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Josh Allen’s bad two years


billvernsays

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12 hours ago, billvernsays said:

The media loves talking about how much better Josh Allen is now compared to his 1st 2 years, like it came outta nowhere and in my opinion that’s simply lazy on their part.


its called a learning curve on a team depleted of offensive talent 

 

if people don’t see that then they are idiots 

 

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I will admit that I thought his progress would be slower, though in my defense I thought the team around him was much better than it was in 2018. I did not see him as special until the first dolphin game when he threw the game winner to Charles Clay perfectly, who then dropped it. It was at that point I knew he was gonna be fun to watch. In his second year it was the Pitt game were I knew he was gonna be special when he threw the dagger to Brown right after they played "Renegade". 

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Josh was great with what he had to work with.  Fans use the ‘josh Allen theorem’ to explain why they should keep their mediocre young qbs around way too long but it is almost always falsely applied because it doesn’t account for how absolutely trash that bills roster was.  Our ‘receivers’ were first in the league in drops and last in the league in separation.  The dude still made Robert foster look like an all pro 

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41 minutes ago, dhgold said:

I remember JA's year two as a mixed bag, showing considerable improvement from year one but still quite lacking as far as precision, consistency and poise. I loved his leadership and intangibles and the fact that he got the heretofore suck-ass Bills to the playoffs but at the end of the season I was on the fence as to whether he was the long term answer. 

 

Sometime around the end of the 2019 regular season (JA's year 2), I had a conversation with a relative who'd recently played in the NFL at a pro-bowl level and who spent a good part of his retirement watching the league. I asked him what he thought of Josh and he said "dude can't play". I tried to defend Josh on the basis of intangibles and improvement while acknowledging he still had much room for improvement, but my relative wasn't buying it. (At the end of Josh's year three, the same relative considered him an elite NFL QB.)

 

The only person I can think of who was convinced JA was the answer after year was Adam Schein.

 

I think your relative was voicing a very common opinion, especially by professionals.   Allen was so far behind the QBs taken before him in 2018 that even the great strides he made in 2019 just made him somewhat "above average".  He was still being dismissed coming into 2020.   There were even some at the beginning of last season who were convinced that he would "regress" in 2021.   What's Allen's done is really remarkable. 

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13 hours ago, mrags said:

I knew Josh was the QB I wanted before the draft. The only other QB I had any interest in, was Mayfield. Which I think got a crap deal in Cleveland. His coaching has been terrible. Story of Cleveland’s life. 
 

With all that said, the Minnesota game is what sealed it for me that he was going to be special. Not just the hurdle. But the scramble and dive to the corner of the end zone. At that point you could just see that he would do anything to win. Anything to carry the team on his back. And he hasn’t disappointed. I actually feel bad for him that he’s been let down by his defense at times and coaching at times. Josh will go down as one of the best to ever play this game when all is said and done. 

Mayfield is a crap deal. His own worst enemy and that’s not gonna change.

Allen, on the other hand, is GOD!

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3 hours ago, TheBrownBear said:

Sorry, but you're wrong.  Given the roster, he was absolutely NOT TERRIBLE in his final six starts of his rookie season.  He put up 13 TDs, averaged 287 ypg and went 3-3 during that season ending stretch with Robert Foster and Zay Jones as his receivers.  (And it would have been a 4-2 record if Clay doesn't drop that gimme at the goal line in Miami).  It wasn't revisionist history or us just relying on the "eyeball test", his stats back up the claim that he was improving and actually fairly good by the end of his rookie year.  Yes, there were still hero ball moments and the accuracy wasn't the best, but, assuming your viewing wasn't colored by a pre-existing agenda, you could clearly see that Josh was going to be a very good player at a minimum.

 

1) I was talking about his rookie season as a whole, not just a 6 game stretch.

2) If we want to cherry pick stats, we can ignore the season finale against Dolphins and then he had 8 TDs in the last 5 games. While an improvement over the first 5 starts prior to the injury that's still nothing to write home about.   

3) In his rookie season Josh had 1 elite game (season finale vs Dolphins), and a number of elite plays scattered throughout the season. I don't think that outweighs the numerous dreadful games (Packers, Titans, Texans, Patriots) or all the rookie mistakes in other games. 

 

I think any objective analysis of his season, as a whole, would show he had a bad year; and that a review of his highlights would show the potential to be an elite QB. 

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7 hours ago, streetkings01 said:

My biggest issue used to be where Allen could throw 10 perfect passes in a row and then throw 1 bad pass and the media and opposing fans would be like “See….see that’s the real Josh Allen right there”…….it definitely used to trigger me!

My son and I used to play "What would people say if Josh Allen had thrown that pass" whenever we were watching non-Bills games.  Certain members of the sports media seem to think that Allen is the only guy to ever throw back across his body or try to drill one into double coverage.

2 hours ago, Utah John said:

I like to compare Allen's attitude to that of other Bills' QBs.  

 

There was a game near the end of Kyle Orton's time here (please don't say that name three times, or he'll come back) when the Bills were down near the end of a game, and Orton had to scramble to the right and get a first down, or the Bills were going to lose.  As this player ran toward the line to gain, two defenders came up to challenge him, and he ran out of bounds short of the line to gain.

 

Put Allen in that situation, and at least one of the defenders will have to make a business decision right there on the spot.

The game against the Bengals early in year 2 was the game that showed me that Allen is one of those guys who simply refuses to lose games.  Now granted, that was not his best game, and they needed a fourth quarter comeback in part because of some of his mistakes.  But that last drive was absolutely clutch.  It also included Knox trucking those guys.

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2 hours ago, Utah John said:

I like to compare Allen's attitude to that of other Bills' QBs.  

 

There was a game near the end of Kyle Orton's time here (please don't say that name three times, or he'll come back) when the Bills were down near the end of a game, and Orton had to scramble to the right and get a first down, or the Bills were going to lose.  As this player ran toward the line to gain, two defenders came up to challenge him, and he ran out of bounds short of the line to gain.

 

Put Allen in that situation, and at least one of the defenders will have to make a business decision right there on the spot.

First Everybody brings up that play... 

 

Second, comparing what Josh would do,  to an old Kyle Orton is apples to oranges 

 

Third it was in the second quarter of the Denver broncos game... Plenty of time left on the clock and like three games left in the season

 

Fourth we were only in playoff contention because kyle Orton saved our season 

 

Fifth, if Orton played hero on that play like you wanted.. he gets carted off the field on a stretcher because he got destroyed and our seasons over anyways 

 

He could have went for the first down but the season would probably be over because his old body would be destroyed

 

 

 

 

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8 minutes ago, DabillsDaBillsDaBills said:

 

1) I was talking about his rookie season as a whole, not just a 6 game stretch.

2) If we want to cherry pick stats, we can ignore the season finale against Dolphins and then he had 8 TDs in the last 5 games. While an improvement over the first 5 starts prior to the injury that's still nothing to write home about.   

3) In his rookie season Josh had 1 elite game (season finale vs Dolphins), and a number of elite plays scattered throughout the season. I don't think that outweighs the numerous dreadful games (Packers, Titans, Texans, Patriots) or all the rookie mistakes in other games. 

 

I think any objective analysis of his season, as a whole, would show he had a bad year; and that a review of his highlights would show the potential to be an elite QB. 

Once you even mentioned stats you lost me.  I hate opinions backed up by QB stats, because stats don't tell me anything.  Let me tell you what i SAW.  I saw glimpses of brilliance, which is what I look for in a rookie QB.  I saw a team that was devoid of offensive talent that as a rookie, Josh carried to 5 wins in 11 starts and it should have been 6 if Peterman didn't lose the Houston game for him. 5 wins in 11 starts with that team was almost a miracle.  I saw him turn an obscure, undrafted WR, Robert Foster, into an NFL receiver.  No other QB in the league, including Aaron Rodgers, has gotten anything out of Foster.  

 

After his rookie year, that you think was bad, I was so impressed that I made future bets on the 2019 Bills including making the playoffs and cashed every one.  See, I watched him light it up against Miami in his rookie finale & because I'm not a stat slave, it reminded me a lot of another QB who had some rough times as a rookie & then the light came on at the end of his rookie year-Eli Manning.  I still remember the people here in 2006 who didn't see Manning play proclaiming JP Losman was better than him-I told them they were very wrong because when I watched Manning play & watched JP play, Manning was a far superior QB.  I guess the stat boys thought becauuse JP had completed 62.5% of his passes in 2006 & Eli had completed 57.7% that JP was better.  

