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Scot McCloughan on Kirk Cousins: "I Don't See Special" - Headed for UFA


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13 hours ago, Kirby Jackson said:

No, the number would have been worse with that scrub Bortles. He turned it over 16 times. The Bills offense was awful. They didn’t however shoot themselves in the foot. They did enough to win 9 games because they won close games. You don’t win close games  when you make mistakes and turn the ball over. When the Bills lost they got pounded (for the most part). That’s how you have a winning record and a minus 57 point differential. 

:oops: I thought you were referring to a point differential.  

 

 

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17 hours ago, OldTimeAFLGuy said:

....so how soon before the "that drunk got fired because he doen't know jack about personnel" posts follow from the Cousins disciples here?......

 

McCloughan does know Jack about personnel.  It's the reason he's been hired by 3 teams.

McCloughan is also a drunk.  It's the reason he's been fired by 3 teams.

 

McCloughan was VP of Player Personnel for the Niners from 2005 to 2008 and GM from 2008 to 2010.  Did he bring in some good players? Yes.  Did he build a championship roster?  Hell to the no. 

 

Seattle built a championship roster, but again - he helped bring in good players, but his wasn't the guiding hand.

 

McCloughan was GM of the Washington Redskins for 2 years 2015-2017.  Again, did he improve the roster?  Sure.  Did he build a championship roster?  Hell to the no.

 

This article really is nothing new - McCloughan already demonstrated his opinion of Cousins as being "I don't see special" by failing to negotiate him to a mutually acceptable contract in 2015 with catastrophic potential consequences for the franchise because he also didn't come up with an adequate replacement plan to bring in "special" (or at least, adequate)

 

Is McCloughan correct that Cousins doesn't have the value to the Redskins of $34M per year for a 3rd year?  Yes, given their current roster.  But what are their alternatives, and how does that speak to his player personnel acumen?  The state of their current roster was his responsibility for 2 years!  He directly drove the Redskins into the position where that's their alternative.  So value his judgement accordingly.

 

Personally I think he under-valued Cousins and his former franchise will pay for it, one way or another. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Hapless Bills Fan
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16 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

McCloughan does know Jack about personnel.  It's the reason he's been hired by 3 teams.

McCloughan is also a drunk.  It's the reason he's been fired by 3 teams.

 

McCloughan was VP of Player Personnel for the Niners from 2005 to 2008 and GM from 2008 to 2010.  Did he bring in some good players? Yes.  Did he build a championship roster?  Hell to the no.  Seattle built a championship roster, but again - he helped bring in good players, but his wasn't the guiding hand.

McCloughan was GM of the Washington Redskins for 2 years 2015-2017.  Again, did he improve the roster?  Sure.  Did he build a championship roster?  Hell to the no.

 

So this article really is nothing new - McCloughan already demonstrated his opinion of Cousins by failing to negotiate him to a mutually acceptable contract in 2015, leaving him playing 2 years on the Franchise tag, with catastrophic potential consequences for the franchise because he also didn't come up with an adequate replacement plan.

 

Is McCloughan correct that Cousins doesn't have the value to the Redskins of $34M per year for a 3rd year?  Yes.  But what are their alternatives, and how does that speak to his player personnel acumen?  It's not like he has a track record of being able to fit together a championship roster when he has the reins.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

......my point was to preemptively strike any discussion about his personal issues from his assessment of Cousins, citing he DOES know personnel,.....so with the obvious stated impasse, where was Bruce Allen hiding?........he has pretty good personnel credentials from his days in TB as did his late father, George Allen........is Bruce going to stay in hiding AGAIN this time around?.......

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12 minutes ago, OldTimeAFLGuy said:

 

......my point was to preemptively strike any discussion about his personal issues from his assessment of Cousins, citing he DOES know personnel,.....

 

What I was trying to say is that his interview is "old news".  His opinion of Cousins as "I don't see special" was already implicit in the fact that Cousins has played on the franchise tag 2 years vs having a long-term deal negotiated in 2015

   And

While his personnel evaluation ability should not be questioned, his ability to actually ASSEMBLE a championship roster (thus knowledge of what it takes) can be questioned.

