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2.8 Yards Per Attempt


TylerDurden
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42 minutes ago, Proudiddy said:

An NFL QB.  A full half of football.  But yay!  448 yards in a game after 2.5 years of forcing a square peg into a round hole!  Even blind squirrels find a nut if given enough opportunities.  Tired of this fuging pathetic ass, pre-pubescent sounding, noodle armed fuging midget.

I like your enthusiasm!

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I'm not ever falling for that Falcon mirage again. 

I've figured out what the struggle is, he can't read zones are doesnt trust his arm strength to make those window throws. 

When a team just sits back like the 49ers in zone all you get his the quick outs to McMillan over and over.

When a team such as the Falcons blitzes heavy ans doesnt get home he can maneuver and make some off time throws, to open receivers, but just standing back in the pocket hitting timely throws in zone is a no go. 

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I keep seeing people say...what if he comes the next Darnold. What if he becomes the next Mayfield. What if he becomes the next Breese and he figures it out on a new team in a few years. 

Its just not going to happen. He isnt the next Darnold. Hes the next Fields. He's the next Wilson. He should bounce around as a backup, earn millions of dollars and then coach high school until he's 60. Its a good life.

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9 hours ago, Sean Payton's Vicodin said:

Yeah I'd rather not make the playoffs if winning the division means another year of Bryce. I'm serious.

We would get bent over in the playoffs and embarrassed again with the ineptitude of our QB and HC.

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7 hours ago, jopie87 said:

I keep seeing people say...what if he comes the next Darnold. What if he becomes the next Mayfield. What if he becomes the next Breese and he figures it out on a new team in a few years. 

Its just not going to happen. He isnt the next Darnold. Hes the next Fields. He's the next Wilson. He should bounce around as a backup, earn millions of dollars and then coach high school until he's 60. Its a good life.

And even if he is the next Darnold or Mayfield. What people have to understand is Darnold or Mayfield were absolutely not going to become those versions of themselves here. While I'm sure a lot of that was on the leadership a lot of that was self-inflicted by them as well.

Sometimes people need a fresh start, a different system, and some motivation.

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8 minutes ago, PantherBoy95 said:

And even if he is the next Darnold or Mayfield. What people have to understand is Darnold or Mayfield were absolutely not going to become those versions of themselves here. While I'm sure a lot of that was on the leadership a lot of that was self-inflicted by them as well.

Sometimes people need a fresh start, a different system, and some motivation.

Both Darnold and Mayfield showed glimpses of what they could be before they got here.  Both also have oodles more of ability physically than Bryce could ever dream of.  That’s why both Sam and Baker have garnered all of the opportunities they have because teams knew if they could get them to have some consistency, they would be special.  Bryce will do absolutely nothing of significance when he leaves here.  I’ve seen people make the Brees analogy as a possible outcome, but again, Brees had made a Pro Bowl in San Diego before going to the Saints.  He had shown tremendous potential before he went elsewhere.  And a more mobile Brees was my comp for what Bryce could be if he was to live up to all the point guard, super processor bullshit this FO was selling even though I never believed.  I watched Brees in college and in San Diego and you knew he as good.  He was talented.  He was smart.  He had promise.  Again, you could see the same things in Baker and Sam.  When I watch Bryce I don’t see any of that.  At all.  I remember how frustrated I was in watching Teddy when he was our starting QB and how neutered the offense felt because he wouldn’t push the ball.  And I was a fan of Teddy in college.  But, Bryce makes Teddy look like fuging Tom Brady.  That’s how fuging bad Bryce is.

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Aikman commented last night that Bryce was playing the way he had played all year, that the ATL game was an anomaly. It was nice to see and hear that someone wasn’t gushing over last week. 
im tired of having a QB who can’t even throw the length of the field in one half of the game, and barely throws the length of the field in 4 quarters. 