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2 hours ago, Utah John said:

There was a game near the end of Kyle Orton's time here (please don't say that name three times, or he'll come back) when the Bills were down near the end of a game, and Orton had to scramble to the right and get a first down, or the Bills were going to lose.  As this player ran toward the line to gain, two defenders came up to challenge him, and he ran out of bounds short of the line to gain.

 

 

I remember this play. I remembered saying out loud "Fitz would have dove for that". Josh has that same quality. It's been apparent since his rookie year. 

 

 

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4 hours ago, TheBrownBear said:

There were posters that legitimately believed he would be unseated by JAKE FROMM!!!  LOL.

 

Admittedly, I was a "wrong Josh" guy on draft night, but was over it and on the Allen train by the time the season kicked off.   I was a true believer by the end of his first year and believed it was only a matter of time until he became a star in the league.  Look at the putrid offensive roster in 2018.  He was a one man offense down the stretch of that season and still produced a winning (or was it .500) record after the midway point.

I've said it before.  I thought the Bills had something when Allen hit Ray Ray for a TD against the Panthers as a rookie in preseason.  It's here at around 8:40.  Obviously, he had a lot to learn, but when I saw that throw, I knew the Bills had something.   Four years later, we've seen dozens of throws like that.   We still shake our heads and ask how he did that.

 

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2 hours ago, Chandler#81 said:

Mayfield is a crap deal. His own worst enemy and that’s not gonna change.

Allen, on the other hand, is GOD!

Yeah. I pretty much said Allen was a god already. 
 

doesn’t diminish Baker in the least. It Baker is definitely better than what he’s been on the Browns. That organization has screwed him up beyond fixing most likely. 

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2 minutes ago, mrags said:

Yeah. I pretty much said Allen was a god already. 
 

doesn’t diminish Baker in the least. It Baker is definitely better than what he’s been on the Browns. That organization has screwed him up beyond fixing most likely. 

 

I gotta disagree with you on Lil' Baker.

 

I do agree that the Browns are a shitshow.  However, that didn't stop Matt Stafford from putting up 5K yards/year whilst in Detroit.  Sure, the team never won, but Stafford still managed to be what I consider elite.

 

Baker is too small, too slow and too much of a douche to be any good in this league.  I do think he's a starter somewhere, but a bottom tier one at best.

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11 hours ago, EasternOHBillsFan said:

 

The media? Talk about lazy, blaming the media for stating what has become obvious... he literally did make great strides in his game by working extremely hard and getting great coaching and workouts from people like Jordan Palmer. Even if he would have had a lot better weapons, he still would have had growing pains and would have been making bonehead decisions like any young QB would make. So yeah, ease up on the crusade against the media.

I’m aware. I never said he was a finished product as a rookie. My issue is the narrative that this was such a surprise. That his progress is so incredible considering how BAD he was in the 1st 2 years. They made fun of Buffalo for trading up to draft him at 7 overall, yet it was clear Josh had real talent. That’s what I’m saying. 
 

As many posters have said, because of his work ethic and determination Josh has significantly improved each part of every season but at a very steady pace that was easy to see if you actually watched the games, it didn’t come out of nowhere.  

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7 hours ago, Buffalo716 said:

First Everybody brings up that play... 

 

Second, comparing what Josh would do,  to an old Kyle Orton is apples to oranges 

 

Third it was in the second quarter of the Denver broncos game... Plenty of time left on the clock and like three games left in the season

 

Fourth we were only in playoff contention because kyle Orton saved our season 

 

Fifth, if Orton played hero on that play like you wanted.. he gets carted off the field on a stretcher because he got destroyed and our seasons over anyways 

 

He could have went for the first down but the season would probably be over because his old body would be destroyed

 

 

 

 


I’m pretty sure he made the decision to retire right then and there.  And for him it was the right decision.  I liked Orton that year.  He gave us everything he had.  

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8 hours ago, Shaw66 said:

I've said it before.  I thought the Bills had something when Allen hit Ray Ray for a TD against the Panthers as a rookie in preseason.  It's here at around 8:40.  Obviously, he had a lot to learn, but when I saw that throw, I knew the Bills had something.   Four years later, we've seen dozens of throws like that.   We still shake our heads and ask how he did that.