Now someone might argue, "he knows what to do, he was just too impaired to do it", but there's no proof.

 

Cousins is a damn good QB.  Is he maybe closer to Eli than Peyton Manning or closer to Philip Rivers than to Drew Brees?   Perhaps.

Does that mean it might not be a winning strategy for a QB-needy team to pay him the big bucks, if they have the other pieces or enough cap space and draft picks to get them?

 

Not evident to me that the answer is "no", despite McCloughan's view

 

 

 

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16 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

What I was trying to say is that his interview is "old news".  His opinion of Cousins as "I don't see special" was already implicit in the fact that Cousins has played on the franchise tag 2 years vs having a long-term deal negotiated in 2015

   And

While his personnel evaluation ability should not be questioned, his ability to actually ASSEMBLE a championship roster (thus knowledge of what it takes) can be questioned.

Now someone might argue, "he knows what to do, he was just too impaired to do it", but there's no proof.

 

Cousins is a damn good QB.  Is he maybe closer to Eli than Peyton Manning or closer to Philip Rivers than to Drew Brees?   Perhaps.

Does that mean it might not be a winning strategy for a QB-needy team to pay him the big bucks, if they have the other pieces or enough cap space and draft picks to get them?

 

Not evident to me that the answer is "no", despite McCloughan's view

 

 

 

 

...thanks for clarification......so why in your view hasn't Bruce Allen stepped in to break the impasse as Prez?.............

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4 minutes ago, OldTimeAFLGuy said:

...thanks for clarification......so why in your view hasn't Bruce Allen stepped in to break the impasse as Prez?.............

 

I got nothin'

 

except maybe

 

In general, the best strategy for an owner or president is to choose good football people, then STFU.  If it's true that Kraft intervened on Garrappolo, that was probably a big mistake.

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2 hours ago, Kirby Jackson said:

I’d slide Wood to overpaid but other than that it’s fair. A lot of it is position based though. The Bills 3 highest cap hits are QB, LT and pass rusher. I’d bet that’s the case with a lot of teams.

I expect an extension with Benjamin.  Glenn, Taylor, and Hughes are all on the block.  Hughes probably cut, Taylor traded or cut, Glenn traded.  If they sign cousins I think you keep Glenn and have 2 solid tackles.  21 and 22 defense.  Mike and Dt.  Second rd I go Rb and speed Wr or athletic Te.  FA is going to set the tone of the draft.  There are 2 ways they go Cousins and Draft to fix the roster.  No Cousins a few more Vetran Defenders and Draft capital used to be aggressive for a Qb coming out.  

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5 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

Far better to trade up for a 5 year cost controlled rookie QB than hamstring the team with Cousins who's simply not good enough to carry a team as a franchise QB.  I'd find a bridge veteran until the 1st round rookie is ready. 

 

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Cousins is a serviceable guy; a solid upgrade from Tyrod.  Nothing too fantastic and certainly not worth the pay day he is going to get from someone. 

 

The pay structure in the league, especially with QBs, needs to be addressed.

 

 

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2 minutes ago, PromoTheRobot said:

There is a cost/benefit issue with Cousins. Is what he costs worth the level of upgrade you get, especially if his cap hit prevents you from signing other free agents.

His cap hit might prevent us from signing other free agents this coming season.  Cousins would likely be the biggest difference maker they could sign though.  The following season the Bills are projected at having over 100k in cap (before Cousins and other re-signings.)  To me, perfectly worth it.  They can get players in the draft with all those picks instead of unloading the important ones on one guy that has potential.

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7 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

Please list all the QBs that actually "carry the team."  That term is more overused than ELITE on QBs because Brady might be the only QB that truly has carried his team over the last decade.

 

Easily Rodgers and Russell Wilson for sure along with others.  Use whatever semantics you like, but I'm talking true Franchise Caliber and Cousins isn't in that tier. 

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3 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

Easily Rodgers and Russle Wilson for sure along with others.  Use whatever semantics you like, but I'm talking true Franchise Caliber and Cousins isn't in that tier. 

Rodgers ok.  Wilson?  You think Wilson carries his team?  Not with that defense he didn't.

