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!

     

Steve Smith looking forward to WR Competition. Cutting of Keiser lit a fire.


top dawg

Recommended Posts

Smitty is not just looking forward to the WR competition from a purely football perspective, but he seems to relish the thought of seeing who will rise to the occasion after being put on notice, so to speak.  Basically, Smith said the guys better get on the stick in so many words.  

 

 

"This is the most competition I've seen and it's real, legitimate competition," Smith said. "The first day I walked into the receivers' room I could feel the thickness in there. It's kind of this uneasy feeling. You could feel the competition. You could feel the seriousness. No one was loose."

 

 

 

Smith said new general manager Dave Gettleman's decision to cut defensive end Thomas Keiser earlier this offseason "created a buzz" in the locker room and served as a wakeup call to some players.

Keiser was viewed as a solid role player and try-hard guy before injuries sidelined him for most of last season.

"When that happened guys were like, `Oh my gosh," Smith said. "It shows that you're not on scholarship. Everybody doesn't get a jersey or a number. The competition here, it is cut throat right now and some of these guys haven't been through anything like that before. Some of the guys have been drafted and might think they're going to fine. But when there's a new GM he can easily say you're not my guy."

 

 

 

I hope he's right. I hope the hunger translates to the field. Maybe it'll finally be different this year. 

 

I'm lovin' it.  Sow the wheat and burn the chafe. G-man gonna make it happen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is somewhat of my first huddle-preseason rodeo, so I'm taking all this talk with a pinch of salt, but its getting me very excited to say the least. All I ask is for improvement on what looked a decent second half of the season last year. I think we can make superbowl playoffs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is somewhat of my first huddle-preseason rodeo, so I'm taking all this talk with a pinch of salt, but its getting me very excited to say the least. All I ask is for improvement on what looked a decent second half of the season last year. I think we can make superbowl playoffs.

Just wait until we get suicidal after the first loss

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh. Didn't realize that. I think it's a Google Chrome glitch. I have a highlighter add-on, but didn't search for "the" that I know of.  

I'm just glad I wasn't the only one that saw it, thought I was going crazy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • See my previous post. You're also leaving out that T-Mac was likely hitting a rookie wall, like 95% of rookies do late in their first season, combined with the added attention on him by defenses, which in turn would be why Bryce looked Coker's way down the stretch.  With Coker playing like that to start next year, defenses will have to pay attention to it, which will then also make things easier for T-Mac. All of which is also ignoring that T-Mac will just be a better player next year than he was this year, assuming he works on his game this offseason, which we all know he will be.  If a player who was already your clear cut #1 comes back even better his next season, you're going to make sure you're throwing it his way more often, no matter who else you have. Again, Coker's added targets won't be at the expense of T-Mac's, they will BOTH be taking targets from the rest of the team.  Not to mention, we should be passing it more next year to begin with, seeing as we'll have both of them hopefully ready to go full speed Week 1, which again, will help both their target totals increase. Coker looks like a really good player, but even the most optimistic person can't say he looks like he has #1 potential, he has very solid to maybe even high end #2 potential.  You're not taking targets away from the reigning OROY who looks like a true Top 15 WR already to get your #2 targets, you increase both of them by taking from the others.
    • Need to crush the hawks tonight. A lose would really damage momentum 
    • Sorry, but this is a terrible breakdown that doesn't at all show what you're trying to say/project about T-Mac next year, as it leaves out key information that changes everything, it makes the opposite point that you're trying to. Chase missed 5 games that second season after playing all 17 as a rookie (and still saw more targets that second season). Puka it looks like you projected his stats out to a 17 game season (as he only played 11 games), but even still , when you have 160+ targets as a rookie, there isn't really much room to get any more the next year. Waddle saw an increase in yards, and sure, his targets went down, but he played on a team with a better WR that year who saw 170 targets for 1,710 yards during that 2nd season for Waddle... something T-Mac doesn't have to contend with on the same team (280+ targets for their top 2 WRs, if you don't think T-Mac would see more than 122 targets if him and Coker combined for 287, then you're nuts). Then Olave and Wilson both saw an increase of 19 targets in their second season. You basically just laid out the reasoning for why T-Mac should see at least 20 more targets next year, if not more, which would be a solid increase and put him easily into the Top 10 most targeted WR next season.
×
×
  • Create New...