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Bleacher Report: Why Doesn't the NFL Like Tyrod Taylor?


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http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2745084-nfl1000-week-11-notebook-why-doesnt-the-nfl-like-tyrod-taylor

 



In three seasons as a starter for the Buffalo Bills after four seasons as Joe Flacco's backup for the Baltimore Ravens, Tyrod Taylor came into Sunday's abject disaster against the Los Angeles Chargers with not-all-that-bad stats: 693 completions in 1,105 passes (a 62.7 completion rate) for 7,941 yards, 47 passing touchdowns and 17 interceptions.

 

Add in his 279 rushes for 1,521 yards and 13 touchdowns, and it would seem that Taylor has the kind of skill set you'd want if you were building a team around a young quarterback.

 

In 2017 under new offensive coordinator Rick Dennison, Taylor has still played well for the most part—but not well enough for the Bills' coaching staff, who benched him in favor of rookie Nathan Peterman.

 

Peterman, of course, threw five picks in his first NFL start Sunday before he was pulled. After the disaster, head coach Sean McDermott said he would review Peterman's performance before naming a starter going forward, per Chris Brown of BuffaloBills.com, which leads to the inevitable question: What's there to review?

 

Another, larger question: Why is Taylor considered to be a below-average starter? Based on Buffalo's response to his skill set through multiple offensive coordinators, that seems to be its view. The Bills have refused to make a long-term commitment to him even after a 2016 season in which the offense was in disarray with the coordinator switch from Greg Roman to current Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn.

 

The team re-signed him to a two-year, $30.5 million contract with $15.5 million guaranteed, which is a holdover deal for any quarterback. Clearly, the Bills see Taylor as disposable, though they haven't exactly been aces in the quarterback evaluation process since the Jim Kelly days.

 

Is that a fair assessment of Taylor's ultimate potential? His performance against the Saints' outstanding defense in Week 10—Taylor completed nine of 18 passes for 56 yards and an interception—is the obvious talking point for those who had enough of Taylor and wanted a change.

 

He was not at all good in that game—Taylor failed to find a rhythm with new receiver Kelvin Benjamin, and he both underthrew and overthrew his receivers. Taylor is not always a comfortable quarterback in the pocket, a situation that is exacerbated by Buffalo's failures to protect him, and Taylor's own tendencies at times lead him to run into pressure.

 

He's also still learning to match his field reads with accurate throws. At this point in his career, Taylor needs receivers who can get separation from defenders. He's not an ideal tight-window thrower, especially to intermediate distances (think 8-15 yards downfield).

 

Where Taylor wins is in the short passing game and on deep balls where his receivers either get open on the designed route, or move outside of structure and coverage as Taylor moves out of the pocket. Right now, the Bills don't have receivers who can consistently win throughout the stems of route concepts.

 

Did we say "pocket"? Because that's a big part of Taylor's regression this season—it's one of the main reasons he got his brains beaten in against the Jets on November 2 in a 34-21 loss, and it's a contributing factor to his bad game against the Saints. It's clear that the Bills have decided to turn Taylor into a pocket passer, and that's not what he is on an every-down basis.

 

Moreover, by eliminating the designed runs that helped him set defenses on edge, and the run-pass options that better aligned him with his receivers, Dennison and his cohorts appear to be trying to fit Taylor into a schematic suit for which he was never designed. That he was able to throw for a touchdown and run for another when he was asked to come into the Chargers game and clean up the mess his coaches created speaks to his toughness and resolve.

 

Ideally, Taylor would be in an offense that let him use his functional mobility as a positive. He would be with a play-designing unit that schemed its receivers open. And he would learn more about the subtleties of the position from a coaching staff that believed in him and tailored the playbook to what makes him comfortable.

 

Just this season, we've seen this "phenomenon" from the Los Angeles Rams with Sean McVay and Jared Goff, and with the Houston Texans with Bill O'Brien and Deshaun Watson before Watson's season-ending ACL injury.

 

It's now become clear that the Buffalo Bills have no use for Taylor, and they should allow him by trade or release to work with a staff that sees him as more than a negative. He's far from a perfect quarterback, but he deserves far better than this

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Amazing the agenda that the MSM Sports outlets have pushing this as some sort of racial issue. Sad!

 

This is great for TT and his agent though because with the media's help they are going to create a ridiculously false market for him in the offseason, maybe we'll be able to fleece another desperate team in a trade after all.

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4 minutes ago, SaviorPeterman said:

Amazing the agenda that the MSM Sports outlets have pushing this as some sort of racial issue. Sad!

 

This is great for TT and his agent though because with the media's help they are going to create a ridiculously false market for him in the offseason, maybe we'll be able to fleece another desperate team in a trade after all.

B$PN trying to stir up trouble...

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7 minutes ago, SaviorPeterman said:

Amazing the agenda that the MSM Sports outlets have pushing this as some sort of racial issue. Sad!

 

This is great for TT and his agent though because with the media's help they are going to create a ridiculously false market for him in the offseason, maybe we'll be able to fleece another desperate team in a trade after all.

 

Oh we get it - "fleece".

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23 minutes ago, SaviorPeterman said:

Amazing the agenda that the MSM Sports outlets have pushing this as some sort of racial issue. Sad!

 

I mentioned this a few weeks ago, "Kaepernick kneeling for Tyrod" etc.  I saw it coming and was right.

Edited by T-Bomb
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Because the league still prefers pocket passers to option QBs.  

 

It's not even a "the league doesn't like mobile QBs" issue.  NFL teams are fine with mobile QBs that can stand in the pocket and deliver the ball (e.g. Russell Wilson).  It's mobile QBs who can't throw from the pocket (e.g. Kaepernick, Taylor) that the league has a problem with.

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6 minutes ago, BuffaloHokie13 said:

Depends on your definition, but no.

 

 

The way I understood it was the Bills basically said renogiate to a contract that is about 50-75% of the value or be cut.

 

I would assume his agent did some sniffing around and said take the renegotiation 

 

Label that how you will. 

Edited by Mango
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5 minutes ago, Mango said:

 

 

The way I understood it was the Bills basically said renogiate to a contract that is about 50-75% of the value or be cut.

 

I would assume his agent did some sniffing around and said take the extension. 

 

Label that how you will. 

 

That's the way I saw it, but ofc had no inside knowlegde.  Are some ppl saying what the Bills did with Taylor was a racial injustice?  Do we need a Rooney rule for black QB's?

Edited by T-Bomb
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3 minutes ago, Mango said:

The way I understood it was the Bills basically said renogiate to a contract that is about 50-75% of the value or be cut.

 

I would assume his agent did some sniffing around and said take the renegotiation 

 

Label that how you will. 

That's definitely very different than my understanding, but I only have one side of the story.

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1 minute ago, T-Bomb said:

 

Yeah, I agree.  Are some ppl saying what the Bills did with Taylor was a racial injustice?

 

 

Yeah, some people are. Without getting too far down the rabbit hole. I am about as progressive as they come, used to work with journeys end. My mom is a campaign manager, my sister works for the DNC and the UN. 

 

Im being told I don’t like him because I don’t like his style because of prejudice. It’s reallt catching me off guard. I just don’t engage.

 

I do think there is a faction of people that this is the reality for. I also think that are a group that thinks he’s not a viable long term option in the NFL at the position. 

 

Just because you think hes not very very good doesn’t mean it’s racial. 1+1 does not equal 2 here. They can be mutually exclusive 

2 minutes ago, BuffaloHokie13 said:

That's definitely very different than my understanding, but I only have one side of the story.

 

 

What is that side of the story. Legitimately curious. 

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Taylor can be an effective QB on the right team. And that type of team is what the Bills have tried to construct around him for the past three seasons. Strong defense, ball control/run heavy offense, hit a few big passes when needed. Unfortunately, this defense has fallen apart. The new offensive scheme has done zero favors for anyone on that side of the ball and the WR Taylor had the most chemistry with (Watkins) was shipped out.

 

In an ideal situation, Taylor can win. But he's not the type of QB that can carry the team on his back when things don't go as planned. Week in and week out, they need things to go according to plan as closely as possible. When that doesn't happen, it all falls apart. 

 

On top of that, I think Taylor has hit his ceiling. He's careful with the ball, he can improvise and create something from nothing once in a while and when he has the time (and the right receiving options) he can toss a nice long ball. Right now he's in a system which is predicated on the run and they can't consistently run the ball. Defenses don't fear getting beat by the pass so they crowd the line and take away McCoy. They go out and get a big target for him but he has trouble finding him and then the dude gets hurt. 

 

If the bewildering switch to Peterman sparks anything perhaps it will spark Taylor to improvise a bit more, move outside the pocket and start pushing the ball downfield to his receivers. I understand the whole "take what they give you" philosophy but if you do that all game long, you're allowing the opponent to dictate what you can and can't do. You have to throw caution to the wind at some point and let these dudes play.

 

And for cripes sake, Wade Phillips has been saying it for years, it's not difficult. You build your system around the skill sets of the players on the roster. You don't force a system onto players who don't reach their full potential inside it. I thought that stuff would stop once Rex left but now they're in an entirely new "process" which is starting to feel more and more like the same.

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