- Joined
- Aug 29, 2011
- Messages
- 751
- Reaction Score
- 926
Hes better then Brady
maybe at some things, like praying and and running, but certainly not as a QB.
Hes better then Brady
What has-been RB have they revived other than Corey Dillon?
Antowain Smith?
I don't remember him being highly thought of after Buffalo cut him loose.
maybe at some things, like praying and and running, but certainly not as a QB.
Somehow, someway....I think you're right.
The Jets had no clue what to do with him and it ruined their season, their offseason and perhaps Mark Sanchez's life.
Belichick will spend three seconds thinking about this and kill the NFL with Tebow.
Totally right on the pocket passers. If you look at most of the title contenders, they're all pocket passers. Rodgers, Brady, Flacco, Brees, Peyton and Eli Manning. The RG3's and the Kaepernicks are more "flavor of the week" guys if you're looking to build a long term playoff perennial franchise. RG3 is already hurt. Kaepernick isn't built to take a beating.
(i still dispute Kap is a running QB)
lol. Yes, it was their inability to utilize a third string quarterback, and not the fact that they had Arena league-caliber skill players and one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the league, that ruined their season.
Kaepernick vs Green Bay (1/30/13) - 16 carries for 181 yds rushing.
Drew Brees in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 combined - 172 yds rushing
Kaepernick isn't anything close to a pocket passer.
Again, youre missing the point. He is an excellent passer and was very successful throwing from the pocket and on the move. However, he also has other skills that allows him to do other things like set an NFL rushing record for QB's when the defense allows it like they did in the Green Bay game. That makes him more dangerous, not a liability
Your post also neglects to mention that while rushing for a record 181 yards he also had more passing yards then one of the all time great passers, Aaron Rodgers. Which is my overarching point. He is an excellent passer which makes him a deadly runner which makes him an even more dangerous passer.
Kaepernick: 17-31, 256 yards, 8.3 yards per pass, 1 interception
Rodgers: 26 - 39, 248 yards, 6.4 yards per pass, 1 interception
Granted, you're a blithering idiot on your best day, but f---, son, look up hyperbole and then learn to recognize it.
Alex Smith had all that and he wasn't dangerous.Kaepernick is dangerous because he also is around a top o-line, running game, has the best TE in the NFL, 2 great posession receivers, and a deep threat receiver.
Alex Smith had all that and he wasn't dangerous.
Where is this hatred you are talking about? Everyone is talking about his football ability. But that doesn't fit your war on Christianity shtick, does it?
lol. Yes, it was their inability to utilize a third string quarterback, and not the fact that they had Arena league-caliber skill players and one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the league, that ruined their season.
That wasn't even the funniest part of your post, either - Belichick "killling the NFL with Tebow" takes the cake there. He'll be a third string quarterback, who may occasionally play special teams and work in a limited capacity on offense...and that's if he makes the cut. Some of you act like Belichick is Christ himself, and that a quarterback with laughable throwing mechanics is suddenly going to terrify defensive coordinators because he's a Patriot. He may well be worth the money as an emergency quarterback, a utility player, and a practice body, but let's not get carried away here.
Kaepernick is a dangerous qb with weapons, RG3 is a dangerous qb without weapons aside from maybe Morris. Kapernick is also better coached then RG3 dont assume I'm dissing Kaepernick because I'm not. Alex Smith is a system qb who is limited, basically like a Matt Cassell.
Wilson, Kapernick, and Griffin are pocket passers too, they just have the ability to run, giving defenses another dynamic to account for. It keeps defenses off balance when you have the luxury of taking off for a first down with your feet when all your other options are covered.
There's something to be said for protecting your body, but it isn't as if Brady or Manning would be lesser players if they could run a little bit. Andrew Luck is another guy who is a pure pocket passer but also possesses some speed, as are Roethlisberger and Rodgers. I don't think you understand how advantageous it is to be able to improvize when the play breaks down, as Wilson, Griffin, and Kapernick, and to some extent, Rodgers, Roethlisberger, and Luck, are able to do.
A blithering idiot in your mind is anybody who doesn't regard your opinion as fact. I think you'd be better served continuing to make snarky jokes on conference realingment, because let's face it, all you do is embarass yourself when you try to talk sports.
Huh? The original joke went whistling right over your head.
He compiled a passer rating of 98.3 on the strength of a 62.4 completion percentage and a 10:3 touchdown-to-interception ratio.
I'm not missing anything. You continue to pimp the 10:3 TD to INT ratio, but that's so inflated by the 1 game against NE where he had 4 TD's and 1 INT. They clearly weren't ready for him (and everyone will be from this point forward) and that ratio for the other 9 games is 6:2. That's 6 TD passes over 36 quarters.
I'm not a chump. I realize you have a for him from a college connection...but he's just not a pocket passer.

Didn't insinuate you were a chump. Simply that you are underestimating Kap's ability as a passer. Attached the NFL.com analysis to support my position but I guess you didn't like his opinion either. You have to be impressed by his completion percentage and yards per completion. Hard to have those numbers and not be a superior passer. In any event, I have a for him not only because of a college and family connection but because he is the 49ers QB which gives me an even larger . Next year im going to have show up at the Cancer walk so we can settle this with an arm wrestling competition.![]()
His football ability is pretty damn good unless we ask you "What is he going to be, their 4th TE." We know you don't like him but the man brought Denver to the playoffs and a victory there playing quarterback not Tight End.
No it has to do with him being a winner, something many players are not in the NFL. You would realize that if you didn't bring up religion. As I didn't, but you did.
By definition not a pocket passer. A pocket passer stays in the pocket at all costs.
Actually, I think they might be. I wouldn't at all be surprised if they did not develop their beyond excellent pocket awareness if they had the ability to run. I'm confident Manning would not have. He used to have happy feet early in his career, and was torched for it in by (non-) analysts. If he had the ability to run, he might never have figured out how to stick in there for 2....3...4...5 seconds.
Was Steve Young a pocket passer? How about John Elway? Those guys could carve defenses from the pocket with the best of them, but they also had the speed to make things happen with their feet. You can argue whether Kapernick, Wilson, and Griffin are pocket passers - regardless, I don't see anything wrong with being multi-dimensional in a day and age where defensive schemes are more complex and innovative than ever.
Wilson, Kapernick, and Griffin are poised enough in the pocket that I'm confident they are developed enough as pocket passers to survive later in their careers with diminished speed. Griffin, for instance, was able to lead the Redskins to the playoffs on a faulty knee late in the season. Each of them made countless plays in the pocket, and under duress, throughout the season. Of course there will always be room in the NFL for pure pocket passers, but based on the passer ratings and completion percentages of the aforementioned players, coupled with their intelligence and work ethic, I think you'd be mistaken to dismiss them as flavor of the month.
They didn't call Steve Young the Scrambler for nothing. Note that his career was cut short by concussion related injuries.