 

Watching that video, it goes to show game 1 that the dude could juke out players, stiff arm guys, and flick it a mile. He has come a long way but JA still looked like JA in that video

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19 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

Josh Allen was bad his rookie year but only in the way a lot of rookies are bad their rookie year. I actually thought it was a very encouraging season because all the playmaking ability was there to see. He struggled with the processing a bit and he took off to run too often but there was lots to like about his rookie year.

Ducasse, Bovine, and Mills were not who you would field to help your rookie QB.  That Allen improved rather than implode that year was very impressive. 

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18 hours ago, Niagara Dude said:

 Since leaving Buffalo John Brown has not been able to stick with any team that he was our top option in Allen's second season

 

I know Allen has only been in the league for four years so it's a small sample size but I don't think there's a single WR/TE that has left Allen and gone on to have a better statistical season without Allen. And yeah, Brown, Beasley and Diggs all had their career best seasons with Allen and these were guys that played in the league a combined 17 years before teaming up with Allen.

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On 3/23/2022 at 10:06 PM, mrags said:

I knew Josh was the QB I wanted before the draft. The only other QB I had any interest in, was Mayfield. Which I think got a crap deal in Cleveland. His coaching has been terrible. Story of Cleveland’s life. 
 

With all that said, the Minnesota game is what sealed it for me that he was going to be special. Not just the hurdle. But the scramble and dive to the corner of the end zone. At that point you could just see that he would do anything to win. Anything to carry the team on his back. And he hasn’t disappointed. I actually feel bad for him that he’s been let down by his defense at times and coaching at times. Josh will go down as one of the best to ever play this game when all is said and done. 

I was basically going to write this exact post. From the Viking game on, it was clearly apparent we had a superstar in Buffalo. Now if we could just find a playoff defense and coaching that doesn't meltdown. 

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23 hours ago, Ethan in Portland said:

Fair amount of revisionist history in this thread. There were a number of posters that had their doubts about Allen after year 2. You know who you are. That said there were legit concerns. His deep ball accuracy was still a major issue after year two.  And the stats don’t lie. 58.8% completion in year 2 is horrible. What was a sign of future success was his TD/INT ratio improvement in year 2.  Keep in mind Lamar Jackson is winning the MVP,Allen losing to Watson in the playoffs with worries about hero ball, and Mahommes is going to the SuperBowl at the same time. 
I believe we all saw glimpses of greatness from Allen. But to say it was obvious he was going to make the massive improvement from year 2 to year 3 is disingenuous.

 

They had more high wind games in 2019 than this year iirc. Completion percentage compared to the qbs they played against might be a better stat.

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I saw Josh Allen in his last college game and I was sold.  I knew his ceiling was higher than the other QBs in the draft and that’s what I wanted.  I didn’t want either of the two SoCal QBs, and I thought Mayfield was overrated.  As the draft approached I was almost positive JA was their guy.

 

Watch that clip.  It looks eerily familiar.  

 

Then watch this clip from his first year and point to a big play that Mac or Tua is capable of making.  You can’t.  Yes he was inconsistent, but the supporting cast was awful and the tools were clearly there.

 

People who think Mac/Tua/whoever is capable of making the kinds of strides that JA has made are just whistling past the graveyard and they know it.

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12 hours ago, billvernsays said:

I’m aware. I never said he was a finished product as a rookie. My issue is the narrative that this was such a surprise. That his progress is so incredible considering how BAD he was in the 1st 2 years. They made fun of Buffalo for trading up to draft him at 7 overall, yet it was clear Josh had real talent. That’s what I’m saying. 
 

As many posters have said, because of his work ethic and determination Josh has significantly improved each part of every season but at a very steady pace that was easy to see if you actually watched the games, it didn’t come out of nowhere.  

 

I think you are misinterpreting why many were people were surprised by Josh Allen.   Lots of rookie QBs show flashes of what they might be able to do at some point, but they never develop the skills they need.  What makes Allen special is that he actually has done every single thing he needed to do, not just to become a competent QB but an elite one, including learning how to master his emotions during games.   Name another QB in the last 20 years who started as raw as Allen who has actually developed into an elite QB.  I can't think of anyone.  I think that maybe Cam Newton came in as raw as Allen but he never developed into an elite passer although he was successful as a QB.   All the other elite/great QBs who have come into the league since 2000 have come in pretty well started as QBs.  Most first round QBs described as being "raw" have busted,  including JP Losman,  EJ Manuel, and Dwayne Haskins.

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I haven't read through this entire thread. Maybe this has already been said, but...

To me, it's simple.

When people talk about Josh's "bad first two years", they tend to forget two key things:

1.) Josh was sushi raw coming out. Didn't get much QB coaching at Wyoming. Had tons of mechanical flaws. Never did the 7-on-7 camps or had the private QB tutors.

This fact alone gets overlooked by so many who want to compare their young QB's first two years to Josh's first two years. Take Tua, for instance. Tua DID have all the 7-on-7 camps, the tutors, the great coaching at a big time school, etc. He -- and most other young QBs that get drafted highly -- were much closer to finished products than Josh Allen. Not NEARLY as raw as Josh. The sheer amount of growth and improvement he needed coming into the league was pretty rare for a 1st round pick.

2.) In both his 1st and 2nd seasons, Josh showed flashes of transcendent physical talent and will/leadership that couldn't necessarily be quantified in statistics. People like to look at Josh's stats his first two years vs the stats of their young QB and make a direct comparison. It wasn't ABOUT stats with Josh, though. We KNOW a lot of his stats (completion %, for instance) stunk. It was about the throws he made. The runs he made. The plays he made that made you jump out of your seat because you couldn't believe what you had just seen. The leadership and will and grit he showed on numerous occasions. You saw flashes where you went "wow...if he can round off the rough edges and make those good plays more routinely, he'll be an all-time great".

So my questions to people who are touting their young third year QBs, Tua or whomever, are as follows: Can you honestly say that your guy has as high a physical ceiling as Josh Allen? That he came into the league needing as much refinement as Josh? And more importantly, this: Forget the statistics. Did you see, with your own eyes, specific plays throughout the first two years that give you hope that this guy can be THE guy? 

Josh was an extremely rare case at QB. An absolute anomaly. But to the surprise of just about no one, he has become the case that everyone looks to in order to justify their faith in their own young QB. Lots and lots of teams are going to get burned expecting Allen-like progression. Dude's a unicorn.

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23 hours ago, Shaw66 said:

I've said it before.  I thought the Bills had something when Allen hit Ray Ray for a TD against the Panthers as a rookie in preseason.  It's here at around 8:40.  Obviously, he had a lot to learn, but when I saw that throw, I knew the Bills had something.   Four years later, we've seen dozens of throws like that.   We still shake our heads and ask how he did that.

 

I was told by a game specialist at EA sports that this throw was not possible within their physics engine. It was too hard without enough wind up. It was only a minor adjustment but it had to be done.

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There is some real "hindsight is 20-20" here. Allen was pretty terrible throwing the football his rookie year. He missed passes by miles and had terrible judgment. His legs kept him alive. His second year was a modest improvement but was still filled with entirely too many erratic and frustrating plays. Had Allen never taken his year three jump, it's a lot more likely that we would have been in the Watson sweepstakes, than looking forward to having one of the brightest stars in the game for the foreseeable future.

I'm as ecstatic as anyone that he turned into the player that he did, but it took the greatest growth trend in the history of NFL QB play to get him here. To act like this was a forgone conclusion based off his rookie year is ridiculous.

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1 hour ago, BullBuchanan said:

To act like this was a forgone conclusion based off his rookie year is ridiculous.

No, it isn't, and wasn't ridiculous.  I was pretty much sold after his rookie year, and I wasn't alone.  

 

This is what I wrote and published on Memorial Day weekend, 2019 (after his rookie season).

 

Quote

It’s not that I expect the 2019 Bills to be great – someplace in the 9-7 to 7-9 range once again this year; what I expect is that the 2020 Bills will be a solid playoff team and a regular preseason Super Bowl contender after that.  It could come a year earlier or a year later, but it’s coming.

 

And this: 

 

Quote

In Josh Allen, Beane and McDermott found their guy.   He loves to compete.  He loves to learn – you can see it and hear it in his interviews.   He’s so much more mature, he has so much more understanding of the game, than we saw a year ago.  He handles his duties in press conferences almost flawlessly, giving thoughtful answers, deftly avoiding difficult issues, rarely being flustered.   He desperately wants to do it right, on the field and off, and McDermott thrives on that attitude.  

 

Belichick got his ideal disciple in Brady.  McDermott got his in Allen.  And, by the way, McDermott also got 6’5”, 240 pounds, speed, mobility and a rocket arm.  I think Allen is destined for greatness, because he has all the tools, mental, physical and emotional, and he has the perfect mentor.  A match made, if you believe in that sort of stuff, in heaven.

