I dunno man, for a couple years now I've been seeing posts about how Geno only looks good against bad teams. Which to me shows that if we play a team with a D-line that can't overcome our woeful O-line, that Geno plays all elite and stuff. And he stinks it up when we play a good team, meaning a team with a good D-line. I believe this is causal and not a mere correlation. With the quality of our O-line, getting a new QB would be like getting a new shelter cat after coyotes ate the last one, and leaving the new one outside with the coyotes. I don't think Tom Brady or Joe Montana could look good playing here right now.
That is an awesome comp, bringing in a new QB behind this OL is like, "getting a new shelter cat after the coyotes ate the last one"!!
(and leaving the new one outside with the coyotes!) Shelter cat--nice touch! Cost-cutting measure, instead of a pricey pedigreed pussycat!
Yup, let's just throw a new cheap shelter-cat QB out behind an OL that can't protect, an OC that can't scheme protections, and predictable playcalling with the QB always in a predictable spot for the sackmasters! What kind of seasoning do coyotes like on their kills? Can we leave a bottle of that out for them too?
We have urban coyotes in my neighborhood here in South Orlando, FL. Our 7 month Malinois puppy is now big, strong, and mean enough that coyotes might pass her up for easier feral cat meat. But I'm still not going to tie the dog up outside overnight and leave the gate open with a "Coyotes Welcome!" sign, even when she's full grown.
P.S. This pampered puppy sleeps with parents, not outside.