Mulva wrote:
DaBrowns41 wrote:
So with 7-8 drops last game, do you think Jimmy Clausen, or Drew Brees, or Peyton Manning would have been better?
No, yes, yes. I don't want anything to do with Jimmy Clausen.
How can a QB play better when the ball hits his receivers in the hands.
He has made plenty of poor throws. Just about every throw he attempts more than 20 yards down field (actually, more like 15) is awful. That's why his yards/attempt is so poor. Check down after check down. Again, he looked good today, but I'm going by the whole body of work. You will never hear me say our receivers are good, but if you honestly think Peyton Manning wouldn't put up better numbers than Quinn has there is no reason for me to even respond to you.
Yes, he's not being completely accurate, but this is still his first season getting snaps.
This is his 3rd season. The fact that it's taken him as long as it has to win the job away from Derek Anderson is pretty telling to me. And even after he won it, he managed to lose it right back. The fact that it's his first season getting snaps is because he wasn't good enough to get any before. And the only reason he is getting them now is because Anderson was the worst QB in the NFL this season.
When you're RB is Jamal Lewis/Chris Jennings/Jerome Harrison, you don't get anything going on the ground.
Just to get back to Peyton Manning for a second, the Jamal Lewis/Harrison combo has significantly more yards and the same ypc average as Jospeh Addai. Just saying.
Defenses don't have to blitz to get to our QB. They just can rush 4, maybe 5 guys and get to us because John St. Clair is like a revolving door. In turn, that leaves 6-7 guys out to cover 3-4 wide receivers. You'd have trouble finding an open target as well.
Derek Anderson was a big problem, constantly throwing at people's feet, over their head.
See, this is where you get ridiculous, because the receivers led the league in drops with DA at quarterback too. It's a total double standard. But I'm not making an argument for him at all. We need a new QB. And I already said the right side of the O-line is a bigger problem, so no need to address that part.
Except for Joe Thomas blowing his block and getting Quinn sacked for a fumble, that's the only big turnover Quinn has had lately. Yes, he had two INT's against Baltimore, but neither were his fault, considering the ball bounced right off the receivers hands.
Unlike Anderson, Quinn is safe with the ball (except for the near pick 6 that Cooper could have had). Point is, he's not throwing into double coverage, he's not making bad throws.
He's made plenty of bad throws. You are choosing to overlook them. Again, go back and watch the Bengals tape. It was only 1 week ago.
Is he dumping the ball off a bit much? Sure
Understatement of the year
, but I'd rather gain 3-4 yards on a play than get an incomplete pass or interception because we want to throw it to Massoquoi who doesn't try for the ball in double coverage.
When you have no play makers around you, it's hard to put up points. We put up 23 points today against a very good defense with nothing.
We don't need a QB just yet. Even if QB was 100% our problem, studies have been proven that rookie QB's bust 95% more when they have 1 or less play makers on offense, so I'd rather develop our guys and get a play maker in the draft before we even think about another QB.
I don't want to draft a QB either. I'm not sold on any of them (I actually like Bradford a lot, but his injuries aren't worth the risk). Jason Campbell or Tavaris Jackson in free agency, or a trade would be just fine with me.
It's been painfully obvious all season that nobody on this team is the answer at QB, and a 4-game pattern of bad, good, bad, good isn't changing my mind.
Bruce Gradkowski managed to light up the Steelers today, so we'll see if Brady can put up some numbers again next week. It's going to take consistently good play the rest of the way to sell me on him being a part of the answer going forward.
You're judging every aspect of a QB who's just finally getting his chance to start consecutive games for a 1-11 football team.
Go and read my blog. You'll see the trend in QB's since 1999 drafted in the first round and bust rates.
QB's that had 2 or more play makers succeeded- All of them, for the most part.
QB's that had 1 or 0 play makers busted, except the jury is still out on Jason Campbell.
Even Peyton Manning had play makers his rookie season in Marvin Harrison and Marshall Faulk.
You can't expect great things out of a QB who doesn't have help.
Given the circumstances, Quinn is doing pretty well. The biggest thing is that he's limiting turnovers. 3 of his 5 INT's this season are balls that literally bounced off of his receivers hands. If Furrey catches that ball in Baltimore, they don't get a pick 6.
I know it's a lot of what if's, so I'll try to stop with that.
The Cincy game wasn't good for Quinn. He was forcing throws, he was inaccurate, but the Detroit game, and the San Diego game, he was virtually flawless. He made maybe 2 errant throws today.
If Mo Mass goes after the ball, either of them in our last drive, we get a 30+ yard play. Quinn has thrown the deep ball quite well with the exception of the very end of the Ravens game.
With Quinn having 10 starts, he's got 10 TD's and 7 INT's. Manning threw more INT's than TD's and completed around 55% of his passes in his first full season of playing, and he had an All-Pro RB and a great WR.
I'm not saying Quinn is, or will be Manning, because he won't. But he's certainly not a bad QB... At least not yet. If he was regressing as a QB, I could understand your argument, but he's been improving, especially since his first 2.5 games this season when he'd throw nothing but dump offs. Now he's finding his intermediate routes, and throwing the ball down the field.
When he's dumping it off, he's protecting himself from turnovers, which is what I'd like to see. Every QB dumps it off.
Just give the kid a full season. You can't judge NFL talent off of just 1 season or less.