Respectfully disagree with that comparison. I think this version is more accurate
1. You're an apprentice brick layer in the construction industry. After your apprenticeship ends you are hired
part time full time by a construction company with a new Foreman. Your first building season isn't easy with
limited action 17 big jobs, 16 of which you worked in full, but you are "paying your dues getting experience.
2. The next season you have a new Foreman who asks you to do
concrete work structural brick work. Its new to you but you
happily have to agree
because there is only 1,696 brick worker jobs in the world. Its not easy and you make
some a ton of mistakes but you learn and by seasons end realize your work is
pretty good absolutely atrocious for
a novice an experienced brick worker who now has 4 years of apprenticeship and two full years on the job.
3.The next season, yet another new Foreman, allows you to continue as a
concrete structural brick worker.
Then suddenly,
the framer Foreman next to you gets hurt and you are asked to be the Framing expert for the entire project. hires a better structural brick worker. He says he's going to move you into structural tile work, You have no experience
framing with structural tile, but you accept this and try your best,
because the basic fundamentals are the same while the techniques vary. Learning as you go.
I've stated it before, Eichenberg main issues have been a lack of strength, with no ability to anchor down. He ends up on his ass far too often. I don't need or want to see him rolled up on the legs of Armstead (again), Jackson or Tua.
I want him to prove me wrong, but going into year 4 @ 26 years old it's hard to see it happening. He has yet to fix his biggest weaknesses and imo that has nothing to do with position change. He needs to be drastically stronger to stand any chance of turning his career around.
If he walks through the door looking and carrying himself like Jackson did last year I'd happily reconsider my outlook on him. We'll see what Eich looks like when August rolls around. I posted this last August: