Boycie
Well-known member
The answer is right in front of our eyes.
I just watched this again to see if the cringe factor has gone down, and guess what? Nope!
The answer is right in front of our eyes.
If he's available with one of our 3rd rounders I'd like it. In fact, I'd be good with taking two legitimate prospects in the 3rd and keeping them both on the 53 (because of the gameday rule change) while we develop them and see if either one is a potential QBOTF.Don't sleep on Rattler.
Everyone seemed to think it was insane when Washington took both RGIII and Cousins, but it was a stroke of brilliance. To do so with a couple of borderline first rounders would be epic genius. Potentially you could hit twice and have tremendous trade value from such. But if you only hit on one, so be it. The key would be not to miss on both picks.If he's available with one of our 3rd rounders I'd like it. In fact, I'd be good with taking two legitimate prospects in the 3rd and keeping them both on the 53 (because of the gameday rule change) while we develop them and see if either one is a potential QBOTF.
I don't think that's a stretch for Schneider. He's a Ron Wolf protégé, and Wolf used to routinely take project QBs in low rounds, develop them (well, Holmgren developed them), and trade them. Matt Hasslebeck, Mark Brunell and Matt Flynn were all such picks.Everyone seemed to think it was insane when Washington took both RGIII and Cousins, but it was a stroke of brilliance. To do so with a couple of borderline first rounders would be epic genius. Potentially you could hit twice and have tremendous trade value from such. But if you only hit on one, so be it. The key would be not to miss on both picks.
Not to mention, other positions are much easier to fill and hit on with good players in later rounds, QB, not so much. If a QB slips past round 2, unless everyone missed and you get a fluke like Brady, Purdy, or Dak, QBs in round 3 or later are just backups. Still that's a very rare case scenario, that a late rounder ever sees many years as a starter.I don't think that's a stretch for Schneider. He's a Ron Wolf protégé, and Wolf used to routinely take project QBs in low rounds, develop them (well, Holmgren developed them), and trade them. Matt Hasslebeck, Mark Brunell and Matt Flynn were all such picks.
Wolf had a knack for low rounders. I was wrong on Flynn, Ted Thompson picked him and he wasn't a QB guru.Not to mention, other positions are much easier to fill and hit on with good players in later rounds, QB, not so much. If a QB slips past round 2, unless everyone missed and you get a fluke like Brady, Purdy, or Dak, QBs in round 3 or later are just backups. Still that's a very rare case scenario, that a late rounder ever sees many years as a starter.
I would not feel bad at all burning the first two picks on QBs that people say are "2nd rounders" as long as the team believed they both had franchise potential.
I like Cousins a lot. He played behind a mediocre O line in Minnesota. Its not like he was super mobile before the Achilles injury. He diced up the 49ers D . He was on pace for the passing title this year before the injury. To say he would not be an upgrade over Geno is being a bit of a homer. I think the Seahawks would be good to sign him and draft a QB. But, by all means, keep Geno at QB. As a 49er fan I would be happyI'd rather have Geno or Lock than Cousins. Cousins will be 36 and coming off a significant injury with a huge contract demand. It seems like a terrible move to get a moderate upgrade over Geno, considering they'd still have a 17M hit for Geno.
The smart move is to hang on to either Geno or Lock and hope a guy slides within our range in the draft.
I agree Cousins is potentially "elite level", but for the added cost, I don't think he's so far ahead of Geno as to be worth it. Just too old already, had too many season ending injuries. No I'd rather keep a budget Geno, who can be nearly as good as Cousins and draft a QBOTF or a couple of prospective ones behind him. We need offensive linemen too badly as well, will need money to sign some.I like Cousins a lot. He played behind a mediocre O line in Minnesota. Its not like he was super mobile before the Achilles injury. He diced up the 49ers D . He was on pace for the passing title this year before the injury. To say he would not be an upgrade over Geno is being a bit of a homer. I think the Seahawks would be good to sign him and draft a QB. But, by all means, keep Geno at QB. As a 49er fan I would be happy
The Vikings had the #2 offensive line in pass blocking, arguably the best receiver in the league, and they play in a dome. Cousins had an excellent start to the season, but statistically, over the last five years, he hasn't been that great.I like Cousins a lot. He played behind a mediocre O line in Minnesota. Its not like he was super mobile before the Achilles injury. He diced up the 49ers D . He was on pace for the passing title this year before the injury. To say he would not be an upgrade over Geno is being a bit of a homer. I think the Seahawks would be good to sign him and draft a QB. But, by all means, keep Geno at QB. As a 49er fan I would be happy
He'd be a slight upgrade, at a premium cost...The Vikings had the #2 offensive line in pass blocking, arguably the best receiver in the league, and they play in a dome. Cousins had an excellent start to the season, but statistically, over the last five years, he hasn't been that great.
I didn't say he would'nt be an upgrade over Geno. Feel free to read my post.
Thats where the draft pick comes in.. I'd just hate to be the team paying him and then he has another season ender injury.
Which was the point I made in my post. If Cousins signed a market value contract at 40m, Seattle would be paying 26 more for Cousins in order to move on from Geno. That's not worth a marginal upgrade at QB.He'd be a slight upgrade, at a premium cost...
As a 49er fan, I'm sure you'd love to see the Seahawks blow up their already limited cap situation by spending an extra $20-30M on a QB who is a very slight improvement from the one on the roster whose cap/performance ratio is probably the highest among non-rookie-contract QBs in the NFL.I like Cousins a lot. He played behind a mediocre O line in Minnesota. Its not like he was super mobile before the Achilles injury. He diced up the 49ers D . He was on pace for the passing title this year before the injury. To say he would not be an upgrade over Geno is being a bit of a homer. I think the Seahawks would be good to sign him and draft a QB. But, by all means, keep Geno at QB. As a 49er fan I would be happy
This…Don't sleep on Rattler.
DJ did a portal transfer to Florida State and isn’t going to be in the draft this year.-- And I cannot tell you how bad an idea DJ Uiagalelei is. My daughter was at OSU. I was at most of their home games, so had the bigger view as opposed to TV. That kid makes his reads so slowly. They often tried to cut the field in half for him. Still struggled to read a simple high low concept. Arm strength was good sometimes but misfired a lot.
-- Nix and McCarthy are run game facilitators. Did you really see either of them make wow plays with their arms.
-- Unless it is the fifth round, I would be bummed about any of the three. I would pray I was wrong, but would be very pessimistic.
Mase
Depending on how the combine and stuff go, I'd have no problem taking him in the first round. Getting him in the third would give me the jizzums.If he's available with one of our 3rd rounders I'd like it. In fact, I'd be good with taking two legitimate prospects in the 3rd and keeping them both on the 53 (because of the gameday rule change) while we develop them and see if either one is a potential QBOTF.
I believe how the contract was worked, the Hawks can get out of his contact for nothing?I'd rather have Geno or Lock than Cousins. Cousins will be 36 and coming off a significant injury with a huge contract demand. It seems like a terrible move to get a moderate upgrade over Geno, considering they'd still have a 17M hit for Geno.
The smart move is to hang on to either Geno or Lock and hope a guy slides within our range in the draft.