c_hawkbob wrote:The raw numbers aren't what made that an exceptional game from Russ, it was the situational greatness; that TD on 4th & 3 and that last pass to put us in position to win it at the end, those are the ones that set this game apart from your list. And the fact that it's become expected of him is what makes him a great player.
HumanCockroach wrote:Seems to fluctuate depending on what assertation is trying to be trumpeted. Wilson hasn't been winning tons of games the last 3 seasons in the 4th quarter, and honestly, is Seattle trailing against GB and Carolina if Wilson makes a basic NFL throw? Who knows honestly, but I do know, that there's quite a bit of hypocracy on this board when it comes to him.
RiverDog wrote:
I'll move off of solid if you'll move off of Breesian. And by every standard? How about we use some stats from Week 12 as a standard:
Russell Wilson 22-31, 339, 2 TD
Dak Prescott 22-31, 289, 2 TD's
Matt Ryan, 35-47, 377, 2 TD's
Baker Mayfield, 19-26, 258, 4 TD's
Jameis Winston, 29-38, 312, 2 TD's
Phillip Rivers, 28-29, 259, 3 TD's
Ben Worthlessburger, 41-56, 462, 1 TD
Andrew Luck, 30-37, 343, 3 TD's
Kirk Cousins, 29-38, 342, 3 TD's
Marcus Mariota, 22-23, 303, 2 TD's
We can argue about semantics all we want, but the point that I am trying to make, that you and some of the others keep missing, is that at least statistically and relative to other quarterbacking performances around the league, Russell's performance last Sunday was not exceptional. I invite you to weigh in on my Quarterback Play thread.
And before you say it, I'm not accepting Anthony's stats monkey crown!
HumanCockroach wrote:Seems to fluctuate depending on what assertation is trying to be trumpeted. Wilson hasn't been winning tons of games the last 3 seasons in the 4th quarter, and honestly, is Seattle trailing against GB and Carolina if Wilson makes a basic NFL throw? Who knows honestly, but I do know, that there's quite a bit of hypocracy on this board when it comes to him.
Anthony wrote:We can argue about semantics all we want, but the point that I am trying to make, that you and some of the others keep missing, is that at least statistically and relative to other quarterbacking performances around the league, Russell's performance last Sunday was not exceptional.
It is exceptional when taken in context we are a running team, that all of a sudden could not run. WhT ai also find interesting is that you never used this argument before but now that it seems to help you, you do Hmm. That said you have 10 QBs that means 22 others did not that says it is still a really exceptional thing. In addition, I find it interesting you leave out the fact Ryan and LUck had Ints something the others did not. That said as I said to another you can believe what you want, but his performance this past week was exceptional by every standard in the NFL, the fact you seem to feel the need to come up with excuses to knock it down says a lot about you, which puts you in the sad category. So I am sorry for you.
RiverDog wrote:
You missed 3 key words in my post, so I thought I'd make them a little larger and bolder for you. If you want to add INT's to them, then fine, go for it. While you're at it, you might as well as add QB rating, too. All I did was take a quick and dirty look at the highlights as listed in the ESPN score summaries from Week 12, and they had just the 3 stats I included.
But please, spare me your man crush spin. The discussion was purely statistical, and I stand by my conclusion: In light of other QB performances around the league, Russell's statistical performance Sunday was not exceptional.
HumanCockroach wrote:Nah, somebody again doesn't understand a word. Hypocracy would be blaming a lineman for getting pushed back into a QB that should have delivered the ball before it ever happened to excuse that inability to deliver the ball in a timely fashion, and then despite still having time, and a wide open receiver in the endzone, airmailed a basic NFL throw, leaving points on the field for the second week in a row, and endangering another players health.
That's hypocracy big guy. How about everytime Wilson is pressured, ignoring that he's held the ball to long, and is sacked because of it? Or when he runs into sacks? How about the sh#tshow at the end of the half last week, taking a sack, costing Seattle its last timeout, then proceeding to throw a forward lateral instead of running out of bounds? Effectively chewing up all of Seattle's time single handedly? How about his intentional grounding penalties that are common, after aimlessly running around?
