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My Case For: Lamar Jackson


Alphadawg7

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please no repeats of buffalo billstupidity. get a real qb who can think on his feet :who can get the ball snapped when you know the opponent is looking to review a play.

22 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

Cover1 is breaking down Jackson through a series of tweets.

 

nice play  nice throw...big deal. that play should be routine but we in buffalo are so used to crap QBing that we get all googly eyed over a 'nice' play.

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2 minutes ago, Tcali said:

please no repeats of buffalo billstupidity. get a real qb who can think on his feet :who can get the ball snapped when you know the opponent is looking to review a play.

Hey do you want Fitzmagic back?  He's pretty smart.  Had a fantastic Wonderelic.

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4 minutes ago, Tcali said:

please no repeats of buffalo billstupidity. get a real qb who can think on his feet :who can get the ball snapped when you know the opponent is looking to review a play.

nice play  nice throw...big deal. that play should be routine but we in buffalo are so used to crap QBing that we get all googly eyed over a 'nice' play.

 

Curious comment when the point was how good his ball skills are which is just one aspect of playing the position.  

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...have not seen him play, but you guys are giving me the impression he is an upscale TT who does similar improvisations with the football versus what may be termed a more typical QB role.......how far off am I ?........if I'm close, are you comfortable with that style or want something more typical (whatever the hell that means today)?........

Edited by OldTimeAFLGuy
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1 minute ago, Tcali said:

Yes I want Fitzpatrick back. You nailed it.

 

Well then back your argument then.  Other posters have offered their opinion, but have made points to support their stance.  You have offered nothing but seeming disdain for the Buffalo Bills in general, and in Lamar Jackson.

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I would rather have a QB like Bree's, Brady or Big Ben that are amazing at feeling pressure and can move around in the pocket to buy time for WR to get open. These guys always seem to move to the right spot in the pocket while still looking down field for developing routes. Their are a few more QB that also very good at this.

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2 minutes ago, Call_Of_Ktulu said:

I would rather have a QB like Bree's, Brady or Big Ben that are amazing at feeling pressure and can move around in the pocket to buy time for WR to get open. These guys always seem to move to the right spot in the pocket while still looking down field for developing routes. Their are a few more QB that also very good at this.

right on. thats the type of QB that we need. The bills have earned the fans disdain by not having a good QB for over 20 yrs.-And we dont need to be banking on the type of QB who got by in college with athleticism that doesnt translate into NFL success.

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6 minutes ago, Call_Of_Ktulu said:

I would rather have a QB like Bree's, Brady or Big Ben that are amazing at feeling pressure and can move around in the pocket to buy time for WR to get open. These guys always seem to move to the right spot in the pocket while still looking down field for developing routes. Their are a few more QB that also very good at this.

 

You do realize they didn't come out of college like that though right?  It's about development.  Some guys mature and have this feel for the pocket and others don't.  And also realize that they have top tier OL's, good weapons at WR.  Who's scaring the defense for us at WR?  Is there a defense saying we can't blitz because we don't want to single or double cover anyone?  NO.  Our offense is not set up the way those QB's offenses are set up.  We have nobody that forces teams to stay in two deep.  There's just so much more to QB's success than just the QB is superman and can do amazing stuff.

Edited by NewEraBills
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59 minutes ago, NewEraBills said:

 

You do realize they didn't come out of college like that though right?  It's about development.  Some guys mature and have this feel for the pocket and others don't.  And also realize that they have top tier OL's, good weapons at WR.  Who's scaring the defense for us at WR?  Is there a defense saying we can't blitz because we don't want to single or double cover anyone?  NO.  Our offense is not set up the way those QB's offenses are set up.  We have nobody that forces teams to stay in two deep.  There's just so much more to QB's success than just the QB is superman and can do amazing stuff.

Great post here. Without Cooks, Ginn Jr or Bryant to take the top off, those are different offenses. Still effective due to the immense talent but less explosive without the deep threat.

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I'm not a fan of guys who scramble and run a lot.

 

I don't hate Lamar, I think he'll be a solid NFL QB actually.

 

I just am terrified at a guy his size running through midfield, trying to jump/spin move, and getting broken in half.

 

Guys in the NFL typically (especially linebackers and safeties) don't miss like they do in college.

 

You mistime that spin and they will smash you.

 

Cam weighed 30+ lbs more than Lamar when he entered the NFL

Hell rgiii had 10-12 lbs on Jackson.

 

His skills don't really scare me, it's him getting leveled and broken that do.

 

 

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9 hours ago, LeGOATski said:

Is that not some of the worst footwork you've ever seen? Not setting, opening his hips too wide, and his spacing is all over the place.

 

No wonder some of his throws are "hitting the medical tent."

 

Dude needs a lot of work and should not be drafted in the 1st, although he most likely will.

 

Why do so many people attribute athleticism and and a strong arm to upside? We should know by now that the QBs with the highest upside are the ones that can distribute the ball accurately to all parts of the field.

 

Pocket control (awareness, movement skills, composure) is a necessity.

 

Mobility is a big plus, but Rodgers, Smith, even Peterman - type mobility is all you need.

 

I guess that's why we all see things differently, I didn't see terrible footwork at all. He looked pretty fluent even under distress most of that game but you're entitled to your own opinion. Like I've stated I'm not usually a fan of running QB's but Jackson has a chance to be a really special player. Accuracy can be coached up, you can't teach arm strength and that's why it's sought after, that and it's a passing league, if you can throw darts down the field I'd say that's an advantage over a noodle armed QB is it not?

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20 minutes ago, BuffaloBillsGospel said:

 

I guess that's why we all see things differently, I didn't see terrible footwork at all. He looked pretty fluent even under distress most of that game but you're entitled to your own opinion. Like I've stated I'm not usually a fan of running QB's but Jackson has a chance to be a really special player. Accuracy can be coached up, you can't teach arm strength and that's why it's sought after, that and it's a passing league, if you can throw darts down the field I'd say that's an advantage over a noodle armed QB is it not?

No one's arguing that.

 

However, at the point where you have adequate arm strength, increasing arm strength does very little for improving the QB's game. It's more about mechanics and football intelligence.

 

How long does it take to teach a QB accuracy?

20 minutes ago, BuffaloBillsGospel said:

 

Edited by LeGOATski
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1 hour ago, SouthNYfan said:

I'm not a fan of guys who scramble and run a lot.

 

I don't hate Lamar, I think he'll be a solid NFL QB actually.

 

I just am terrified at a guy his size running through midfield, trying to jump/spin move, and getting broken in half.

 

Guys in the NFL typically (especially linebackers and safeties) don't miss like they do in college.

 

You mistime that spin and they will smash you.

 

Cam weighed 30+ lbs more than Lamar when he entered the NFL

Hell rgiii had 10-12 lbs on Jackson.

 

His skills don't really scare me, it's him getting leveled and broken that do.

 

 

That had best be dealt with via NFL Coaching.
But the pain might well be the same when your center and or guards miss a LB blitz, or a big safety.
Putting a young or new NFL QB in a position for long term success is on Coaching period. What the Kid does with the said Coaching is another story altogether.

 But i do agree mostly.

another reason to let him ride the pine and see the game up close for awhile. I vote for that method with Any QB Bills draft

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Must say I guess different people see different things looking at the tape.

What I (and some others) see is a young passer who shows remarkable composure. What he has most of is poise in the pocket. His feet are extremely quiet. He doesn't bail until he really has no other choice. In the meantime he keeps his eyes downfield. There is no comparison between Jackson's and Allen's pocket presence. At this time, Jackson's is far superior. And it only really makes sense to compare prospects that run pro style offences for pocket presence. One way to think of the major questions concerning spread QBs is whether they will have any at the next level at all. Their experience in spread college Os doesnt really tell us. 

