juniorseau55
Go Fins
Hes looking like bobby McCain when he was figuring out how to play his position.
Dead wrong. X was fine year one. Do not write fiction.Iggy has been nearly as bad as X was his first year. I have no worries that he will be fine by this time next year.
I don't share your take. In man press situation, for CB position, of cause there are techniques involves, however it mostly to do with talent and instinct. Something that it cannot coach up. I don't share your optimism.Noah is the type of athlete/player that once he "gets it" and masters the position he'll be dominant.
That's my hope at least. Kid is still super young and obviously a personal project of Flo's.
I definitely like the results Flo achieved with Needham (who he targeted UDFA around R5).
I fully expect the R1 invested in Noah to pay dividends. For now folks need to back off
and allow the developmental process to get results. We should see some notable upside later
in this season and by next year the "stud" hopefully emerges!
All I know is, when Noah covers, I am holding my breath every time.Igbo is trash and was a stupid effing waste of a pick. We didn't even need his ***
Right. Your negativity is consistent if nothing else.I don't share your take. In man press situation, for CB position, of cause there are techniques involves, however it mostly to do with talent and instinct. Something that it cannot coach up. I don't share your optimism.
Every one here support the dolphins. Everyone have their own way of supporting the team. How you support the team is your business. How I support my team is my own business. Don't tell anyone your way is the only way. You came off rather childish.Flo and Co. teach and expect. You completely over-simply -- I assume to support your degrading of the player.
with more time. In the interim, as a fan who supports the TEAM, I'd rather be optimistic than negative.
He was OK for a rook, but let's not pretend it wasn't until year three that he became a top level corner.Dead wrong. X was fine year one. Do not write fiction.
As evidenced by this crazy stat - when going deep on X last year QBs completed 2 balls. They also had 3 picked.Yeah I get it, it's just at best case with Byron Jones you're gonna hold down the opponent. With a guy like X, you are basically turning your defense into a scoring machine. And I see the difference in players in X and Byron Jones like this:
When you're facing a top QB at the end of a game, trying to keep them scoring to seal the game, they know they have to do whatever it takes to make a play and they are gonna challenge coverage if needed. And a guy like Jones succeeds because he covers well, and in normal circumstances QB's just aren't going to challenge coverage that much. But when coverage is challenged at the end of the game, guys who can't play the ball in the air aren't good at stopping that late game surge. And it's especially a problem when that guy is placed on a top flight receiver who happens to be very, very good at beating DB's for the ball.
I know INT's aren't the end all, be-all. Guys like Revis, Asomugha, and Sherman weren't considered the top guy because they intercepted more passes than others. Its because their coverage was impeccable to the point they were rarely ever thrown against. But the difference between a guy like Jones and Sherman (and the others), is that those guys could make you pay if you did challenge them. We all remember "don't you try me with a sorry....receiver like Crabtree" when Sherman was challenged at the end of the NFC championship and showed why that was a bad idea.
There were QB's that just pretty much ignored Byron's coverage last year - one was Kyler Murray who just threw past him and literally threw the ball right between his hands. X isn't as consistent in coverage, but there really isn't a time that a QB sees him in place and still tries to get it past him - at least not one who didn't pay for it.
X did win the starting job as a rookie, beating out Alton Verner (respected veteran) for the job, played about 5-6 game and got hurt. When he came back, Gase decided to start him for the playoff game at Pitt and that’s when he recorded his first INT. Year 2 he had 4 picks and was the best corner on the team. Year 3 he became a top flight CB. IMO he was way ahead of Iggy at the same points in time.He was OK for a rook, but let's not pretend it wasn't until year three that he became a top level corner.
He has always had a "nose" for the ball, but he also got beat regularly early on in man coverage, and was not always assignment sound in zone.
I'm not knocking him at all. He has worked extremely hard, both in the film room as well as in technique, to hone his craft.
Year one X was not a finished product, but you can see his ability. The poster wanted to draw parallel between X year one and Noah year one. That doesn't workHe was OK for a rook, but let's not pretend it wasn't until year three that he became a top level corner.
He has always had a "nose" for the ball, but he also got beat regularly early on in man coverage, and was not always assignment sound in zone.
I'm not knocking him at all. He has worked extremely hard, both in the film room as well as in technique, to hone his craft.
Actually, the best teams draft well.Noah was selected as the replacement for X in a few years. The best teams plan ahead and strengthen areas of strength so they don’t become areas of need.
Given Iggy's age/experience at the position, I wouldn't expect otherwise.Year one X was not a finished product, but you can see his ability. The poster wanted to draw parallel between X year one and Noah year one. That doesn't work
The way you put it, i agree to certain degree. It is not the kid's fault he was drafted first round.Given Iggy's age/experience at the position, I wouldn't expect otherwise.
I think that's where he gets a bad rap from some fans.
If you have the opinion that it was a reach, or a "luxury" pick, I can understand that line of thought, but your beef is with the organization (in this case, probably Flo), not the player.
AlterraunX did win the starting job as a rookie, beating out Alton Verner (respected veteran)