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Older QBs surviving playing well after they have lost their fastball is an excellent point. They have a career of experience and could do things with Young’s arm that he can’t do. I think it is maybe not apples to apples.
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I think the big issue is everyone has different meanings of "great arm". Brett Favre had a great arm. Brett Favre's arm did things Tom Brady could not do with his arm not matter how much he would want to do it. That's just raw arm talent. Cam Newton had crazy arm talent. Means he could be flat footed and launch a ball without his body.....and get it to a distance and at a trajectory Brady couldn't in the same setup. Just raw arm talent. Doesn't mean Tom Brady couldn't drop dimes all over a D and carve them up in a way Favre couldn't......despite Favre or Cam (early) having a better raw arm. So again, you don't need a great NFL arm. But you need all the other tools to be there. Old QBs often end up there. Some start there. Some can be elite and even reach GOAT status without great arms. Because they got the brains, pocket play, ball placement, etc. coming out their ears. In the end, Bryce Young looks to be your standard Bama QB. Largely a product of playing on the best roster in all of NFL football with a GOAT coach on top of that.
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By LinvilleGorge · Posted
NIL will ultimately probably mean the end of non-revenue generating college athletics. To be able to compete in the revenue sports you're going to have to cut out all the programs that are losing money for your school.
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