 

Why do you think Cousins is not franchise caliber?  IMO he is in the tier directly behind the elites (Brady, Rodgers, Brees) That is the tier where you shell out money for your QB. That is the tier I would call Franchise. If you are holding out for Brady, Rodgers, Brees you are likely to hold out forever.

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3 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

Rodgers ok.  Wilson?  You think Wilson carries his team?  Not with that defense he didn't.

 

Why do you think Cousins is not franchise caliber?  IMO he is in the tier directly behind the elites (Brady, Rodgers, Brees) That is the tier where you shell out money for your QB. That is the tier I would call Franchise. If you are holding out for Brady, Rodgers, Brees you are likely to hold out forever.

 

He's a product of high volume passing attempts in schemes designed by Sean McVay and Jay Gruden that greatly padded his statistics.  He isn't a high level decision maker with great accuracy who makes his teammates better. The following are all QBs I'd rather have instead of him:

 

Rodgers
Brady
Brees
Roethlisberger
Matt Ryan
Carson Wentz
Russell Wilson

Jimmy Garoppolo
Phillip Rivers
Matthew Stafford
Cam Newton

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16 hours ago, GoBills808 said:

Yup. Probably Panthers game as well. And there's really no price too high for 2-3 more wins per season IMO...which I believe is what an obvious upgrade at QB would have netted the Bills this season.

 

There always is a price,  some would be happy (ecstatic actually) of a very good season even if it means following two years were were in cap hell and needed to have mostly drafted players and UDFAs and tanking Cleveland style.  Seahawks got to Superbowl when their QB was cheap, P*ts get in because their QB gets money on the side not market rate, etc.

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18 hours ago, papazoid said:

TD's thrown

 

KC - 27

TT- 13

 

that's more than slightly better

 

if cousins was on this years team....we beat JAX

1) As a fair(er) comparison why not look at total TD's? Its well know that TT also score TD with his legs...

 

Also, let's get a better overall total QB comparison:

 

KC- 27 TD passes, 13 INT's W/L 7-9 (overall record 26-30-1)- existing offensive system 2017

TT - 14 TD passes, 4 INT's, W/L 8-6 (overall record 22-20)- new offensive system 2017

 

KC is a far better passer indeed but what does that get you? He needs a supporting case around him to succeed, see his total overall W/L record. But how do you surround him with the necessary talent when his contract will account for a large portion of the cap?

 

Is the cost to sign KC worth eating up 25+ Mil of the payroll? 

 

That's franchise QB money and KC is a slightly above average QB who has a TD/INT ratio of  2:1 and a below .500 career winning percentage.

 

2) Since we're going hypothetical's ,  If KC was on this team hypothetically speaking we would be 7-9 and we would NOT have even played Jax in the playoffs, ijs.

 

 

 

 

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17 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

He's a product of high volume passing attempts in schemes designed by Sean McVay and Jay Gruden that greatly padded his statistics.  He isn't a high level decision maker with great accuracy who makes his teammates better. The following are all QBs I'd rather have instead of him:

 

Rodgers
Brady
Brees
Roethlisberger
Matt Ryan
Carson Wentz
Russell Wilson

Jimmy Garoppolo
Phillip Rivers
Matthew Stafford
Cam Newton

Rodgers, Brady, Brees, Roethlisberger are Hall of Fame QBs.   If you're objective is to get a Hall of Fame QB, then Cousins is not for you.   You're only chance is to draft one, which means you have to go all in on trading up every few years until you hit one.   I don't think that's a good strategy for building a team, but if that's what you want, I won't argue with you. 

 

Garoppolo is unproven.   Stafford hasn't outplayed Cousins.   Cousins actually is a better quarterback than Newton.  

 

It leaves Cousins where I've said he is - not a Hall of Famer but a top 10 quarterback in the current NFL.   

 

To say that he's a product of a high volume passing attack simply isn't true.   His passer ratings have been excellent the past three years, which means he has a good TD to INT ratio and a good completion percentage.   So where do you get this Accuracy concern from?   He's had several fourth quarter comebacks.   

 

I just don't know where you're getting this conclusion that he isn't a good QB.   What do you want from the guy?   

 

I get that some people think the money will be too much for what you get, but forget the money for a minute.   If you don't want Cousins, what's your plan for getting a QB better than Cousins - like a Matt Ryan or better - in Buffalo?

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14 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Rodgers, Brady, Brees, Roethlisberger are Hall of Fame QBs.   If you're objective is to get a Hall of Fame QB, then Cousins is not for you.   You're only chance is to draft one, which means you have to go all in on trading up every few years until you hit one.   I don't think that's a good strategy for building a team, but if that's what you want, I won't argue with you. 

 

Garoppolo is unproven.   Stafford hasn't outplayed Cousins.   Cousins actually is a better quarterback than Newton.  

 

It leaves Cousins where I've said he is - not a Hall of Famer but a top 10 quarterback in the current NFL.   

 

To say that he's a product of a high volume passing attack simply isn't true.   His passer ratings have been excellent the past three years, which means he has a good TD to INT ratio and a good completion percentage.   So where do you get this Accuracy concern from?   He's had several fourth quarter comebacks.   

 

I just don't know where you're getting this conclusion that he isn't a good QB.   What do you want from the guy?   

 

I get that some people think the money will be too much for what you get, but forget the money for a minute.   If you don't want Cousins, what's your plan for getting a QB better than Cousins - like a Matt Ryan or better - in Buffalo?

 

I'd take Garoppolo over Cousins 100 times out of 100 chances. As for Cousins being better than Stafford and Newton, that's a matter of your opinion that I happen to disagree with. 

 

Cousins is pretty good, but not worth top tiered money that will tie up quite a bit of cap space.  That's where I'm at and I already posted what I would do. 

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43 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

He's a product of high volume passing attempts in schemes designed by Sean McVay and Jay Gruden that greatly padded his statistics.  He isn't a high level decision maker with great accuracy who makes his teammates better. The following are all QBs I'd rather have instead of him:

 

Rodgers
Brady
Brees
Roethlisberger
Matt Ryan
Carson Wentz
Russell Wilson

Jimmy Garoppolo
Phillip Rivers
Matthew Stafford
Cam Newton

I would even add in Andrew Luck as well (only if he's healthy of course)

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59 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

His cap hit might prevent us from signing other free agents this coming season.  Cousins would likely be the biggest difference maker they could sign though.  The following season the Bills are projected at having over 100k in cap (before Cousins and other re-signings.)  To me, perfectly worth it.  They can get players in the draft with all those picks instead of unloading the important ones on one guy that has potential.

If you did sign Cousins you would still have to upgrade WR or what's the point? I suppose KB is an upgrade once healthy. Zay maybe. You need at least one more.

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1 hour ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

 

 

Cousins is pretty good, but not worth top tiered money that will tie up quite a bit of cap space.  That's where I'm at and I already posted what I would do. 

This point is where I disagree fundamentally.  This is the core issue. 

 

In my opinion, "not worth top tier money" is a concept that doesn't apply to QBs.   It may to other players, but not QBs.

 

In my opinion, if you want to compete for championships in the NFL, have a chance to compete every year, you have to have a top 10 QB.   There are, in my opinion, only two tiers - the top 10 and the others.   If you have a top 10 QB, you have a chance to compete every year.   If you don't, you don't.   You might get there once in a while with a top 20 QB, but you need a lot of things to fall right.  

 

So you gotta have a top 10 QB.   Once you've decided that, in my opinion it doesn't matter if you're paying the guy #2 money and he's #8.    Sure, you'd rather be paying #8 money to have a QB who's #8, but that isn't what's important.   What's important is having a top 10 QB.   If you're overpaying, well, that's the price you're paying to have a chance at a title every season.   

 

Under which scenario am I going to be the happier fan?   (1)  My team has a top 20 QB and the paying him like a top 30 guy.   (2)  My team has a top 10 QB and they're paying him like a top 2 guy.   I'll take (2) all day, every day.   

 

When the Browns write the big check to get Cousins, am I going to be laughing because they overpaid and the Bills have Tyrod?    No.   The Bills have Peterman?  No.   The Bills have some guy they drafted?    No, at least not until that guy turns into a top 10 NFL QB.   

