gargantual
Active member
Uhhh yeah. What is it with all their defensiveness on OUR site?
Doesn't it just SCREAM of fear?
Well of course it does.
Doesn't it just SCREAM of fear?
Well of course it does.
KCHawkGirl":26c93yrl said:It said in there that his downside is he holds the ball too long. Maybe he does but it leads to explosive downfield plays like Ben Rothliesburger. Also to be rank behing Keap and Cam Newton? Pure silly.
Scottemojo":3oumeg1r said:Second, it is clear to me that the writer of that story is gauging potential far more than actual results, and in that contest, Wilson will always lose to the 4 guys ahead of him. He shouldn't, but he will.
NinerLifer said:"Kaepernick is in the best position of any of them to win titles quickly because of the coaching staff and talent that surrounds him."
See, now that's exactly what everyone around here is pointing out as 'THE' fallacy statement, but posted by a 9r fan, what else can you expect?,,,,,, the truth?, nope.
Coaching staff?, again, nope.
Talent around him?, once more it's a no, especially if you're talking about receivers.
Kaepernick ahead of Wilson is a joke, and not a well thought out joke at that.
kearly":wqwv67yg said:I think a lot of the physical talent perception boils down to size bias. Kaepernick impresses a lot more running a 4.53 at 230 than Wilson did running a 4.55 at 206. But does that size difference really matter? For other positions sure. But for a quarterback? Not really, no.
kearly":1ll0dde1 said:Arm strength wise, I think Wilson is comparable. Luck and Kaepernick have better arms but I wouldn't go so far as to say that Wilson loses anything from the difference. Wilson has a terrific arm.
Kip, it is height, and height only. In a league that will always be obsessed with size, and properly so, one or two outliers like Brees and Wilson will not change perception. So, when asked to rank players, that bias will always show up.kearly":ishho3ob said:Kaepernick checks his second read with the same frequency and skill level that Jake Locker does. To me that makes him a one read quarterback, but the definition of the term is innately subjective.
Scottemojo":ishho3ob said:Second, it is clear to me that the writer of that story is gauging potential far more than actual results, and in that contest, Wilson will always lose to the 4 guys ahead of him. He shouldn't, but he will.
I honestly think Wilson's upside is as high as any of those guys, and I thought that before he was drafted. Of that group, only RG3 is clearly faster and that may not stay true for long given RG3's injury history. Wilson runs very well and has proven remarkably durable though five seasons of college plus NFL. Arm strength wise, I think Wilson is comparable. Luck and Kaepernick have better arms but I wouldn't go so far as to say that Wilson loses anything from the difference. Wilson has a terrific arm. Wilson's height is his only detracting factor, and you might find 10-15 plays all season where it factored. I think Wilson's physical talent is under-rated.
I think a lot of the physical talent perception boils down to size bias. Kaepernick impresses a lot more running a 4.53 at 230 than Wilson did running a 4.55 at 206. But does that size difference really matter? For other positions sure. But for a quarterback? Not really, no.
Contrary to popular thought, not all mental talent is teachable. I could study music for a lifetime but I'd never be the next Mozart. Wilson's unique mental talent should not be brushed over when discussing upside. We saw plain as day what a mental ceiling looked like with T-Jack and Whitehurst. Wilson's mental ceiling might be the highest I have ever seen.
And when I saw mental I don't just mean X's and O's, expertise or technique, but improvisation. Wilson is an artist on the move.
Then you have leadership and all that other stuff. How often do you see a team down 20 in the fourth quarter in the playoffs on the road, that completely believes they are going to win the game?
Scottemojo":3c1bal73 said:The only way to deal with it is to win. Fortunately, Wilson will soon be over 25 and permanently off this list.
themunn":3c1bal73 said:Those times hide the real difference between the two players though, it's evident once you look at their 10 and 20 yard splits, Wilson is a full tenth of a second faster over 10 yards, they're about equal at 20 yards (Wilson slightly ahead) and Kaepernick is faster over 40 yards. This is further evidenced in their 20 yard short shuttle and 3-cone drill, both of which Wilson is about a tenth of a second faster in.
His size is what gives Kaepernick the "home-run effect" that RGIII also has, once he breaks free of that initial 10 yards his long stride means he's difficult to catch (we've seen it with Browner's long returns or his amazing chase-down of Adrian Peterson from behind) - it's far more impressive to watch, but Wilson's quick acceleration over 10/20 yards is what allows him to make defenders look silly trying to bring him down before he slings the ball 10/20/30/40 yards through the air.
And I'd rather my QB uses his legs to avoid being hit then throw the ball to another player to get tackled than run through crowds of players and risk injury
Happybelly":3c1bal73 said:Luck's arm is stronger than Wilson's? I probably haven't watched Luck as much as you have, but I've always had the impression his arm strength wasn't that great. I've seen him float some passes that were either intercepted or incomplete that would have been completions with better zip on the ball.
Sarlacc83":8vqrmpbi said:I might be the only one who's actually glad for this kind of thing.
And for one reason: Anything to feed Wilson's fire. I believe he has the Jordan syndrome where the tiniest slight makes him work that much harder (albeit, he doesn't turn into a grudge-holding jerk. I hope). So go ahead and tell him he's #5. Please.
themunn":ri4q8tqt said:Those times hide the real difference between the two players though, it's evident once you look at their 10 and 20 yard splits, Wilson is a full tenth of a second faster over 10 yards, they're about equal at 20 yards (Wilson slightly ahead) and Kaepernick is faster over 40 yards. This is further evidenced in their 20 yard short shuttle and 3-cone drill, both of which Wilson is about a tenth of a second faster in.
His size is what gives Kaepernick the "home-run effect" that RGIII also has, once he breaks free of that initial 10 yards his long stride means he's difficult to catch (we've seen it with Browner's long returns or his amazing chase-down of Adrian Peterson from behind) - it's far more impressive to watch, but Wilson's quick acceleration over 10/20 yards is what allows him to make defenders look silly trying to bring him down before he slings the ball 10/20/30/40 yards through the air.
And I'd rather my QB uses his legs to avoid being hit then throw the ball to another player to get tackled than run through crowds of players and risk injury