suppaball
Well-known member
Sucked at first, benched. Then a carrier back up for years, then boom a league MVP?
Looks possible, still early but looks to be very possible.
Looks possible, still early but looks to be very possible.
Geno looked fantastic today, but let's not get carried away. I'd be shocked if any reputable analyst would have him anywhere near their top 5 right now.But we do know this: Geno was ranked #33 or something insulting before the season started. He is currently top 10, moving to top 5 or so after this weekend's games.
I was referring to stats from ESPN (RTG, QBR) and PFF, on the other hand, "reputable analysts" ranked Geno #33 in a league with 32 teams.Geno looked fantastic today, but let's not get carried away. I'd be shocked if any reputable analyst would have him anywhere near their top 5 right now.
You are lucky that John63 is busy on Broncos' forum, otherwise, slights like this shan't be tolerated.That matters because it means the success isn't about spinning out of tackles and hitting deep balls to great receivers to put up amazing numbers, it's about a guy running the offense the way you expect of a veteran, quality starting QB to do. The source of the success is different.
I think what Geno's doing at the LOS is being appreciated by teammates.I think the thing that impresses the most is that while his execution is fine (even good), it's his command of the offense that stands out. He's commanding the LOS and the game pre-snap better than we've seen here since peak Hasselbeck.
We've seen stark examples of it across all the games this year.
The touchdown to Dissly in week 1, Geno saw that TD before the ball was even snapped.
This week, Geno pulls Eskridge aside, basically tells him he's going to hit him for a first down strike--the Lions are watching him talk to Eskridge by the way--and then he does.
The presnap call to Metcalf where he basically calls for Metcalf to clear out his first down scramble.
And pre-season, that was a fair assessment. He wasn't even a lock for the starting position on his own team at the time.I was referring to stats from ESPN (RTG, QBR) and PFF, on the other hand, "reputable analysts" ranked Geno #33 in a league with 32 teams.
This really puts a different perspective on a qb's career path. Especially a high draft pick like Geno.You've got to remember that Geno's career until he came here hardly put him in an opportunity to shine.
Drafted by one of the league's worst franchises and started day 1 as a rookie, when it was clear he needed to develop further as a pro.
Starts for 2 years, showing improvement, even if his team got worse.
Has his jaw broken by a teammate and loses his job to Ryan Fitzpatrick, who, in his 11th year as a pro suddenly turned into a quality QB, tossing for 3900 yards and 31 TD passes that year and earning himself another year as a starter.
Then signs for the other basketcase New York team - and gets his only start when team are already 2-9, ending Manning's consecutive start run and done by coach Ben McAdoo, who was fired immediately after said game.
Geno then sits for a year behind Philip Rivers, where he had a grand total of 4 pass attempts across the entire year to show his ability.
He's been with us ever since, and to be honest, anyone who says he has looked like a bad quarterback watching him play for us has been saying so with preconceived notions based on how he played as a Jet, many years earlier.
Statistically, his worst game for us was SF last week, but even then he played better than Wilson did against the same team the week before, and the RB pass/interception robbed him of a chance to maybe make his stats look at least somewhat reasonable. He still completed 80% of his passes! When your worst game still has you completing 80% of your passes, and only one single interception, maybe you aren't that bad after all.
Yeah because our defense sucks.Mariota just got done beating the Hawks in Seattle. But yes, he's def. better than those guys. So far.