 

A top 10 QB comes along in free agency maybe once every five years.   Brees was the last.   People thought Schaub was one but he busted.   When that guy comes along, he gets overpaid.   That's the way it works.   Brees got overpaid when he signed.   Do you think Saints fans cared?

 

When you have a top 10 QB and his contract runs out, you have to pay him top 5 money to keep him, because if you don't, someone else will.   That's simply the price.   He doesn't get the highest salary in the league because people think he's the best QB in the league.   He gets it because someone will pay it.   Flacco got it, and it turned out to be a mistake.   Ryan got it, and it wasn't a mistake.   

 

If you don't pay the price, you don't get the guy.   

 

Edited by Shaw66
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2 hours ago, Scott7975 said:

Rodgers ok.  Wilson?  You think Wilson carries his team?  Not with that defense he didn't.

 

Why do you think Cousins is not franchise caliber?  IMO he is in the tier directly behind the elites (Brady, Rodgers, Brees) That is the tier where you shell out money for your QB. That is the tier I would call Franchise. If you are holding out for Brady, Rodgers, Brees you are likely to hold out forever.

Didn’t you know 26 knows all about QBs and he’s not to be questioned?

 

 

1 hour ago, Shaw66 said:

Garoppolo is unproven.   Stafford hasn't outplayed Cousins.   Cousins actually is a better quarterback than Newton.  

I think Jimmy is his new idol @ QB. 

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13 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

This point is where I disagree fundamentally.  This is the core issue. 

 

In my opinion, "not worth top tier money" is a concept that doesn't apply to QBs.   It may to other players, but not QBs.

 

In my opinion, if you want to compete for championships in the NFL, have a chance to compete every year, you have to have a top 10 QB.   There are, in my opinion, only two tiers - the top 10 and the others.   If you have a top 10 QB, you have a chance to compete every year.   If you don't, you don't.   You might get there once in a while with a top 20 QB, but you need a lot of things to fall right.  

 

So you gotta have a top 10 QB.   Once you've decided that, in my opinion it doesn't matter if you're paying the guy #2 money and he's #8.    Sure, you'd rather be paying #8 money to have a QB who's #8, but that isn't what's important.   What's important is having a top 10 QB.   If you're overpaying, well, that's the price you're paying to have a chance at a title every season.   

 

Under which scenario am I going to be the happier fan?   (1)  My team has a top 20 QB and the paying him like a top 30 guy.   (2)  My team has a top 10 QB and they're paying him like a top 2 guy.   I'll take (2) all day, every day.   

 

When the Browns write the big check to get Cousins, am I going to be laughing because they overpaid and the Bills have Tyrod?    No.   The Bills have Peterman?  No.   The Bills have some guy they drafted?    No, at least not until that guy turns into a top 10 NFL QB.   

 

A top 10 QB comes along in free agency maybe once every five years.   Brees was the last.   People thought Schaub was one but he busted.   When that guy comes along, he gets overpaid.   That's the way it works.   Brees got overpaid when he signed.   Do you think Saints fans cared?

 

When you have a top 10 QB and his contract runs out, you have to pay him top 5 money to keep him, because if you don't, someone else will.   That's simply the price.   He doesn't get the highest salary in the league because people think he's the best QB in the league.   He gets it because someone will pay it.   Flacco got it, and it turned out to be a mistake.   Ryan got it, and it wasn't a mistake.   

 

If you don't pay the price, you don't get the guy.   

 

 

Shaw,

I don't agree with you on everything but you are spot on with this!

IF and I keep saying IF the "process" takes us down a top 10 QB FA signing you don't worry if you may be "overpaying".

 

The same goes for signing a QB on your team so he DOES NOT get to FA.

 

TOP 5 QB Average Salaries:

1.  Stafford - 27 million

2.  Carr - 25 million

3.  Luck - 24 1/2 million

4.  Brees - 24 1/4 million

5.  Flacco -  22+ million

 

5 QB's, total of 2 Super Bowls.

 

It's just what QB's cost.

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2 minutes ago, ShadyBillsFan said:

Didn’t you know 26 knows all about QBs and he’s not to be questioned?

