BlueTalon
Well-known member
How did Marshawn Lynch not make that list?Its a thing and Brett Farve was apart of it.
Best in-season NFL trades
www.nfl.com
How did Marshawn Lynch not make that list?Its a thing and Brett Farve was apart of it.
Best in-season NFL trades
www.nfl.com
2 words...classless writersHow did Marshawn Lynch not make that list?
If Geno continues on current pace, he will be the starter next year as well, and any QB we get will have a year of seasoning watching him and learning. Sort of an Alex Smith to new kid Mahomes type of setup.2 years out? 3 years out? Yes, there is plenty of high draft picks to be had for a guy who will be benched next year for the QB of the future.
Your crazy. You start watching football like last year?The trade deadline is November 1st, 1 month away.
You may say "No team will do it because there is not enough time to feed him the playbook/get used to the new offence".
Hogwash!
We are 4 weeks deep and pretty much every team knows what they have at this point. Plenty of teams think they are a QB away from being a contender (Think Denver during the offseason)
They can cram 2 weeks of playbook down Geno and send him out with what he is comfortable with...and learn on the fly.
A team that thinks they are a QB away would trade big for a 77+% completion rate, 6TD 2 INTs and over a 1000 yards in the first 4 games.
Over a years time thats 4100 yards, 24.5 TDs and 8.5 INTs...that is a solid starter!
After the season is over, the Hawks get nothing for him, getting value out of him now is the smartest move!
So what is a solid starter's trade value who only costs pennies?
2 First rounders? A first, 2nd and 3rd?
I take it you didn't actually watch the play being broken down by Millen just a few seconds later with the All-22 view where literally every receiver was blanketed. I'd rather him take that sack then throw an INT. Throwing the INT on that play would have been "choking in crunch time."If Geno continues on current pace, he will be the starter next year as well, and any QB we get will have a year of seasoning watching him and learning. Sort of an Alex Smith to new kid Mahomes type of setup.
That said, Geno could have really helped his stock by not taking a huge sack on 3rd and 2 with 6 minutes left in the game. Don't know if it was a Waldron play-call issue, but it was another instance of Geno choking at crunch time. A run would have been a better call. It's like Geno freezes up every time in those 4th quarter do-or-die situations, going back to last year's Saints and Steelers games. Geno's gotten great crunch-time support from the run game, 2 long TD runs by Penny last week, and the 69-yarder from Kenneth Walker this week. Everyone, including Geno, KNEW the Saints would march our D down the field and either run out the clock or score on the next possession
The blame game is astounding to me. Astounding.I take it you didn't actually watch the play being broken down by Millen just a few seconds later with the All-22 view where literally every receiver was blanketed. I'd rather him take that sack then throw an INT. Throwing the INT on that play would have been "choking in crunch time."
The blame game is astounding to me. Astounding.
Every time they lose, it will be attributed to Geno regardless of circumstance. We still apparently fundamentally misunderstand a team sport.
I'm talking overall trends, and the breakdown on this specific play is somewhat irrelevant; it's just the latest example. Why does it seem this keeps happening, like a bad script? What is the cause of the trend? Geno trying to do too much and not keeping keeping situational football top of mind? Receivers are blanketed, pass rush is coming... well, there is such a thing as "throwing it away". Being aware that going for it on 4th down is an option and knowing that taking a big sack here essentially ends the game. Maybe this play was a Waldron problem, the play design didn't get receivers open, didn't have a checkdown, etc. So the Saints D got lucky to have just the right D called... Geno needs to recognize, throw it away, and live to fight another down. Can Saints "get lucky" and have exactly the right D called (and successfully executed) on the 4th-and-2 play?I take it you didn't actually watch the play being broken down by Millen just a few seconds later with the All-22 view where literally every receiver was blanketed. I'd rather him take that sack then throw an INT. Throwing the INT on that play would have been "choking in crunch time."
Was he outside the pocket? Could he have thrown it away out of bounds? Serious question as I don't really remember and am too lazy to look it up.I take it you didn't actually watch the play being broken down by Millen just a few seconds later with the All-22 view where literally every receiver was blanketed. I'd rather him take that sack then throw an INT. Throwing the INT on that play would have been "choking in crunch time."
I'd much prefer he just threw it awayI take it you didn't actually watch the play being broken down by Millen just a few seconds later with the All-22 view where literally every receiver was blanketed. I'd rather him take that sack then throw an INT. Throwing the INT on that play would have been "choking in crunch time."
So, hmm, you're saying that Geno needs to atone for one of the worst damned Defenses+shitty Refereeing (per Tyler Lockett)?If Geno continues on current pace, he will be the starter next year as well, and any QB we get will have a year of seasoning watching him and learning. Sort of an Alex Smith to new kid Mahomes type of setup.
That said, Geno could have really helped his stock by not taking a huge sack on 3rd and 2 with 6 minutes left in the game. Don't know if it was a Waldron play-call issue, but it was another instance of Geno choking at crunch time. A run would have been a better call. It's like Geno freezes up every time in those 4th quarter do-or-die situations, going back to last year's Saints and Steelers games. Geno's gotten great crunch-time support from the run game, 2 long TD runs by Penny last week, and the 69-yarder from Kenneth Walker this week. Everyone, including Geno, KNEW the Saints would march our D down the field and either run out the clock or score on the next possession
Seahawks will get more draft capital by managing FAs and receiving a 3rd rd comp pick if he leaves.
A third round pick generally doesn't amount to an above-average starter. In a league where Sam Bradford and Nick Foles garner the sort of trade compensation they did, Geno is worth more than a third due to positional value alone.This is why he won't be traded. We absolutely would not get better than this, even if a team came calling, which they won't. Geno's not worth a 3rd rounder, let alone anything greater, despite what the stats say after 5 games.
A win or loss in game 5 wouldn't do much for Geno's league-wide viability perception. How he does over the course of the season as a whole with greater weight being given to games on the other end of the season is really what will have more relevance in Geno's league-wide perception.If Geno continues on current pace, he will be the starter next year as well, and any QB we get will have a year of seasoning watching him and learning. Sort of an Alex Smith to new kid Mahomes type of setup.
That said, Geno could have really helped his stock by not taking a huge sack on 3rd and 2 with 6 minutes left in the game. Don't know if it was a Waldron play-call issue, but it was another instance of Geno choking at crunch time. A run would have been a better call. It's like Geno freezes up every time in those 4th quarter do-or-die situations, going back to last year's Saints and Steelers games. Geno's gotten great crunch-time support from the run game, 2 long TD runs by Penny last week, and the 69-yarder from Kenneth Walker this week. Everyone, including Geno, KNEW the Saints would march our D down the field and either run out the clock or score on the next possession