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The Rosen Era Has Begun in Arizona


26CornerBlitz

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6 minutes ago, TheTruthHurts said:

I remember during the injury debate with Rosen I said Allen probably gets hurt 1st, and look at that. Both players won't survive in the NFL. Allen thinks he's a running back. Has to protect his body better. 

 

Oh I'll definitely come off that position as soon as Josh Allen anticipates a throw. 

 

That's going to take a while with him still having room to grow in pre and post snap diagnosis among other areas. 

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Not sure I fully understand the Rosen infatuation, one way or the other. Nothing Rosen does or doesn't do lends itself to the decision to trade up and select Josh Allen. Allen will rise or fall on his own merits, whether Rosen craps the bed like last night or has a great game, regardless. 

 

It says a lot about us as fans if we need to celebrate the failure of Rosen because it somehow validates drafting Allen; it simply doesn't. No matter how much we wish it did.

 

People judge these games like a sprint when it's a marathon barely off the starting line. 

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3 hours ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

What rookie QB would have done well behind that OL last night against Denver's front?  None of them I'd say.  

 

It was Cincy preseason week 3 bad and JA was completely overwhelmed. Couldn't even get rid of the ball.

 

JA has been pretty well protected. I think they've done some things in terms of sliding protection which limits the route runners, but at least he's had time.

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5 minutes ago, K-9 said:

Not sure I fully understand the Rosen infatuation, one way or the other. Nothing Rosen does or doesn't do lends itself to the decision to trade up and select Josh Allen. Allen will rise or fall on his own merits, whether Rosen craps the bed like last night or has a great game, regardless. 

 

It says a lot about us as fans if we need to celebrate the failure of Rosen because it somehow validates drafting Allen; it simply doesn't. No matter how much we wish it did.

 

People judge these games like a sprint when it's a marathon barely off the starting line. 

Nailed it - sadly we'll always be comparing ourselves to everyone else. While you can draw few universal commonalities across teams in the league, saying we passed up on a QB or any other player doesn't mean anything. Had we drafted Rosen, there's no guarantee he plays the way he's playing now, or that anything plays out the way it is now.

 

We also want to do this to validate our own beliefs, or disbelief in our FO and other components of the organization, but mostly for the reason you write above. The other piece is the insanely flawed logic that all QBs drafted this year should progress at the same rate. In what world could that be true? Even with 5 identical QBs in every single atomic way, drafted by 5 different teams will all develop differently and at different rates. Allen was always going to take the longest, and likely wouldn't have started until at least next year in our FO's ideal world. The sky is falling routine after six weeks is getting old. Be critical of his performance and development, sure, but calling it after so little efficacious data has been presented is pretty pathetic.

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3 minutes ago, LSHMEAB said:

 

It was Cincy preseason week 3 bad and JA was completely overwhelmed. Couldn't even get rid of the ball.

 

JA has been pretty well protected. I think they've done some things in terms of sliding protection which limits the route runners, but at least he's had time.

 

The last couple of weeks the Bills' OL has actually been decent and there have been plays to be made in the passing game.  Allen was misdiagnosing too many of them.  Not unexpected given how much he has to learn.  I'm hoping he reads and decides faster after his time watching Anderson. 

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1 hour ago, joesixpack said:

 

I. Thou shalt not point out Josh Rosen's glaring deficiencies.

II. Thou shalt only point out Josh Allen's glaring deficiencies.

III. Thou shalt criticize the front office for taking Josh Allen instead of Josh Rosen.

IV. Thou shalt not attempt to reconcile these seemingly disparate commandments, especially when comparing the nearly identical output of the two QBs.

 

Now, I only need 6 more. ?

 

 

Thou shalt expect 1st round drafted rookie QB's on crappy teams to immediately play at a high level and declare them busts when they don't. 

Edited by keepthefaith
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13 minutes ago, K-9 said:

Not sure I fully understand the Rosen infatuation, one way or the other. Nothing Rosen does or doesn't do lends itself to the decision to trade up and select Josh Allen. Allen will rise or fall on his own merits, whether Rosen craps the bed like last night or has a great game, regardless. 

 

It says a lot about us as fans if we need to celebrate the failure of Rosen because it somehow validates drafting Allen; it simply doesn't. No matter how much we wish it did.

 

People judge these games like a sprint when it's a marathon barely off the starting line. 

The 'celebrating Rosen's failure' is as much a nudge to everyone who's so quick to label Allen busto as it is a comparison of the two. 

 

Can't speak for everyone, but I'm just highlighting the dichotomy between responses to bad performances; Rosen's afforded the appropriate (in my mind) amount of leeway, Allen is most definitively not. I don't see any harm in pointing that out.

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4 minutes ago, keepthefaith said:

 

Thou shalt expect 1st round drafted rookie QB's on crappy teams to immediately play at a high level and declare them busts when they don't. 

 

I thought of another one! "Thou shalt declare McBeane incapable of understanding offense after one offseason together."
 

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Cardinals’ Dreadful Loss to Broncos isn’t Josh Rosen’s Fault

 

By CONOR ORR  October 18, 2018
 
It’s a shame to think about the number of talented quarterbacks who were drafted onto bad teams with bad offenses, who then floundered and had to shoulder the psychological weight of a “bust” label that was not entirely their fault for the rest of their lives.
 
When a young quarterback is in a situation with no hope, no respite in sight, it’s easy to spot. Josh Rosen was there Thursday night amid a 45–10 loss where he was intercepted three times (two went back for touchdowns), and sacked six times. The Cardinals have been there all season.
 
Arizona came into a prime time game against the Broncos ranked last in yards per game, second to last in points per game and last in third down percentage (22%). The team did not successfully convert a third down until the 9:57 minute mark of the third quarter against Denver.
 