 

 

I think Jimmy is his new idol @ QB. 

I don't know 26 that well, but I wouldn't dump on him that much.  

 

As for Jimmy, I like his prospects, but he hasn't proven anything to me yet.   Paying him 25 is a much bigger risk than paying Cousins 25.  

 

What he doesn't get is that Cousins is solidly in the range of 5th to 12th best QB in the league.   Look at his stats over the past three years.   Same as Stafford's, better than Newton's (who's really had only one good year).   People rave about Luck - Cousins has been better.  Matt Ryan's had one blowout year; otherwise, he's struggled to put up numbers as good as Cousins, and he's throwing to Julio Jones.   

 

Cousins isn't Rodgers, I know.   But look at the guys who are in the 12 to 20 range of QBs - Eli, Flacco, Taylor, Dalton.   I can't believe he wouldn't want Cousins over those guys. 

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22 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

This point is where I disagree fundamentally.  This is the core issue. 

 

In my opinion, "not worth top tier money" is a concept that doesn't apply to QBs.   It may to other players, but not QBs.

 

In my opinion, if you want to compete for championships in the NFL, have a chance to compete every year, you have to have a top 10 QB.   There are, in my opinion, only two tiers - the top 10 and the others.   If you have a top 10 QB, you have a chance to compete every year.   If you don't, you don't.   You might get there once in a while with a top 20 QB, but you need a lot of things to fall right.  

 

So you gotta have a top 10 QB.   Once you've decided that, in my opinion it doesn't matter if you're paying the guy #2 money and he's #8.    Sure, you'd rather be paying #8 money to have a QB who's #8, but that isn't what's important.   What's important is having a top 10 QB.   If you're overpaying, well, that's the price you're paying to have a chance at a title every season.   

 

Under which scenario am I going to be the happier fan?   (1)  My team has a top 20 QB and the paying him like a top 30 guy.   (2)  My team has a top 10 QB and they're paying him like a top 2 guy.   I'll take (2) all day, every day.   

 

When the Browns write the big check to get Cousins, am I going to be laughing because they overpaid and the Bills have Tyrod?    No.   The Bills have Peterman?  No.   The Bills have some guy they drafted?    No, at least not until that guy turns into a top 10 NFL QB.   

 

A top 10 QB comes along in free agency maybe once every five years.   Brees was the last.   People thought Schaub was one but he busted.   When that guy comes along, he gets overpaid.   That's the way it works.   Brees got overpaid when he signed.   Do you think Saints fans cared?

 

When you have a top 10 QB and his contract runs out, you have to pay him top 5 money to keep him, because if you don't, someone else will.   That's simply the price.   He doesn't get the highest salary in the league because people think he's the best QB in the league.   He gets it because someone will pay it.   Flacco got it, and it turned out to be a mistake.   Ryan got it, and it wasn't a mistake.   

 

If you don't pay the price, you don't get the guy.   

 

 

Perfectly fine with me because he's not the guy. 

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4 minutes ago, ColoradoBills said:

 

Shaw,

I don't agree with you on everything but you are spot on with this!

IF and I keep saying IF the "process" takes us down a top 10 QB FA signing you don't worry if you may be "overpaying".

 

The same goes for signing a QB on your team so he DOES NOT get to FA.

 

TOP 5 QB Average Salaries:

1.  Stafford - 27 million

2.  Carr - 25 million

3.  Luck - 24 1/2 million

4.  Brees - 24 1/4 million

5.  Flacco -  22+ million

 

5 QB's, total of 2 Super Bowls.

 

It's just what QB's cost.

Thanks for making the point about what it costs to re-sign your top 10 guy.   As of today it appears that exactly ONE of those guys is on a Hall of Fame trajectory - Brees.   The other four got what some people would think is Hall of Fame money.   

 

Is it working out in every case?   Absolutely not.   Was it the wrong move?   No.   Oakland betting on Carr was a better bet than saving $10 million and having no QB.  

3 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

Perfectly fine with me because he's not the guy. 

That's fine with me, too.  If you're the GM and you don't think he's top 10, top 12, then I agree you shouldn't spend the money.   If Beane and McD don't think so, they should save their money.  