Some people said I was jumping the gun, and a few even said that was ridiculous.  But a lot of people agreed with me.  

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43 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

No, it isn't, and wasn't ridiculous.  I was pretty much sold after his rookie year, and I wasn't alone.  

 

This is what I wrote and published on Memorial Day weekend, 2019 (after his rookie season).

 

 

And this: 

 

Some people said I was jumping the gun, and a few even said that was ridiculous.  But a lot of people agreed with me.  

 

I also saw it in 2018. 

 

If you have an eye for these things it was obvious.

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1 hour ago, Not at the table Karlos said:

There was a 5 min video of all the drops. Yes some were repeated but still 5 mins. That's ridiculous.

It’s really all you need to see in regard to his jump in stats.  Yet media overthinks it…. Makes it out like it’s sooooo crazy and that he can’t possibly back up his year 3 campaign. Then he does.🤷‍♂️

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Mahomes didn't get to have a bad first year because he WAS ON THE BENCH! Reports back then was that he was completing more passes to the defense in practice than the receivers.

 

Josh said how good it was to sit down a little during that first year after he was injured to learn a bit more and I don't have the stats in front of me but I remember him playing much better after that. The Bills screwed him over by going into the season with Peterman. Not his fault

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2 hours ago, BullBuchanan said:

There is some real "hindsight is 20-20" here. Allen was pretty terrible throwing the football his rookie year. He missed passes by miles and had terrible judgment. His legs kept him alive. His second year was a modest improvement but was still filled with entirely too many erratic and frustrating plays. Had Allen never taken his year three jump, it's a lot more likely that we would have been in the Watson sweepstakes, than looking forward to having one of the brightest stars in the game for the foreseeable future.

I'm as ecstatic as anyone that he turned into the player that he did, but it took the greatest growth trend in the history of NFL QB play to get him here. To act like this was a forgone conclusion based off his rookie year is ridiculous.

And yet a lot of his passes that were completed were jaw dropping throws.  That is what everyone is talking about here. 

 

I thought Allen was the best QB in that draft but like a lot of folks I was worried because so many of the experts were trashing him.  Then I watched every game his rookie season and came away feeling really good that the Bills had their guy. And I had that feeling not because he missed easy throws and made head scratching decisions, which he did by the boatload, but the throws he made - HOLY COW. 

 

 

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To date, Josh's rookie season, he put up arguably the greatest stretch of rushing prowess a QB ever put up. Only Mike Vick put up comparable numbers over a six game stretch. Somehow people didn't factor that in to his overall success and ability in his first season. And his second season was a dramatic improvement in passing efficiency while still be a top 5 or even top 3 QB with his legs. 

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On 3/24/2022 at 12:07 AM, Ethan in Portland said:

Fair amount of revisionist history in this thread. There were a number of posters that had their doubts about Allen after year 2. You know who you are. That said there were legit concerns. His deep ball accuracy was still a major issue after year two.  And the stats don’t lie. 58.8% completion in year 2 is horrible. What was a sign of future success was his TD/INT ratio improvement in year 2.  Keep in mind Lamar Jackson is winning the MVP,Allen losing to Watson in the playoffs with worries about hero ball, and Mahommes is going to the SuperBowl at the same time. 
I believe we all saw glimpses of greatness from Allen. But to say it was obvious he was going to make the massive improvement from year 2 to year 3 is disingenuous.

Yeah, there were always naysayers. Even halfway through 2020 there were naysayers (by now, most of them have transferred their ire to McDermott). But most fans noticed the great things that Allen could do even from year 1. And most got on board with him as the Bills starting QB after not too long. The question was always how much of his limitless potential he would actually be able to attain, and that was the unknown at the time. Would Josh Allen just develop into a solid starter for many years but never get over the hump, or would he be able to truly become elite? We all saw the potential, but Allen had to put in the work to achieve it.

 

I haven't seen a single person claim that it was obvious that Allen would make a massive jump in year 3. His jump surprised all of us. We expected more steady improvement, and we got a lot more than we expected. But anyone who watched Allen had to notice the potential even from his rookie year. That's why a lot of Bills fans spent so many endless hours defending Allen and trying to make people see him for who he was when the going narrative was that Allen was just a big running QB who was inaccurate and inconsistent.