There is an issue regarding footwork that he needs to work on. His stance in the pocket sometimes has his feet too close together. The reason for this habit may be his arm strength that lets him throw a football 60 yards with the flick of the wrist. He knows he can get it there without setting up text book proper so he doesn't bother doing it. The problem is that this leads  him in his throwing motion to push off his front rather than his back foot which in turn causes his ball to sail at times and which I suspect generally makes him, for now, less accurate than he should be. But this is not the kind of flaw that is difficult to correct. 

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On 1/20/2018 at 5:35 PM, Johnny Hammersticks said:

He has improved every year as a passer, and by all accounts is a film room junky.  Very hard working, motivated kid.

Film Room Junkie? I like that sound of that!!

1 hour ago, LeGOATski said:

No one's arguing that.

 

However, at the point where you have adequate arm strength, increasing arm strength does very little for improving the QB's game. It's more about mechanics and football intelligence.

 

How long does it take to teach a QB accuracy?

From what I have seen teaching accuracy takes longer than you have i a career. Not one time have I ever seen anyone be taught how to throw accurately by an NFL staff.

 

To me that claim is just a QB coach saying yes, because if he says no he can't, you get another QB coach who is willing to lie.

 

Minor improvements yes. Big improvement to accuracy I say again, I never saw it yet.

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24 minutes ago, BadLandsMeanie said:

Film Room Junkie? I like that sound of that!!

From what I have seen teaching accuracy takes longer than you have i a career. Not one time have I ever seen anyone be taught how to throw accurately by an NFL staff.

 

To me that claim is just a QB coach saying yes, because if he says no he can't, you get another QB coach who is willing to lie.

 

Minor improvements yes. Big improvement to accuracy I say again, I never saw it yet.

Me neither. It's developed from the moment you start throwing a football. 

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I was watching highlights of Jackson yesterday actually and would totally be on board with nabbing him. Lamar looks like Vick 2.0 and that man was a dangerous weapon in Atlanta. Jackson has the same delivery of the ball, tight and on a frozen rope. 

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I am intrigued by Jackson.  He has a very nice arm and is a good passer, unlike Tyrod, whatever other posters might say.  I would like to see him become less dependent on running.  He does way too much of it, and I think that could create a lot of risk of injury at the next level.  I would also like to see him put on about 20 lbs of muscle.  I wouldn't have any problem at all if he ended up as a Bill.  

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3 hours ago, 3rdand12 said:

That had best be dealt with via NFL Coaching.
But the pain might well be the same when your center and or guards miss a LB blitz, or a big safety.
Putting a young or new NFL QB in a position for long term success is on Coaching period. What the Kid does with the said Coaching is another story altogether.

 But i do agree mostly.

another reason to let him ride the pine and see the game up close for awhile. I vote for that method with Any QB Bills draft

 

I agree on this for the most part, except on the blitz part.

While those can be bad, a QB moving full speed one direction into a linebacker/safety going full speed into him from the other direction is definitely a harder hit, it's just physics.

 

But yeah...

I wouldn't be terribly upset with Jackson, I'm just fearful of ANY running QBs shelf life.

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15 hours ago, joesixpack said:

 

So basically your thought process is “anyone who disagrees with me is a racist.” You’re an idiot.

 

No, plenty of people can disagree. Most just have no ability to support their posts.

 

I'm an idiot... You're a !@#$. And you follow me around, put me on ignore, !@#$ boy.

6 hours ago, SouthNYfan said:

I'm not a fan of guys who scramble and run a lot.

 

I don't hate Lamar, I think he'll be a solid NFL QB actually.

 

I just am terrified at a guy his size running through midfield, trying to jump/spin move, and getting broken in half.

 

Guys in the NFL typically (especially linebackers and safeties) don't miss like they do in college.

 

You mistime that spin and they will smash you.

 

Cam weighed 30+ lbs more than Lamar when he entered the NFL

Hell rgiii had 10-12 lbs on Jackson.