 

But if you think he's top 10, you're going to have to pay top dollar, and it's the right move, in the sense that it's a smart bet.  

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2 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Thanks for making the point about what it costs to re-sign your top 10 guy.   As of today it appears that exactly ONE of those guys is on a Hall of Fame trajectory - Brees.   The other four got what some people would think is Hall of Fame money.   

 

Is it working out in every case?   Absolutely not.   Was it the wrong move?   No.   Oakland betting on Carr was a better bet than saving $10 million and having no QB.  

 

I just posted this in another thread.

 

I can live without having the next Manning/Brady.

I just want the Bills to have a top 12 QB for 4-5 years running.

Please.

 

I don't care how they do it, just do it.

If they go down the FA route it will cost.

If they make a big move to go up the draft, they better get it right.

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1 hour ago, PromoTheRobot said:

If you did sign Cousins you would still have to upgrade WR or what's the point? I suppose KB is an upgrade once healthy. Zay maybe. You need at least one more.

 

Kb and Zay will make plays because Cousins will throw accurate passes

 

Cousins likes to spread it around, the 3 and 4 wideouts will be targeted 

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18 minutes ago, Teddy KGB said:

 

Kb and Zay will make plays because Cousins will throw accurate passes

 

Cousins likes to spread it around, the 3 and 4 wideouts will be targeted 

Zay has the worst year a receiver has had in like the last 5 seasons by the advanced metrics (notice how far below anyone else he is graded). http://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/wr

 

The Bills CANNOT be counting on that guy. If he contributes it’s found money but he did nothing to inspire confidence. He was historically bad. 

Edited by Kirby Jackson
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55 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

In my opinion, if you want to compete for championships in the NFL, have a chance to compete every year, you have to have a top 10 QB.   There are, in my opinion, only two tiers - the top 10 and the others.   If you have a top 10 QB, you have a chance to compete every year.   If you don't, you don't.   You might get there once in a while with a top 20 QB, but you need a lot of things to fall right.  

 

So you gotta have a top 10 QB.   Once you've decided that, in my opinion it doesn't matter if you're paying the guy #2 money and he's #8.    Sure, you'd rather be paying #8 money to have a QB who's #8, but that isn't what's important.   What's important is having a top 10 QB.   If you're overpaying, well, that's the price you're paying to have a chance at a title every season.   

 

Under which scenario am I going to be the happier fan?   (1)  My team has a top 20 QB and the paying him like a top 30 guy.   (2)  My team has a top 10 QB and they're paying him like a top 2 guy.   I'll take (2) all day, every day.   

 

To your point re: top 10 QB and Cousins. 

I took my QB Draft Stats data and filtered it for QB who have more than 1 1/2 seasons of starts for insufficient data (this does eliminate Goff, Wentz, and Garappolo), and for QB who have thrown for <220 YPG on average for not generating enough passing attack (this eliminates Kaepernick, Smith, and Prescott and would eliminate Tyrod).

 

Then I sorted it for YPA, TD/INT ratio, and completion percentage, as three stats widely reported as correlating to a successful passing attack and to wins.

 I don't think many would argue with the names on that list except perhaps near the bottom, for Winston and Mariota.

Cousins shows up on that list at #6.  If you sort in a different order, he's still on the list, order just shifts around a bit (up a few spots or down a few spots.)

IOW, by objective QB criteria other than passing yardage (skewed by a high-volume passing attack)  he is a top-10 QB and has been for years.

To tie together your point about competing every year with McClougahn's "I don't see special": that's exactly what I was getting at up-thread when I said it's not clear to me McCloughan knows how to put together a championship roster.  He has talent evaluation skills, yes, no question.  But you're damn straight about needing a consistent good QB to compete for a championship regularly, and if he didn't want to pay Cousins asking price 'cuz he's not Drew Brees or Aaron Rodgers, he needed to figure out how to get Drew Brees II or Aaron Rodgers Jr and bring them to Washington.
 


image.thumb.png.d3d8f499191715febe21de32e57948fc.png

 

 

Quote

 

When the Browns write the big check to get Cousins, am I going to be laughing because they overpaid and the Bills have Tyrod?    No.   The Bills have Peterman?  No.   The Bills have some guy they drafted?    No, at least not until that guy turns into a top 10 NFL QB.   

