FinAtic8480
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1.Chad Henne missed a wide-open Brian Hartline for a probable touchdown on Thursday night's first play. He either missed Brandon Marshall in the end zone or they weren't thinking the same route a little later. His offense didn't put up a touchdown against reserve Dallas players.
So Thursday continued a preseason from Henne in which you wanted to see more. If he was a five-year veteran with a proven body of work, it wouldn't matter. Maybe it still doesn't. It's preseason, after all. And preseason is full of false hope in players (remember John Avery?) and false worries (one columnist - not me - once wrote to bench Dan Marino when he struggled coming off his Achilles repair. He naturally threw five TD passes in the opener.)
But this is the first season the keys really have been handed to Henne and you wanted to see something more than a very good second quarter at Jacksonville this preseason.
At least Tony Sparano did.
And that tells you something about his thinking on Henne and the first-team offense right now. It's not all Henne. The running game has been bad this preseason. The offensive line hasn't been very good. Receivers have dropped passes. Again: It's preseason. Again: Let's not overdo it.
But Sparano kept Henne and the first-team offense in the game into the second quarter - rare for the fourth game of preseason. That ended with tackle Jake Long getting hurt (though he looked fine afterward), Henne sacked and a fumble recovered by Dallas.
But Sparano evidently is worried enough about this offense to run the risk of injury in the most meaningless of preseason games. That says something.
Then Chad Pennington entered the game and immediately completed 7 of 10 passes for 40 yards and a touchdown. Which means ...
2. Sparano has to be asking privately, "How long would I stay this season with a struggling Henne?" The season's first half is a tough schedule starting with at Buffalo, at Minnesota and the Jets. Pennington is no long-term solution. History says he'll get hurt. And, at 34, he has a pop-gun arm -- though one that still could work in this offense like it did in 2008. Brandon Marshall works the short and middle routes and busts big gains from them. Pennington's accuracy, in fact, is an asset to that. Plus, some veterans still view him as a leader in the way Henne hasn't risen to.
Bottom-line: You've invested a lot in Henne for good reason. He showed last year he can be a good NFL quarterback. There's no reason to cast all that aside off a preseason. But it's a performance-based job and if this shoddy preseason leaks into the regular season there will be an unwanted decision to face. And quicker than you might expect.
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/spo...g/2010/09/hyde5_is_henne_on_a_short_leas.html
This BS needs to stop