trents wrote:http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/26351121/grateful-gronkowski-announces-retirement
Not even 30 years old! That should make the Pats less formidable.
idhawkman wrote:How many years did he have? If it is 8 or more, I'd agree with Riv. Under that I think he might be a second or third time HOF'er.
RiverDog wrote:Gronk played 9 seasons. Here's some of the facts for his resume:
5 Pro Bowls and 3 Super Bowl rings.
4 seasons with 1,000+ receiving yards, tied with the most for his position all time.
Gronk leads all tight ends for most post season receiving yards, receptions, and scores. He's also one of two players (the other being Jerry Rice) to record 20 or more receptions, 200 or more yards, and 3 or more TD's in the Super Bowl.
In 2011, Gronk caught 17 TD passes, most ever for a tight end and 5th for all players.
Since 2010, Gronk has registered 7 games with multiple TD receptions and 100+ receiving yards. Only 4 others, all WR's (Antonio Brown, Jordy Nelson, Megatron, and Julio Jones), have matched that feat during the same time frame.
Like I said, I don't necessarily like the guy or the team that he played for. But you can't deny the obvious: Gronk was the best tight end of his era.
RiverDog wrote:yea, but he took a beating. Those big tight ends that make a living catching passes over the middle, matched up against linebackers and free safeties, make for some big, juicy targets. He was smart to cut his losses and get out while he was ahead.
He wasn't one of my top most 10 likeable players, but he was one of if not the best pass catching tight end in his era and a slam dunk first round HOF'er.
obiken wrote:Riv to be fair, Who was a better Tight end? nobody.
RiverDog wrote:Idahawk mentioned Tony Gonzales, but he didn't have any rings. Gronk has 3. Those count when it comes to HOF induction. And Idahawk, IMO Gronk's records were more of a cause of those championship teams than they were a result of them, and there's no better example than the past SB. It's kinda like discounting Mickey Mantle's 18 World Series home runs by saying that he ran his numbers up by playing for championship teams. Mantle was a huge part of the '50's Yankees just like Gronk was a huge part of the '10's Patriots.
idhawkman wrote:By the way, I think in his 9 years he went to a total of 5 Super Bowls and they won 3. He was a major part of all of them.
RiverDog wrote:Yup, as I said, 3 rings. In today's HOF balloting, SB rings matter, which is why guys like Lynn Swann made it.
I realized that you were not disagreeing with me, but I did get the sense that you were attaching a disclaimer of sorts by noting that he benefited from playing on championship teams. Glad you cleared that up.
idhawkman wrote:That last post didn't come out right. I meant bad teams with one or two stars that win championships. Its easier to do on like a basketball team than it is on a baseball or football team.
RiverDog wrote:IMO baseball is less of a team sport than football or basketball. ERA's and batting averages are pretty darn individualized.
RiverDog wrote:IMO baseball is less of a team sport than football or basketball. ERA's and batting averages are pretty darn individualized.
idhawkman wrote:from an offense perspective I agree with you. From a defensive perspective I couldn't disagree more with you.
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