NJ Dolphan
Rookie
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2008
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which was bogus and shows nothing.
Then at least explain WHY it's bogus. My guess is that you haven't, because you can't.
which was bogus and shows nothing.
I don't feel like he needs 'quicker' decisions. He needs to let plays develop now that he has time to throw the football. I also don't see 'more accurate' throws. The pass to Dion Sims, upon further review, was not a bad decision. It was an inaccurate throw.
Of course, I also believe that he was a GOOD quarterback last season. I also do not believe that just because he's had a slow start in the preseason, he won't show improvement during the year.
If he stays healthy, he is going to get 16 games. Let's see what happens. I am a big believer in #17, but he's still got to prove it to me.
Then at least explain WHY it's bogus. My guess is that you haven't, because you can't.
truedolphan57 has, you just don't understand because you dont watch the games, you go on ESPN and look at the stats a THINK that tells the entire story.
In any event, I pointed out that the Dolphins were 20th or below in passing yards, points and rushing yards and that you can't chalk that up to Tannehill having a bad supporting cast.
I said that I watched all but three games last year, two of them were losses, two of those were on the radio, and one was arguably Tannehill's worst game. So I don't know why that's germane.
In any event, I pointed out that the Dolphins were 20th or below in passing yards, points and rushing yards and that you can't chalk that up to Tannehill having a bad supporting cast. I was then told that was wrong because Tannehill was 10th in passing yards. i responded that statistic was simplistic, if not irrelevant, because it doesn't account for other QBs that missed games due to injury or performance, and that it was much more useful to look at team passing yards.
While not disputing that basic premise, I am then told that the team passing yards are misleading because they include yards lost to sacks. I then point out that every team loses passing yards to sacks and that the amount of yards the Dolphins lost to sacks was not particularly dramatic when compared to another team like the Patriots, which was 12th best in sacks allowed, but lost only 90 more passing yards to sacks than the Dolphins did.
After that I got crickets, except to go back to "you obviously never watched the games."
In the end, Tannehill improved over his rookie year, although he really had nowhere to go but up. So, we've got someone better on our hands than Gabbert or Ponder. Hooray!! Still, I never said we should give up on him. I disagreed with the notion that there's no reason to have gotten frustrated with him, and it isn't glaringly obvious that he's going to be a top ten or even top fifteen QB.
This is the year that the excuses for the frustration end.
Whoa, there champ. Why not?
you can play the if/and/or buts all you want. injures happen. its part of the nfl. you can't project what an injured player woulda/coulda/shoulda done. The fact is, Tannehill threw for almost 40k yards. good enough to be 10th best in the league. you can try to spin team passing yards all day long, and i can spin them the other way. it's just not worth it. you keep believing team passing yards is more definitive of how good a qb is, and you will be the only one. because that's just in, it's TEAM passing. which includes a lot of variables.
It is NOT about if, ands or buts. Those are the actual results. So to make it clear, the Browns got more passing yards from a combination of Brandon Weedon, Hoyer and Jason Campbell. The Texans got more passing yards from a combination of Schaub and Keenam. If those QBs don't collectively impress you all that much, you can't say that Tannehill was that impressive, at least if you're going to make a big deal out of the fact that he was tenth in the league in passing yards.
Really? The QB is the most important player in the offense. His play affects how good the rush is, how many points the team scores, how often he gets sacked, obviously how well his receivers perform and ultimately how many games the team wins. Now all of those things are out of the QBs hands to a certain extent, and you can't really come up with a number to quantify it. Or, to take a very extreme hypothetical just to illustrate the point, you could give Peyton Manning, Rodgers, Brady the same exact team, with the same exact coaches as Tannehill got, and the results are obviously going to be better than what we got, although they all might have done better or worse than they did with the teams they're currently on.
It is NOT about if, ands or buts. Those are the actual results. So to make it clear, the Browns got more passing yards from a combination of Brandon Weedon, Hoyer and Jason Campbell. The Texans got more passing yards from a combination of Schaub and Keenam. If those QBs don't collectively impress you all that much, you can't say that Tannehill was that impressive, at least if you're going to make a big deal out of the fact that he was tenth in the league in passing yards.
The idea that there are better QBs than Tannehill doesn't negate the fact that QB play is impacted by poor play from the surrounding cast.
Cleveland also had more yards than Tony Romo, Andrew Luck, Ben Roethlisberger, and Joe Flacco. They had nearly as much as Tom Brady.
Are you suggesting that the combination of Weeden, Hoyer, and Campbell are the equal of those QBs as well?