 

A top 10 QB comes along in free agency maybe once every five years.   Brees was the last.   People thought Schaub was one but he busted.   When that guy comes along, he gets overpaid.   That's the way it works.   Brees got overpaid when he signed.   Do you think Saints fans cared?

 

A minor "nit" here.  Schaub was not a free agent until late in his career, when it was already evident "bad things happened" to his throwing control.  The Texans traded 2 - 2nd round picks for him.  In exchange, the Texans got 6 years of solid to very good (sometimes top-10) QB play, and 2 playoff appearances, which is more than they've had anytime since.  I would take a value of "bust" like that, although of course I'd prefer better, for longer, which brings me to a second point:

A team can win, and reach multiple playoffs with a QB who is 'not quite all that' like Schaub or Smith.  But they still need to address the question "at QB, how will we get better?"  Where the Texans went wrong with Schaub was in failing to do that.  Over 10 years, 3 draft picks (7, 5, and 4 round) used on TJ Yates and Tom Savage, are not the answer.
 

Quote

When you have a top 10 QB and his contract runs out, you have to pay him top 5 money to keep him, because if you don't, someone else will.   That's simply the price.   He doesn't get the highest salary in the league because people think he's the best QB in the league.   He gets it because someone will pay it.   Flacco got it, and it turned out to be a mistake.   Ryan got it, and it wasn't a mistake.   

 

If you don't pay the price, you don't get the guy.   

 

 

Edited by Hapless Bills Fan
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14 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

To your point re: top 10 QB and Cousins. 

I took my QB Draft Stats data and filtered it for QB who have more than 1 1/2 seasons of starts for insufficient data (this does eliminate Goff, Wentz, and Garappolo), and for QB who have thrown for <220 YPG on average for not generating enough passing attack (this eliminates Kaepernick, Smith, and Prescott and would eliminate Tyrod).

 

Then I sorted it for YPA, TD/INT ratio, and completion percentage, as three stats widely reported as correlating to a successful passing attack and to wins.

 I don't think many would argue with the names on that list except perhaps near the bottom, for Winston and Mariota.

Cousins shows up on that list at #6.  If you sort in a different order, he's still on the list, order just shifts around a bit (up a few spots or down a few spots.)

IOW, by objective QB criteria other than passing yardage (skewed by a high-volume passing attack)  he is a top-10 QB and has been for years.

To tie together your point about competing every year with McClougahn's "I don't see special": that's exactly what I was getting at up-thread when I said it's not clear to me McCloughan knows how to put together a championship roster.  He has talent evaluation skills, yes, no question.  But you're damn straight about needing a consistent good QB to compete for a championship regularly, and if he didn't want to pay Cousins asking price 'cuz he's not Drew Brees or Aaron Rodgers, he needed to figure out how to get Drew Brees II or Aaron Rodgers Jr and bring them to Washington.
 


image.thumb.png.d3d8f499191715febe21de32e57948fc.png

 

 

 

A minor "nit" here.  Schaub was not a free agent until late in his career, when it was already evident "bad things happened" to his throwing control.  The Texans traded 2 - 2nd round picks for him.  In exchange, the Texans got 6 years of solid to very good (sometimes top-10) QB play, and 2 playoff appearances, which is more than they've had anytime since.  I would take a value of "bust" like that, although of course I'd prefer better, for longer, which brings me to a second point:

A team can win, and reach multiple playoffs with a QB who is 'not quite all that' like Schaub or Smith.  But they still need to address the question "at QB, how will we get better?"  Where the Texans went wrong with Schaub was in failing to do that.  Over 10 years, 3 draft picks (7, 5, and 4 round) used on TJ Yates and Tom Savage, are not the answer.
 

 

Can't read the data, but I'm not surprised. 

 

Thanks about Schaub.   

 

The real point is that you don't many shots at guys who have had success in the league.  

 

Heck, when Brees was a free agent, people were worried that he'd bust.  

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