 

His skills don't really scare me, it's him getting leveled and broken that do.

 

 

 

Rg3 also had a knee injury already. You're talking about concern for guys getting hit who are built more solidly than most rbs or wrs.

 

Injuries happen, can we stop avoiding people because they might get hurt? They traded a wr in part because of his injury history and in return 3 guys they traded for all got injured. What Whaley said was right, this sport is something not meant to be played by humans. You take take the most talent and roll the dice.

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8 minutes ago, Ol Dirty B said:

 

No, plenty of people can disagree. Most just have no ability to support their posts.

 

I'm an idiot... You're a !@#$. And you follow me around, put me on ignore, !@#$ boy.

 

Rg3 also had a knee injury already. You're talking about concern for guys getting hit who are built more solidly than most rbs or wrs.

 

Injuries happen, can we stop avoiding people because they might get hurt? They traded a wr in part because of his injury history and in return 3 guys they traded for all got injured. What Whaley said was right, this sport is something not meant to be played by humans. You take take the most talent and roll the dice.

 

I don't disagree with what you're saying, but some things are higher risk than others.

 

Driving a car is statistically one of the more dangerous activities.

Driving 70mph in a snow storm is higher risk than driving 45mph on a clear day.

Even if you do crash doing 45mph on a clear day, the chances of a severe injury are much lower than a crash at 75mph.

 

A quarterback who is 215 lbs who frequently runs and gets creamed by linebackers and safeties is a much higher risk for injury, as well as a higher risk for a major injury, than a 230+ lb pocket passer.

 

So yes, anybody can get hurt.

A scrambling QB just has a higher chance of it, and more likely to be worse of an injury.

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2 minutes ago, SouthNYfan said:

 

I don't disagree with what you're saying, but some things are higher risk than others.

 

Driving a car is statistically one of the more dangerous activities.

Driving 70mph in a snow storm is higher risk than driving 45mph on a clear day.

Even if you do crash doing 45mph on a clear day, the chances of a severe injury are much lower than a crash at 75mph.

 

A quarterback who is 215 lbs who frequently runs and gets creamed by linebackers and safeties is a much higher risk for injury, as well as a higher risk for a major injury, than a 230+ lb pocket passer.

 

So yes, anybody can get hurt.

A scrambling QB just has a higher chance of it, and more likely to be worse of an injury.

 

It's a fair point, I understand what you're saying. I'm going against conventional wisdom I just injuries are part of the game. I could be wrong, but I feel like Vick was rarely injured. Then you have guys like Jake locker who can't stay healthy. It's just a crap shoot in my opinion. 

 

If Lamar could be a great prospect on the board when they draft, I just hope they don't pass on him because he may get injured trying to make a play. I'm fine with passing on him, I just hope it's based on something they see in his potential rather than he may get hurt. Like I said, I'd rather just roll the dice with the highest upside available to me.

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Jackson would need to be redshirted for two years if the Bills draft him.

 

He needs to put on some muscle and needs to learn how to read an NFL defense.

 

I think he can accomplish those things, but sitting him is priority number one.

 

So, I can see the Bills going after Alex Smith or Sam Bradford to bridge the gap.

 

Lamar Jackson does have the tools to be a big time NFL QB, but development is everything with him.

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7 hours ago, Ol Dirty B said:

 

It's a fair point, I understand what you're saying. I'm going against conventional wisdom I just injuries are part of the game. I could be wrong, but I feel like Vick was rarely injured. Then you have guys like Jake locker who can't stay healthy. It's just a crap shoot in my opinion. 

 

If Lamar could be a great prospect on the board when they draft, I just hope they don't pass on him because he may get injured trying to make a play. I'm fine with passing on him, I just hope it's based on something they see in his potential rather than he may get hurt. Like I said, I'd rather just roll the dice with the highest upside available to me.

 

Fair!!

