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!

     

CO:Success isn't a given for receivers


CatMan72

Recommended Posts

Yes Wr is a difficult position to evaluate, however you cannot run from drafting the position. If you keep plugging Vets in you will never allow yourself the opportunity to draft a good young WR. We got lucky with Smith, failed with some others... It's a necessary risk that has to be taken.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes Wr is a difficult position to evaluate, however you cannot run from drafting the position. If you keep plugging Vets in you will never allow yourself the opportunity to draft a good young WR. We got lucky with Smith, failed with some others... It's a necessary risk that has to be taken.

Good point, but a 2nd round pick is a valuable pick (especially this year) and I don't think we should spend it on a position with such a high rate of failure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, it sucks how hard it is to evaluate receivers but that doesn't mean we have to count it out. Look at all the bust DT's/DE's in the 2nd round, the same can be said for any receiver.

No risk no reward.

There are busts at every position including DE and DT, but the rate of failure doesn't compare to WR.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As the article said, this year is really deep in WR talent in rounds 2 and 3. You can't just translate past success rates over to this draft.

True, but again - under the best of circumstances it's a crapshoot and we need help at that position now, not in 2 or 3 years.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Best circumstance is 50%? It depends on who you pick and how talented they are. That's like saying you can draft a 20 year old Jerry Rice and turn around and say "oh well he's a WR so he'll be a bust half the time".

Where'd you even get 50% from anyway?

Re-read the article and edited my post after saying 50%, I mis-remembered the context of the 41% stat they quoted when discussing the # WR's taken in the first 48 picks that started as rookies.

Bottom line, I think our 2nd round pick this year is too valuable to spend on a WR.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The answer to the problem is obvious: draft a TON of WR's.

I understand the though process here, draft many hoping to find one, but we're short on draft picks this year.

My answer to the problem would be to use our 3rd or 4th on a WR and sign a proven FA to hedge our bet on the rookie.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • PJ's completion % was 63% when starting games in Carolina.  Which I believe is better than Bryce when starting.  And again, 4-3 as the starter here and the LONE QB Carolina has been able to actually win with in the Tepper era.  If you ask a gambling gunslinger to come into blowouts.....they are going to go down in a blaze of glory.  Which he would do.  Yeah, he isn't good.  And gunslingers are supposed to have rockier stats than checkdown QBs.   So....why does PJ Walker have a better comp % as a starter than Bryce Young.  And for every knock you want to make about PJ, you can find something or a skillset that PJ does better than Bryce.   I didn't say PJ had good field vision.  He doesn't.  Tell me about Bryce after he comes off the first read lol.  Let me repeat, PJ Walker is not a good QB.  He is NFL depth and an in house arm.  Bryce Young doesn't belong in a convo w/ Jake and Cam.  He belongs closer in a convo with the backup caliber QBs Carolina was forced into playing.  Which isn't just PJ Walker.  But Kyle Allen.  Moore.  Guys like that.   
    • Oh I see what you meant by memory. I will trust my memory, I have looked a a lot of those ball charts for Bryce and they trend a general pattern. They thing that has changed that I have noticed more recently is the reduction in the bunching of behind or at  the LOS passes over to his right.  Aside from the quantity of throws recently since the running game has become a more dominant factor. 
    • Yes but you basically said you are going from a quick skim of those charts without doing the same for Bryce and/or Andy. So you are going memory vs. snapshots. That's not going to be a very comprehensive analysis.
×
×
  • Create New...