Peter King: Feature story on Tannehill -- "Sink or Swim" | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Peter King: Feature story on Tannehill -- "Sink or Swim"

TheWalrus

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As Ryan Tannehill walked into an autograph session last Saturday at the Dolphins' inaugural Fin Fest celebration, a crowd of fans in the Sun Life Stadium concourse caught sight of Miami's newly minted first-round quarterback and rained greetings on him. "Good luck, Ryan!" said one. "Need you, Tannehill!" said another. And one voice said, "Better be good!"

Not every team in the NFL has to do what the Dolphins and owner Stephen Ross did last Saturday: open the home stadium to fans and let them roam free on the turf, kick field goals, throw passes, tour the locker rooms, meet players. But in Miami, where the Dolphins have made the playoffs just once in the last 10 years, fewer than half of the stadium's 75,000 seats have been sold to season-ticket holders, and the team has failed repeatedly in attempts to bring in big-name players or coaches who could fire up the fan base. "The apathy is high," said former Dolphins linebacker Kim Bokamper, who covers sports for Miami's CBS TV affiliate. "After failing to get so many guys they went after—Jim Harbaugh, Jeff Fisher, Peyton Manning—they've lost the benefit of the doubt with the fans. These fans are dying for someone to believe in."

Full story at the link:

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1197957/1/index.htm
 
i enjoyed the article but not sure if I agree that he is under more pressure than Luck to succeed. I'd rather be the first qb drafted in the first round since Dan Marino after over a 10 year drought of bad qb play than immediately following Peyton Manning when he's still playing in the league.
 
T-Hill was an outstanding pick at #8........finally da Phinz have some good news :-)
 
In what way could you possibly compare him to Sanchez? Tannehill is much more athletic, has a much better arm, and has a much better head on his shoulders. He may turn out to be just a Mark Sanchez, but based on just the obvious, there is no comparison to be made between the 2
 
In what way could you possibly compare him to Sanchez? Tannehill is much more athletic, has a much better arm, and has a much better head on his shoulders. He may turn out to be just a Mark Sanchez, but based on just the obvious, there is no comparison to be made between the 2

enter Junc/2 AFC title game losses
 
How is he like Mark Sanchez?

When Sanchez came out he was considered to be a very athletic guy with all of the tools but limited experience. You could say the same thing about Tanny, but I do think he is a better prospect than Sanchez was coming out because he has a bigger arm and he's more physically gifted. For me to say that isn't saying much, though, because I always hated Sanchez at USC.
To me, the best case scenario for Tannehill is a Hasselbeck type of guy, which is obviously not bad, but also nothing special. A west coast QB that can certainly be good enough to win on a very talented team, but he's never going to carry the team or be an upper echelon QB. Again, just my opinion.
 
When Sanchez came out he was considered to be a very athletic guy with all of the tools but limited experience. You could say the same thing about Tanny, but I do think he is a better prospect than Sanchez was coming out because he has a bigger arm and he's more physically gifted. For me to say that isn't saying much, though, because I always hated Sanchez at USC.
To me, the best case scenario for Tannehill is a Hasselbeck type of guy, which is obviously not bad, but also nothing special. A west coast QB that can certainly be good enough to win on a very talented team, but he's never going to carry the team or be an upper echelon QB. Again, just my opinion.

No, not really. Mark Sanchez is 6'2, ran a 4.93 40 and had/has average arm strength, accuracy, release and footwork. His tools are and always have been considered "average."

The point with Sanchez is that he was supposed to be a winner and a leader with great intangibles. Not that he was some ultra talented specimen.

Other than limited starting experience and playing in a pro style system, there is very little that Tannehill and Sanchez have in common as prospects entering the NFL.
 
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