There's issues with ALL players, hypocracy would be chastising and blaming all of them guilty or not, and never holding Wilson accountable. Hypocracy would be claiming Wilson doesn't hold the ball to long, and doesn't struggle easily in games for pretty much the entirety of his career. That my sad, stupid little jock boy friend is hypocracy, not pointing out those things.
HumanCockroach wrote:Wahhh.... wahhhh....wahhhhh..... I hold Wilson to the SAME standard I hold every player. Doesn't bother me to do so. He isn't the second coming, he's a football player.
c_hawkbob wrote:The raw numbers aren't what made that an exceptional game from Russ, it was the situational greatness; that TD on 4th & 3 and that last pass to put us in position to win it at the end, those are the ones that set this game apart from your list. And the fact that it's become expected of him is what makes him a great player.
NorthHawk wrote:That may have been a blessing in disguise because it didn't leave the Panthers any time to mount any type of comeback.
NorthHawk wrote:That may have been a blessing in disguise because it didn't leave the Panthers any time to mount any type of comeback.
idhawkman wrote:Your two examples are great because the point out the issue that frustrates me about him the most. The 4th and 3 TD pass was on the money. No where else to put that pass for it to be a TD. The pass to Lockett to setup the game winning FG was underthrown. Lockett would have had a TD if RW had thrown that one the same as the 4th and 3 pass. Instead, Lockett had to wait on the pass and then get tackled at the 10. In the overall scheme of things, we won on a game winning FG but we should have won on the Lockett TD :50 earlier.
burrrton wrote:
I also think (though I don't know for sure) Wilson is frequently careful not to get too cute when staring at sure-ish receptions. If the receiver is WIIIIIIDE open, better to take the sure 50-yard completion than try to throw a perfect ball and risk the overthrow.
Yeah, perfect throws 100% of the time would be nice, but since that doesn't happen with *anybody*, I'm not going to get frustrated with a slightly under-thrown ball when it's clear he can get away with it.
burrrton wrote:I also think (though I don't know for sure) Wilson is frequently careful not to get too cute when staring at sure-ish receptions. If the receiver is WIIIIIIDE open, better to take the sure 50-yard completion than try to throw a perfect ball and risk the overthrow.
Yeah, perfect throws 100% of the time would be nice, but since that doesn't happen with *anybody*, I'm not going to get frustrated with a slightly under-thrown ball when it's clear he can get away with it.
HumanCockroach wrote::lol:
I wonder what's the excuse for all the early game under throws, over throws that costs Seattle points and first downs?
Don't want to make it to easy? Lmfao.... I've seen Wilson intentionally ground the ball multiple times every season, losing crucial yardage, a down, and not saving a hit on him but am to believe in that specific fraction of a second( as clearly that hasn't happened regularly) I'm supposed to believe, he knew he needed to under throw the ball ( even though, more often than not it gives the DB the chance to recover and knock the ball away, as has happened DOZENS upon DOZENS of times to Wilson) to win the game..... yeah, sure, ya bet ya.... smh.
And I most certainly have seen it amongst elite QBs... when an underthrown actually creates the room to complete the pass, or, if it's simply a poor throw.... QBs don't attempt to be "off target" sometimes it's simply a bad throw. Some it seems struggle with that idea.... never a good idea to avoid a sure TD, ever, unless it's a player in POSSESSION of the ball already, not something still in question...
QBs don't attempt to be "off target" sometimes it's simply a bad throw.
burrrton wrote:Yes. And sometimes it's simply a *careful* throw. If this seems preposterous to you, play more sports.
idhawkman wrote:I think that is RWs biggest problem - trying to be careful in the first 3 quarters. When it is late in the game and nothing to lose, he lets it rip and plays well. But early in games he is "careful" and thus not very good.
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