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This thread actually made me recall the McCarron controversy that summer in 18'.  

 

I read this and I tried to remember if Josh was projected to start right away.  

 

The McCarron trade at the time from the Bills didn't make a lot of sense to me.  You know he seemed like an ideal bridge QB until Josh was ready.  

 

 

 

Funny how things in general that seem like a big deal at the time are forgotten about 4 years later!   

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31 minutes ago, Another Fan said:

This thread actually made me recall the McCarron controversy that summer in 18'.  

 

I read this and I tried to remember if Josh was projected to start right away.  

 

The McCarron trade at the time from the Bills didn't make a lot of sense to me.  You know he seemed like an ideal bridge QB until Josh was ready.  

 

 

 

Funny how things in general that seem like a big deal at the time are forgotten about 4 years later!   

McCarron was bad in camp, then got hurt in preseason & was behind Peterman, which annoyed McCarron.  Rumors are he didn't want to be a backup to Peterman.  Peterman was bad in the opener & got benched in the 3rd quarter.  After that the Bills named Allen the starter before he got hurt in Houston & missed 4 games.  Then after Peterman failed again when he replaced the injured Josh in Houston, the Bills brought in Anderson & then Barkley.  

 

Here are some quotes before regular camp from Bills Digest indicating McCarron was unimpressive in mini-camp:

 

1. Who will win the starting QB job out of training camp?
CB: I believe it’s going to come down to two candidates —Josh
Allen and Nathan Peterman. Peterman was the most consistent
QB in the spring. Provided he stays on that same track, I think he’ll
be the starter in Week 1 unless Josh Allen comes on faster than
anticipated. It’s clear the Bills brass doesn’t want to throw Allen to
the wolves right away, but if he shines in the preseason he could
get the keys to the offense. AJ McCarron just hasn’t impressed and
doesn’t measure up in the leadership category to the other two.


ML: I never thought I’d be saying this a few months ago, but
I’m going with Nathan Peterman. I thought Peterman was quietly
having a good spring before ramping it up a notch at Buffalo’s
final spring practices. He’s throwing the ball with more velocity
and precision and looks like a different quarterback from last
year. He’ll need to keep that up, of course, and can’t fall back
when it comes to turnovers. But he’s my pick heading into training
camp.
 

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22 hours ago, BullBuchanan said:

There is some real "hindsight is 20-20" here. Allen was pretty terrible throwing the football his rookie year. He missed passes by miles and had terrible judgment. His legs kept him alive. His second year was a modest improvement but was still filled with entirely too many erratic and frustrating plays. Had Allen never taken his year three jump, it's a lot more likely that we would have been in the Watson sweepstakes, than looking forward to having one of the brightest stars in the game for the foreseeable future.

I'm as ecstatic as anyone that he turned into the player that he did, but it took the greatest growth trend in the history of NFL QB play to get him here. To act like this was a forgone conclusion based off his rookie year is ridiculous.

It may not have been a forgone conclusion after his rookie year, but after his 2nd year he was entrenched as the Bills QB, in spite of what the stat boys thought.  He still had to clean up his deep passes after the 2nd season, but anyone who was watching every game & still questioned who was going to be the Bills QB the next 10 years wasn't paying much attention.   

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2018 was a bad situation for any signal caller used his legs to overcome challenges OL WR etc, 2019 was up and down 'hero ball', 2020 he tied everything together.

 

Just because the average NFL fan thinks Josh Allen came out of nowhere his 3rd year doesnt mean he had two bad years - he grew every step of the way.

 

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23 hours ago, BullBuchanan said:

There is some real "hindsight is 20-20" here. Allen was pretty terrible throwing the football his rookie year. He missed passes by miles and had terrible judgment. His legs kept him alive. His second year was a modest improvement but was still filled with entirely too many erratic and frustrating plays. Had Allen never taken his year three jump, it's a lot more likely that we would have been in the Watson sweepstakes, than looking forward to having one of the brightest stars in the game for the foreseeable future.

I'm as ecstatic as anyone that he turned into the player that he did, but it took the greatest growth trend in the history of NFL QB play to get him here. To act like this was a forgone conclusion based off his rookie year is ridiculous.

 

Clearly, even as a rookie, Allen was far better at playing football than you are at evaluating it...

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