Pandion Haliaetus
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To be fair though I haven’t really compared him to Goff in skill set or potential.And? I could play that game too.
Two Words: Charlie Whitehurst.
Matt Hasselbeck's situation and Drew Locks situation are completely unrelated in just about every sense. Holmgren quite literally had inside knowledge and personally trained Hasselbeck. When we got him he was inserted into the same exact system he was in in GB. Mike Holmgren knew exactly what he was getting when he traded for Matt Hasselbeck.
This situation is copium at its finest. Drew Lock is one of Carroll's hail mary reclamation projects. Drew Lock is this years Darnold. I've seen the dude play, he's not good. There is a reason why we were flirting with Desean Watson and continue to be looking at QB's in the draft. Drew Lock is nothing but a placeholder, a warm body to man the position that has good physical skills. He's going to be a Tarvaris Jackson like character.
People keep comparing him to Goff, but that situation isn't the same either. Shane Waldron is not McVay, nor does he have the same petigree as McVay nor should we expect him to be McVay.
I just stated that if Waldron can coach him up to be a poor man’s Goff or Goff-lite that I would be fine with that.
The things we are missing here are simple, the staple of this offense ISN’T going to live or die through QB play. The bread and butter, meat and potatoes of Waldron’s offense is a creative dynamic rushing attack and creating explosive plays through YAC and off Play-Action. Low Risk. With utilization of RBs as WRs, and WRs as RBs with your TEs schemed in creative ways that they don’t sell the play-design all to create misdirection and confusion. Keep the chains and clock moving, defense resting, scheming for the next drive.
Our problem though is Russ didn’t want to hand the ball off and he wanted Yards Through The Air rather Yards after the Catch.
I’m not asking Lock to be Goff, but can he just command the offense, execute the play-design and let his teammates do the heavy lifting as designed and understand only to get ballsy when your opponent makes a mistake? Pretty much what Goff effectively was for the Rams, a point-guard.
That’s up to Lock, he’s the one that has to physically and mentally prepare. Maybe he’s a square peg in a round hole or a solid fit, but I don’t think we gain anything by cementing him to his past, he’s young, and hopefully humbled, hungry, still moving forward with a lot to prove about his future especially with a contract on the line. We just don’t know, it’s up to him.
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