 

Vick had very little injuries prior to his prison time.

He was also the greatest runner of any QB in league history.

His agility and skill in making people miss was just crazy.

When he returned from prison he was a better thrower, but was now taking direct hits when he ran, most likely due to losing a step or two.

He had multiple concussions, rib, and hamstring injuries, all causing missed games.

 

I'm not arguing with you by the way, just a little Vick history:)

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There’s clearly something about him that’s turning teams off. His arm strength, speed, and numbers would indicate a first round pick, but he’s not being talked about that way. 

 

Like I said before, he kind of reminds me of Geno Smith. Geno lit up the college world until defenses figured him out.  Jackson has the legs to keep defenses honest, so it wasn’t as apparent. 

 

In the NFL, I think his speed gets neutralized and his skills as a passer will be needed. 

 

Basically Tyrod 

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10 minutes ago, Virgil said:

There’s clearly something about him that’s turning teams off. His arm strength, speed, and numbers would indicate a first round pick, but he’s not being talked about that way. 

 

Like I said before, he kind of reminds me of Geno Smith. Geno lit up the college world until defenses figured him out.  Jackson has the legs to keep defenses honest, so it wasn’t as apparent. 

 

In the NFL, I think his speed gets neutralized and his skills as a passer will be needed. 

 

Basically Tyrod 

 

Except colleges never really figured out Geno

His statistics were crazy good

So was his raw talent and athleticism

The issue with Geno was his mindset.

During a precombine interview he was asked "what's the biggest thing you think you need to learn or work on to make the step to the NFL?"

His response? "I don't need to learn anything, there is nothing an NFL coach could teach me I don't already know"

I remember hearing that and thinking "this guy is going to get roasted in the NFL"

 

Jackson is a work-o-holic

He is a film room junkie

He wants to succeed

He knows to do that you need to put in work and study and practice

(Apparently so is Taylor)

 

Big differences though:

Tyrod Taylor was also not even close the level Jackson is at entering the draft.

Sure they are both mobile QBs, that's about it.

 

Tyrod wasn't half the prospect entering the draft that Jackson is.

 

This is not me endorsing Jackson as our pick by the way.

As I said above, I'd prefer a more pocket oriented passer.

My point is to say that Jackson is "basically tyrod" is just an over generalization because they are both running QBs.

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Living in the Louisville area, I watched Lamar Jackson a fair amount in the past two years and to me he's another QB of the Tebow mold in that he was a great college QB who won't translate well to the pros. 

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42 minutes ago, SouthNYfan said:

 

Except colleges never really figured out Geno

His statistics were crazy good

So was his raw talent and athleticism

The issue with Geno was his mindset.

During a precombine interview he was asked "what's the biggest thing you think you need to learn or work on to make the step to the NFL?"

His response? "I don't need to learn anything, there is nothing an NFL coach could teach me I don't already know"

I remember hearing that and thinking "this guy is going to get roasted in the NFL"

 

 

Mindset and decision making.  Geno threw an absolutely lovely ball.  Had a nice smooth delivery.... problem is he was bad at deciding where to throw it.  Indeed it was watching Geno in college at a time when people were thinking potential top 10 pick and not understanding it that made me decide I was going to try and start evaluating propsects myself in 2014..... so I have him to thank / blame.  

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1 hour ago, SouthNYfan said:

 

Except colleges never really figured out Geno

His statistics were crazy good

So was his raw talent and athleticism

The issue with Geno was his mindset.

During a precombine interview he was asked "what's the biggest thing you think you need to learn or work on to make the step to the NFL?"

His response? "I don't need to learn anything, there is nothing an NFL coach could teach me I don't already know"

I remember hearing that and thinking "this guy is going to get roasted in the NFL"

 

Jackson is a work-o-holic

He is a film room junkie

He wants to succeed

He knows to do that you need to put in work and study and practice

(Apparently so is Taylor)

 

Big differences though:

Tyrod Taylor was also not even close the level Jackson is at entering the draft.

