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First 4 NFL starts - Tyler Shough


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2 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

I'm not sure that the reason he's not playing is due to the round he was draft in. 

I assumed it was the play that resulted in that type of QBR on the season.  Others in that range, get to keep playing for reasons that have something to do with not being a 5th round pick.   

I mean, I actually think for a 5th round pick...Rattler is a decent young body to have at your #3 or even #2 spot pending you got a solid QB you aren't looking to replace. 

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3 minutes ago, CRA said:

I assumed it was the play that resulted in that type of QBR on the season.  Others in that range, get to keep playing for reasons that have something to do with not being a 5th round pick.   

I mean, I actually think for a 5th round pick...Rattler is a decent young body to have at your #3 or even #2 spot pending you got a solid QB you aren't looking to replace. 

I tend to think coaches don't even look at QBR or any other stat. The base the decisions on performance they can see on the field and not what the stats say. I tend to agree but I don't play fantasy football where stats matter.

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3 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

I tend to think coaches don't even look at QBR or any other stat. The base the decisions on performance they can see on the field and not what the stats say. I tend to agree but I don't play fantasy football where stats matter.

well, I think NFL teams do use stats these days.  Analytics just too big of a thing.  Now, I don't think they give a rip about ESPN's QBR.   

but do think a good team knows what there QBs completion % is going to this area of the field vs that coverage? Yes.  

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1 minute ago, CRA said:

well, I think NFL teams do use stats these days.  Analytics just too big of a thing.  Now, I don't think they give a rip about ESPN's QBR.   

but do think a good team knows what there QBs completion % is going to this area of the field vs that coverage? Yes.  

They use it to evaluate salaries and game strategies. I don't think they use it to determine who starts. 

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15 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

They use it to evaluate salaries and game strategies. I don't think they use it to determine who starts. 

I mean, sure.  But to an extent.....the bad play and stats will sort of jive up often.   I do think players and coaches are aware of the stats.  I'm sure a QB at some point has heard his coach throw his awful stats in his face in anger lol.  

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1 minute ago, CRA said:

I mean, sure.  But to an extent.....the bad play and stats will sort of jive up often.   I do think players and coaches are aware of the stats.  I'm sure a QB at some point has a QB has heard his coach throw his awful stats in his face in anger lol.  

They will tell them how many throws in a row they have missed right before they sit them out lol

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1 hour ago, strato said:

That’s unfair, and bullshit. It just isn’t true. 

I mean...it kinda is 😕

It might not be a "substantial" portion, but we genuinely do have people who are still upset after games we've won because...stats.

Kinda silly in my opinion, but... 

Edited by Mr. Scot
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32 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

I tend to think coaches don't even look at QBR or any other stat. The base the decisions on performance they can see on the field and not what the stats say. I tend to agree but I don't play fantasy football where stats matter.

Depends on the coach, but in my opinion that's how the smart coaches operate.

I don't really see Andy Reid or Sean McVay going by a stat sheet.

24 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

They use it to evaluate salaries and game strategies. 

That's probably more guys like Suleiman and Tilis than it is coaches.

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2 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

Depends on the coach, but in my opinion that's how the smart coaches operate.

I don't really see Andy Reid or Sean McVay going by a stat sheet.

That's probably more guys like Suleiman and Tilis than it is coaches.

I'm talking about the folks that actually use the stats.

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16 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

I mean...it kinda is 😕

It might not be a "substantial" portion, but we genuinely do have people who are still upset after games we've won because...stats.

Kinda silly in my opinion, but... 

I don't think that's intellectually honest of the view at all...

I think the people you deem are "unhappy" with stats......just stay fixated on the the big picture and to actually matter in the NFL going forward, you need more offensive production and more threatening play from the QB spot....if the goal is to be consistently relevant in the future and present a real threat to win the league on an ongoing basis (which is supposed to the goal and mission you are building toward)

Finding our way to a random 9 win season......without the inspiration belief we are on the way to achieve what we want .....just doesn't actually mean much. 

 

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5 minutes ago, CRA said:

I don't think that's intellectually honest of the view at all...

I think the people you deem are "unhappy" with stats......just stay fixated on the the big picture and to actually matter in the NFL going forward, you need more offensive production and more threatening play from the QB spot....if the goal is to be consistently relevant in the future and present a real threat to win the league on an ongoing basis. 

Finding our way to a random 9 win season......without the inspiration belief we are on the way to achieve what we want .....just doesn't actually mean much. 

No. It's pretty much what I said. People don't wanna admit it because it sounds silly..which it is.

As has been repeated many times, my evaluation of Bryce and why I think he should be a backup rather than a starter, isn't stat based.

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9 minutes ago, Jon Snow said:

I'm talking about the folks that actually use the stats.

Mentioned it elsewhere, but I think it was Person who said Scott Fitterer went all in on analytics after joining Tepper's org but Dan Morgan prefers old school "eyes on film" scouting.

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9 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

No. It's pretty much what I said. People don't wanna admit it because it sounds silly..which it is.

As has been repeated many times, my evaluation of Bryce and why I think he should be a backup rather than a starter, isn't stat based.

I mean, you are doing here what you do.  

but yeah, the people you are "addressing" here don't think as you want to portray them.   No one actually gives a fug about literal stats.  

threatening play and overall load carrying ability of an offense matter when it comes to a QB.  Especially, if your goal is to build a really good football team.  Thats generally the fixation of most teams.  Find that dude that can carry a team if need be and good enough to win a Super Bowl.  

Sometimes stats get talked about just because it is an easy way to talk on a message board about QBs that don't got what they are looking for and don't view as the answer. 

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    • Linked here (Panthers Mailbag) and as always, subscription required. FYI: There were a few other answers (re: Dowdle, Mays) quoted in Juan's thread. I won't bother reposting them here. Just click on over here if you wanna look. (formatting / editing is my own, highlighting some things that the board has been talking about) ______________________________ Starting with the big one, what's gonna happen with Bryce: To be sure, it’s been a choppy season for the third-year quarterback. Every time you start thinking Young lacks the arm strength/size/fill-in-other-attribute to be the “guy,” as Dave Canales referred to him after Week 18 last season, he pulls off a Cam Newton-like performance (complete with a dab in Atlanta). ...while the Panthers would like to see more consistency, Young has continued to ascend, as Tilis put it. After ranking at or near the bottom statistically among QBs his first two seasons, Young is now closer to the middle of the pack. Just as importantly, with four games left, Young has already surpassed his win total (6) from his first two seasons. Then there’s the clutch factor: Five of Young’s seven victories have come on game-winning drives, and last week he surpassed Josh Allen as the youngest QB in NFL history (at 24 years and 128 days) with 11 game-winning drives. The decision to pick up Young’s fifth-year option before the May 1 deadline — at an estimated $26.5 million, per Over the Cap — is an easy one, considering the top 11, highest-paid QBs all are more than $50 million a year. The question is whether the Panthers want to make Young the next member of that $50M club, and if so, when? Canales, Dan Morgan and Tilis will weigh more than just the next four games, even if Young plays well and the Panthers end their seven-year playoff drought, when considering an extension. Young and the Panthers have taken another step forward this season. If that ascension continues in 2026, his payday is coming. ______________________________ Another questioner asked Person to describe current locker room culture: Like a lot of coaches in a new spot, Canales tried to bring in good “culture” guys to help him establish a standard of what’s expected in terms of effort and attitude. It helped that several were already here. Not coincidentally, three of them have been signed to extensions since Canales and Morgan arrived in January of last year: Derrick Brown, Horn and Hubbard. Horn’s growth as a leader and his recommitment to offseason training to try to avoid injuries have been striking. And Canales deserves credit for maintaining his energy and positivity despite slow starts in each of his two seasons. ... So are the Panthers winning because they have a good locker room or is the healthy locker room a product of the winning? It’s probably a combination. But moving on from veterans who were either bad teammates (Diontae Johnson) or who weren’t the right fit for a rebuild (Jadeveon Clowney) was beneficial. ______________________________ Next, whether the weaknesses in the Panthers pass rush a scheme issue or a talent issue: Per Pro Football Focus, the Panthers have been the NFL’s worst pressure team since 2023, when Evero arrived in Charlotte. Over that same span, the Panthers have the NFL’s seventh-highest blitz percentage. So it hasn’t been for a lack of trying. That would suggest personnel has played a part. Evero hasn’t had much to work with since 2023, when Brian Burns and Frankie Luvu combined for 13.5 sacks. ... Morgan hasn’t spent big on a free-agent pass rusher since trading Burns to the Giants in 2024. He brought in D.J Wonnum, K’Lavon Chaisson and Clowney last year, before adding Patrick Jones this past offseason. Wonnum, who had four sacks in eight games last season, has none in 12 games this year. Jones recorded one sack in four games before undergoing a season-ending back surgery in October. The Panthers drafted a pair of second-day, SEC edge rushers this year in Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen. Evero needs more. The list of free-agent pass rushers isn’t deep, but it is headlined by Trey Hendrickson and Jaelan Phillips. At a minimum, Morgan should take a long look. ______________________________ One other tidbit: Person sees "no chance" of Canales giving up playcalling duties.
    • This is the match up I want and I want Nick Scott to blow Jennings the fug up, don't care if he gets ejected 
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