While the trappings of a disaster game were present early with the fluke tipped pass, intercepted and returned for a touchdown, this was a game that may have been over before kickoff. A spin through Rosen film this year shows so many doomed concepts. Sure, there is the jet sweep tossed in for modernity, but the offense looks like something straight out of 1999 (and not the good parts of 1999 that Jon Gruden spent all offseason rhapsodizing about). So few of Rosen’s plays have any diverging action, or something to take the pressure off the focus of the play. There is almost never the mouth-agape, wide-open pass. Anything that isn’t a simplistic, muddled slant over the middle seems like a forever-developing deep route that would almost assure Rosen on his backside by the time it was finished.
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5 minutes ago, joesixpack said:

 

I thought of another one! "Thou shalt declare McBeane incapable of understanding offense after one offseason together."
 

This idea that McDermott doesn't "understand offense" is absurd when you think about it. As a life long defensive coach/DC, he has spent his career breaking down thousands of hours worth of offense. It's inconceivable that he doesn't understand offense, especially when he's had some success in devising schemes to stop them. 

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13 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

The 'celebrating Rosen's failure' is as much a nudge to everyone who's so quick to label Allen busto as it is a comparison of the two. 

 

Can't speak for everyone, but I'm just highlighting the dichotomy between responses to bad performances; Rosen's afforded the appropriate (in my mind) amount of leeway, Allen is most definitively not. I don't see any harm in pointing that out.

I appreciate the insight here. But there is a segment of the fan base that delights in Rosen's failures because that somehow shows he's worse than our guy. And that is an entirely illogical approach. 

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45 minutes ago, TheTruthHurts said:

 

Oh I'll definitely come off that position as soon as Josh Allen anticipates a throw. 

 

Then you should've come off of it the second Allen through a perfect blitz beater for a would-be TD against Minnesota on 3rd down that Benjamin dropped.

 

Just sayin'

24 minutes ago, TheTruthHurts said:

Come on. A 1st read slant? A JV QB makes that throw. Why are our expectations so low for QB's? 

 

Ah, so it's not "as soon as he anticipates a throw"...it's "as soon as he anticipates a throw that I feel like acknowledging"

 

 

9 minutes ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

Cardinals’ Dreadful Loss to Broncos isn’t Josh Rosen’s Fault

 

By CONOR ORR  October 18, 2018
 
It’s a shame to think about the number of talented quarterbacks who were drafted onto bad teams with bad offenses, who then floundered and had to shoulder the psychological weight of a “bust” label that was not entirely their fault for the rest of their lives.
 
When a young quarterback is in a situation with no hope, no respite in sight, it’s easy to spot. Josh Rosen was there Thursday night amid a 45–10 loss where he was intercepted three times (two went back for touchdowns), and sacked six times. The Cardinals have been there all season.
 
Arizona came into a prime time game against the Broncos ranked last in yards per game, second to last in points per game and last in third down percentage (22%). The team did not successfully convert a third down until the 9:57 minute mark of the third quarter against Denver.
 
While the trappings of a disaster game were present early with the fluke tipped pass, intercepted and returned for a touchdown, this was a game that may have been over before kickoff. A spin through Rosen film this year shows so many doomed concepts. Sure, there is the jet sweep tossed in for modernity, but the offense looks like something straight out of 1999 (and not the good parts of 1999 that Jon Gruden spent all offseason rhapsodizing about). So few of Rosen’s plays have any diverging action, or something to take the pressure off the focus of the play. There is almost never the mouth-agape, wide-open pass. Anything that isn’t a simplistic, muddled slant over the middle seems like a forever-developing deep route that would almost assure Rosen on his backside by the time it was finished.

 

I've got to ask: earlier in this thread, you said that people making excuses for Allen was a defense mechanism.

 

Whether you mean to be doing it or not, the last few pages read an awful lot like what people on this board are saying in defense of Allen's less-than-stellar work on the field...I'm sure you've thought this through, so I'll ask: what's the difference?

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4 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:

 

Then you should've come off of it the second Allen through a perfect blitz beater for a would-be TD against Minnesota on 3rd down that Benjamin dropped.

 

Just sayin'

 

Ah, so it's not "as soon as he anticipates a throw"...it's "as soon as he anticipates a throw that I feel like acknowledging"

 

I've got to ask: earlier in this thread, you said that people making excuses for Allen was a defense mechanism.

 

Whether you mean to be doing it or not, the last few pages read an awful lot like what people on this board are saying in defense of Allen's less-than-stellar work on the field...I'm sure you've thought this through, so I'll ask: what's the difference?

 

I have said repeatedly in multiple threads that Allen was put in a bad situation with a poor supporting cast, but that doesn't excuse the areas that he needs to show growth in. Same goes for Rosen, who didn't play well last night with some poor throws and ball security issues. 

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6 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:

 

 

Whether you mean to be doing it or not, the last few pages read an awful lot like what people on this board are saying in defense of Allen's less-than-stellar work on the field...I'm sure you've thought this through, so I'll ask: what's the difference?

This difference is that he wanted Rosen over Allen.

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1 minute ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

So what. I want Allen to succeed, but that does not mean his growth curve has lessened. He has a long way to go. 

So what is that your criticisms, or lack thereof, are driven by your preconceptions.

 

Had Rosen looked good last night, this place would have been lousy with "I told you so!"  Since he looked like Peterman, his supporters resort to the same excuses that Allen supporters use.  It's all very predictable.

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Josh Rosen is a rich mans Nate Peterman. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

J/K....rookies do rookie things. It’s happening to Baker, Darnold, Rosen and obviously Allen. People need to chill out and realize that there are no conclusions to be had on these guys for a while. 

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