Sure they are both mobile QBs, that's about it.

 

Tyrod wasn't half the prospect entering the draft that Jackson is.

 

This is not me endorsing Jackson as our pick by the way.

As I said above, I'd prefer a more pocket oriented passer.

My point is to say that Jackson is "basically tyrod" is just an over generalization because they are both running QBs.

 

I respectfully disagree. If you look at the back half of Geno’s final college season, he was absolutely shut down. He could barely put up any points. 

 

I was a big Geno fan and was shocked to see how much defenses figured him out. That’s the main reason why he fell in the draft 

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44 minutes ago, Virgil said:

 

I respectfully disagree. If you look at the back half of Geno’s final college season, he was absolutely shut down. He could barely put up any points. 

 

I was a big Geno fan and was shocked to see how much defenses figured him out. That’s the main reason why he fell in the draft 

 

Do you even look at game logs before posting?

 

He threw for 298/ypg (1788 yards) over his final 6 games

 

He threw for 16 td and 4 int

 

Oh, Geno also wasn't a rushing qb, totaling only 151 yards in 13 games his final season

 

His final season as a whole was 71.2% comp, 4205 yards, 42 td 6 int

 

You have no clue in regards to him as a college QB and what he did.

 

His attitude and lack of willingness to learn was what killed his draft stock.

 

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50 minutes ago, Virgil said:

 

I respectfully disagree. If you look at the back half of Geno’s final college season, he was absolutely shut down. He could barely put up any points. 

 

I was a big Geno fan and was shocked to see how much defenses figured him out. That’s the main reason why he fell in the draft 

Yeah, his numbers fell off a cliff the 2nd half of the year and WVU went on a huge losing streak.

11 minutes ago, SouthNYfan said:

 

Do you even look at game logs before posting?

 

He threw for 298/ypg (1788 yards) over his final 6 games

 

He threw for 16 td and 4 int

 

Oh, Geno also wasn't a rushing qb, totaling only 151 yards in 13 games his final season

 

His final season as a whole was 71.2% comp, 4205 yards, 42 td 6 int

 

You have no clue in regards to him as a college QB and what he did.

 

His attitude and lack of willingness to learn was what killed his draft stock.

 

Geno went from averaging 379 yards over the first 6 games with a 75% completion percentage, 25 TDs, and 0 INTs to 275 yards, 67%, 17 TDs, and 6 INTs over the last 7 games. WVU went 5-1 over the first 6 and went 2-5 over the last 7 games.

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20 minutes ago, DCOrange said:

Yeah, his numbers fell off a cliff the 2nd half of the year and WVU went on a huge losing streak.

Geno went from averaging 379 yards over the first 6 games with a 75% completion percentage, 25 TDs, and 0 INTs to 275 yards, 67%, 17 TDs, and 6 INTs over the last 7 games. WVU went 5-1 over the first 6 and went 2-5 over the last 7 games.

That's not "off a cliff" 

300 yards, 67% comp, 17td 6 int is very good

Remove his 8 td game and his first half is close

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20 minutes ago, SouthNYfan said:

That's not "off a cliff" 

300 yards, 67% comp, 17td 6 int is very good

Remove his 8 td game and his first half is close

His passing yards dropped by 100 per game, TDs went from over 4 per game to less than 2.5, and his TD/INT ratio went from 25/0 to less than 3/1. It's a huge drop off without even pointing out that the team as a whole fell off a cliff too. Of course his numbers were still good, but it was indeed a huge drop off.

Edited by DCOrange
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1 minute ago, DCOrange said:

His passing yards dropped by 100 per game, TDs went from over 4 per game to less than 2.5, and his TD/INT ratio went from 25/0 to less than 3/1. It's a huge drop off without even pointing out that the team as a whole fell off a cliff too.

