DarkVictory23
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2021
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I understand what you are saying, my point is that you have created a completely unfalsifiable position through which you rate him.Look, I understand what your saying and maybe i'm not being clear with my point of view. I'm basically saying that Geno has had some good regular season numbers, but i'm not seeing how a lot of other NFL QB's around the league wouldn't have just as good or better numbers too considering the weapons on offense that Geno has. It has nothing to do with the defense. As for wins, if Geno can muster up 9 with a team, than I don't see why a lot of other QB's couldn't muster up 9 as well (or better with really good QB's). I've said Geno isn't a bad QB, but I don't see anything special with him either. He's an average to slightly above average QB, but a lot of people think he's more than that including you. We just don't agree.
If he has good numbers, you just go 'well, he has a lot of weapons. Any QB could do it.' But if it gets pointed out that he has a very bad offensive line, you get to toss that off as an 'excuse'. Are we evaluating Geno in the context of his offense or just by his numbers--which you've already admitted are good? You can't talk about his 'weapons' but make talking about the offensive line off-limits.
So, since Geno's individual numbers are good, you fall back on wins. It's easy to say 'I don't see why a lot of other QB's couldn't muster up 9 as well', but then it gets pointed out to you that a lot of other QBs have failed to do that repeatedly, ad nauseum. And yeah, I looked back only a decade and a half, but what are the odds that the numbers are going to drastically change if I go back 20 years, or 25? Or back to the start of the Seahawks as a franchise?
It's easy to get myopia when you watch our team and see the could'ves or should'ves that Geno missed during the season and just assume we could plug some other QB who would fix those issues and forget that we also give up those positive moments Geno added that it's easy to take for granted when your team didn't do as well as you hoped.
That's why appreciating the historical context helps have a view that's slightly more realistic. And if out of 60 teams over the last 15 years have tried to do it and only 5 QBs actually had, maybe--just maybe--it's actually not as easy as we think it is in our imaginations?