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Bryce Young


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1 hour ago, WarPanthers89 said:

No way this guy inspires a locker room of grown men. On top of that he has physical limitations, and is showing no improvement at all. It’s over for him. I honestly wouldn’t even take him as a backup if I’m a GM. We are only giving him a chance at this point because of what was invested in picking him, If we didn’t spend all of the draft picks, he would have been benched for good by now, and would never see the field again. 

This. The only reason he's still out there is the capital we spent to get him. He clearly doesn't have the physical gifts to be elite. He's a backup qb in this league. We will keep losing until there is no other choice but to sit him for good. Top 5 pick here we come.

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1 hour ago, mrcompletely11 said:

Bryce Young since entering the NFL: Yards per attempt: 5.7 (last) Completion rate: 60.3% (last) Passer rating: 77.3 (last) EPA per dropback: -0.13 (tied for last)

 

 

 

 

It's over.   Call hospice pull the plug.  It's done

where'd you find this compilation?

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4 hours ago, Billy Goat said:

He's in his third year. This sort of crap is what you'd expect from a 1st year QB. He hasn't built on the final few games of last season and he's as bad as he was for the first part of 2024. They need to start thinking about what QB they want in next year's draft.

Yeah, Bryce's improvement from his first year has been marginal at best. 

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    • I think incompetence is a little strong. He was given a nightmare QB to work with and forced to start him right away.   He knew immediately that it wouldn’t work like that and tried to get Andy in and when that happened the difference was night and day as far as the look and feel of the offense.   He may be short on innovation and in that sense behind the curve of the modern day league but there is a lot stuff he knew about the QB position and the league in general. The fundamentals of the position don’t change as far as your footwork and form etc.  If Fitterer indeed assembled that staff and Bryce was forced on him with that the likes of Thomas Brown being his OC Frank was given an impossible situation.     Nothing against Brown other than he was a running back and not that experienced and the last type of pedigree that I would trust to develop a rookie QB.   I have no doubt people were telling Bryce different things.     Anyhow aside from all that I am  sort of interested to see how bad the NYJ offense gets abused this year with him running it.  I mean I do agree that the league has passed him by philosophically. Though it is swinging a little back to the old school.     Which we have had to do as well.  And the prescription for a weak inexperienced QB really was just about what Ceank ran.  Conservative, strong running game.   When we have tried to do otherwise with Bryce it is mostly miss not too much hit.  I mean cutting him loose to do a pass first attack has been a disaster when we can’t run the ball.    
    • I was checking out Chris Brazzell II measureables, and I thought they looked suspiciously familiar. Turns out it was true, almost identical measureables to former Panthers DJ Chark circa 2023. I even checked Terrace Marshall Jr results, and honestly isn't that far behind them.   I know this isn't unique for just our team, but we seem to specifically have an obsession with trying to make this tall lanky speedsters work for us. I admittedly wasn't that high on Brazzell, and when I watched the tape I didn't really see that 4.3 speed, and a strong wind seems to tackle him.   I really liked most of the draft, including getting Hecht in the 5th when I graded him as a #1 Center in this draft. I'm rooting for the guy to work out, especially since our HC and OC made their bones as Wide Receiver coaches. But Brazzell is the only one I'm kinda meh on. I was hoping we'd trade up to get Big Citrus, or if we went WR I liked Ted Hurst much better. We'll see though. 3rd rounders seem to be coin-flips for us (see DJ Johnson/Matt Corral). But I'm rooting for the guy and for this experiment to finally pay off.   I haven't seen anyone else post something about this, so just thought it was interesting and passing it along.   #keeppounding   -------------------------------------------------------------- AI Overview   Chris Brazzell II and D.J. Chark both possess nearly identical elite deep-threat profiles, highlighted by their tall, lanky builds and blazing sub-4.40 speed. Chark was slightly faster, while Brazzell offers a marginally heavier frame and longer wingspan. [1, 2, 3, 4] The side-by-side physical and athletic testing results from their respective NFL Scouting Combines outline their comparable profiles: [1] Metric [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] D.J. Chark (2018) Chris Brazzell II (2026) Height 6'3" 6'4" Weight 199 lbs 198 lbs Wingspan 78.5" 80.1" 40-Yard Dash 4.34 seconds 4.37 seconds 10-Yard Split ~1.50s (est.) 1.52 seconds Vertical Jump 40.0" 40.0" (pre-draft) Hand Size 9.25" 9.0" Analytical Comparison Size & Build: Both receivers offer an excellent catch radius with lanky, outside-threat frames. Brazzell holds a slight edge in height and an even more significant advantage in wingspan, giving him a massive target radius. Speed Profile: Chark famously recorded the fastest 40-yard dash time at his combine, while Brazzell was a standout at his event. Both times are elite for their size, translating directly to the "field-stretching" and vertical playmaking abilities that define their games. Draft Status: Chark was selected by the Jacksonville Jaguars in the second round (61st overall) of the 2018 Draft. Brazzell was selected by the Carolina Panthers in the third round (83rd overall) of the 2026 NFL Draft.
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