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    • I can't wait to go through this analysis 
    • What's more likely? An entire competant NFL front office (as many here suggest Morgan runs) has watched Bryce struggle week in and week out to perform at the bare minimum of NFL QBs for 3 years and has decided that's the future of this organization, OR our owner who has proven repeatedly he can't keep his nose out of team decision making has declared Bryce is our QB until he decides otherwise, especially given he's the one that drafted him in the first place? 
    • It is time to take a look at the defense.  Without further ado do.... Edge (OLB):  I think we overpaid for Jaelan Phillips, but he is constant pressure with 73 pressures in 2025, ranking 9th in the NFL.  In all, he was the 20th (of 111) rated pass rushing edge in 2025 according to PFF, putting him in the top 20% in the nfl.  With a pair of solid ILBs beside him and if we can get Wharton going, I think the sum of the parts will make him better than he was in Philly.  Furthermore, with second-year pro Princely Umanmielen behind him, I expect him to grow with the tutoring and competition. On the other side, the duo of Nick Scourton and Patrick Jones II is strong, in my view.  Scourton generated 34 total pressures as a pass rusher. That total included 8 sacks, 23 hurries, 3 hits. Against the run, he recorded 28 solo tackles. For a rookie, second round, edge, that is great.  He also forced 1 fumble on the season. Jones was decent in 2025 in just 131 snaps, but he is solid veteran depth.   We seem to lack the elite pass rusher, but this rotational unit will be a big upgrade over last season.  Expect Scourton and Princely to show improvement. While it is unlikely that we add more to edge this draft, you can never have too many pass rushers (well, you can--two sophomores and two veterans is a good mix). Would the Panthers take an edge if one was sitting there? Absolutely. Defensive End:  Derrick Brown is a stud.  I did not notice how dominant he became as a pass rusher.  His PFF pass-rush grade of 72.0 ranked 23rd among 134 qualified interior defensive linemans. His run-defense grade of 66.3 ranked 22nd at the position. He generated 35 total pressures as a pass rusher. That total included 6 sacks, 23 hurries, 6 hits. On the other side:  What the hell?  Tershawn Wharton earned a 40.8 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 127th among 134 qualified interior defensive linemans. His PFF pass-rush grade of 57.0 ranked 95th among 134 qualified interior defensive linemen. His run-defense grade of 34.8 ranked 125th at the position. However, Wharton needs to be situational and we really need a few DEs who can plug and pressure.  LaBryan Ray is an interior defensive lineman for the Carolina Panthers who earned a 45.7 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season.  You cannot tell me that we are not going to add a DE.  In my view, this is a HUGE need that we have not adequately addressed.  There were only 3 DEs in the NFL who played more snaps that Derrick Brown.  We have to give him more blows during the game.  So After Brown, we have 2 other players who need to improve a lot to reach mediocre. Nose Tackle:  Of course, a NT might move out some to help stuff the run at DE opposite Brown, and stats do not always reflect on a NT's actual value.  Bobby Brown III earned a 54.1 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 80th among 134 qualified interior defensive linemen.  His PFF pass-rush grade of 51.1 ranked 126th among 134 qualified interior defensive linemans. His run-defense grade of 57.8 ranked 51st at the position.   Behind him, Cam'Ron Jackson is an  earned a 45.5 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season.   The defensive line is weak, based on 2025 performance rankings in PFF.  After DBrown, they pretty much suck.  These are the guys our ILBs will be counting on. Inside Linebacker:  Devin Lloyd earned a 89.1 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 3rd among 88 qualified linebackers. His PFF coverage grade of 81.1 ranked 3rd among 88 qualified linebackers. His run-defense grade of 83.2 ranked 11th at the position. 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He allowed a 72.9 passer rating when targeted by opposing quarterbacks --SOLID!!  Our second-best CB, Jaycee Horn, was in the pro bowl.  He earned a 57.8 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 76th among 114 qualified corner.backs. His PFF coverage grade of 61.6 ranked 61st among 114 qualified cornerbacks. His run-defense grade of 50.5 ranked 87th at the position.  He recorded 5 interceptions on the season.  Our CBs had NINE interceptions in 2025.  It is doubtful they duplicate that figure, but Jackson was our best CB.   We are thin at CB, but the two we put out there are solid.  Nickel, at this time, is "meh," but both are developing and should improve.  A great draft for Nickel.  The Panthers will add a CB somehow. Safety:  For now, Trevon Moehrig is as advertised--above average vs. the run, below average in coverage, making him average. He earned a 64.3 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 50th among 98 qualified safeties. His PFF coverage grade of 55.3 ranked 64th among 98 qualified safeties. His run-defense grade of 73.5 ranked 37th at the position.  Lathan Ransom got some valuable experience in 2025, getting in on 330 plays or so.  He earned a 62.9 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 56th among 98 qualified safeties.  (Average, not bad for a day 3 rookie) His PFF coverage grade of 55.8 ranked 63rd among 98 qualified safeties. His run-defense grade of 85.1 ranked 4th at the position.  A pure strong safety, if you ask me.  Nick Scott  earned a 67.8 overall PFF defensive grade in the 2025 season, 36th among 98 qualified safeties. His PFF coverage grade of 67.3 ranked 31st among 98 qualified safeties. 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