 

It's a big drop off

We can agree to disagree on the cliff

 

My point was that he dropped in the draft because he didn't respond well to the adjustments

 

His mentality was that he was better than anybody else and didn't need to learn anything

 

That's why he dropped

 

The other argument started because somebody equated Jackson to Geno Smith.

 

That's just absurd.

 

Jackson is a hard worker, a film room junkie, and seems willing to learn and grow as a player.

Jackson is also a more mobile QB with a completely different style than Geno.

 

Does that mean he'll be able to adjust?

That's not possible to say.

 

He's also makes better on the fly decisions than tyrod and isn't afraid to throw into traffic or tight spaces.

 

But to say he's another Geno or Tyrod is just false.

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On 1/20/2018 at 5:28 PM, Johnny Hammersticks said:

 

I think LJ is underrated as a passer, and has gotten a lot better at reading defenses and going through his progressions.  His footwork needs some help, which affects his accuracy at times, but this is something that can be fixed.

 

He has rare arm talent, good instincts, and very good pocket presence, IMO.  Very high ceiling, and the athleticism is merely a bonus that will surely reigned in in the NFL.  I’m not saying he’s a sure fire franchise guy, but I think the Tyrod 2.0 cliche is growing tiresome.

 

Except it's not a bad comparison. You're talking about 2 guys with elite physical skills who can't be consistently good at passing the ball. I understand you'd get tired of it if you're a fan, but this guy is far from a finished product as a passer. I'd rather have someone with a more limited physical skill set who completes >65% of his passes consistently. The guy's completion percentages in college are 54, 56, 60 and don't let that 60 fool you, he completed more passes for fewer yards his last year, which means we're looking at more short-range passes. 

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1 minute ago, ndirish1978 said:

 

Except it's not a bad comparison. You're talking about 2 guys with elite physical skills who can't be consistently good at passing the ball. I understand you'd get tired of it if you're a fan, but this guy is far from a finished product as a passer. I'd rather have someone with a more limited physical skill set who completes >65% of his passes consistently. The guy's completion percentages in college are 54, 56, 60 and don't let that 60 fool you, he completed more passes for fewer yards his last year, which means we're looking at more short-range passes. 

 

I also would prefer a QB with more limited physical skills that completes >65% of his passes.  I disagree, however, with the TT comparison, as Jackson is a far better passer than Tyrod was coming out of college, and seemingly more physically gifted.  It also is fair to say, IMHO, that LJ has improved as a passer tremendously over the past three years.  Certainly not a finished product yet, as newly drafted college QB's rarely are, but I'm trying to think of QB's that may be available at picks 21-22 in the first round.  I do not want to trade up for a QB.  And if Jackson or Mayfield are there at 21-22, I think both of those players warrant consideration.

 

FTR...my QB's are ranked as follows in order of my preference:

 

1. Josh Rosen

2. Sam Darnold

3. Josh Allen

4. Baker Mayfield

5. Lamar Jackson

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1 minute ago, Johnny Hammersticks said:

 

I also would prefer a QB with more limited physical skills that completes >65% of his passes.  I disagree, however, with the TT comparison, as Jackson is a far better passer than Tyrod was coming out of college, and seemingly more physically gifted.  It also is fair to say, IMHO, that LJ has improved as a passer tremendously over the past three years.  Certainly not a finished product yet, as newly drafted college QB's rarely are, but I'm trying to think of QB's that may be available at picks 21-22 in the first round.  I do not want to trade up for a QB.  And if Jackson or Mayfield are there at 21-22, I think both of those players warrant consideration.

 

FTR...my QB's are ranked as follows in order of my preference:

 

1. Josh Rosen

2. Sam Darnold

3. Josh Allen

4. Baker Mayfield

5. Lamar Jackson

 

We have the same top 5, though I'd probably switch Allen and Mayfield. I am in the "trade everything to move up and get Darnold or Rosen camp, so we're probably at odds there. Can you recall the last time picking the fifth best QB in the class worked out? How many drafts provide us with more than 2 starting quality QBs?

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