believed in Sam. Only that he’s proof that the Jets and Panthers are bad organizations. You spent all that time on me. I’m flattered. 
    • Story of the year. Get down massively to Arizona, look like your first NFL game to throwing for more than 300 yards and getting the team to within 40 yards of a come back win. Get down 17-0 to Miami, execute the offense to outscore the Dolphins 27-7 the rest of the way. Defeat the Falcons 30-0 throwing for like 150 yards. Personally, I think it would be great to have retained Darnold. Darnold in this scheme with Canales would instantly make this team a contender for the NFC South. However that didn't happen.  I don't know what you do because when they run game gets shut down, and it will get shut down, you have to depend on Bryce to play efficiently. On one third down ball to someone (I forget who), when he was rolling out and made that throw close to the sideline to convert, the TV people would talking about how special that was. What I saw was another receiver streaking all alone 45 yards downfield, with about 5 yards of separation. Even while rolling out, an average QB is able to deliver that ball, signed, and sealed for a touchdown. Bryce's lack of deep ball ability is the achilles heel to this offense and it's something that can't be fixed.  I would love to be able to draft Carson Beck. I think he took a lot of crap at UGA which now seems unwarranted. Looking at how inefficient their offense is now compared to how it was with Beck at QB, and now how he has gone into the system Cam Ward was in and outperformed him massively in just pure execution and efficiency, along with the physical traits, tells me he will be a Top 3 pick. We won't have a Top 3 pick though. So what do we do? I have no idea. Canales is too good of an offensive coach for us to get a Top 3 pick and Bryce is inconsistent enough to get us a Top 10 pick. So absent finding a guy like Nix with tons of experience and good enough measurables, which requires great evaluations, I just think we are stuck. 
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