I-5 wrote:Does it imply he has no arm, no talent?
He called RW a game-manager and cited the drop-off in performance and the that the team carried him to a super bowl win.
RiverDog wrote:To me, the term "Game Manager" implies a quarterback that doesn't or can't win games via a heavily passing offense, ie 400 yard, 4 TD games, but doesn't lose them, either, by maintaining high efficiency ratings and low turnovers. In other words, he doesn't win games, but he doesn't lose them, either. Russell Wilson fits that general description, and I would call his play of the past two years as that of a 'game manager'.
That's my description, and no, I obviously don't consider it a derogatory term. The problem is that the media is using it as a much broader definition, and lumps into it quarterbacks that simply happen to be the quarterback when his team wins. Case in point is Mark Sanchez in 2009 and 2010 when his teams made it to the AFC Championship game. The media called him a good "game manager", too, yet Sanchez had efficiency ratings that placed him relatively low amongst other starting quarterbacks. His teams won in spite of his play, not because of it. In Sanchez's case, he had a relatively low efficiency ratings and high turnover ratios (12/20 TD/INT and a 63.0 rating in 2009, 17/13 and a 75.3 rating in 2010). Compare those numbers to Russell's in 2012 (26 TD's, 10 INT's 100.0 rating in 2012, 26/9 101.2 in 2013).
The media has used such a broad definition of the term that it has turned into a 'dirty word', which is why some might take offense if you were to call Russell Wilson a "game manager." That's where the rub is.
You see from everything I read the term "game manager" means they rarely have to win the game for their team and in some cases cannot. Rw is not a game manager, RW is a playmaker. He can throw for 300+ yards and win the game, he can win the game with his feet, with his arm, and with his head. I do not think 400 yards and 4tds would be the mark as 400 yards does not happen often. I Mean amongst the top 5 QBs by yards they only went over 400 yards 10 times out of 80 games played. That is not a lot, and 3 of the top 5 only did it once, and all of them have several games well under 200 yards. So 400 yards is not the mark were if you are below it your a game manager. "Game Managers" are not amongst the leaders in comeback victories, they usually are not in the top 10 in tds, and td/int ratio, or YPA. So Rw is not a game manager by any stretch. Well at least not any more than any QB is, to an extent all QBS manage the game, it is their ability to improvise and make things happen when the game plan goes awry that decides who is and who is not a game manager, and Rw is amongst the best at improvising and more importantly wining.
Eaglehawk wrote:It means you do not have enough of the OTHER skills to be an elite qb, but you won't lose the game for the team either.
You are "MEH".
NorthHawk wrote:I still think it's a term that has become popular because of people obsessed with stats and involved in Fantasy Football.
When you are drafting for those leagues, you want QBs with big numbers regardless of how well they lead or how successful they are.
Any QB not near the top is thought of as simply a Game Manager. It has no basis in the actual play of the QB.
HumanCockroach wrote:As always with fantasy, each season is a product of itself. Wilson outscored Stafford last season, as well as Brees the season before. Points in fantasy for yardage is a bi product, rushing yardage and TD's are where points are scored, and Wilson consistently put up 20 or more points. Fantasy person could do worse. Investigate the scoring system before writing off Wilson is my advice. He scores a LOT more points than people think ( which IMHO is a BIG misperception that rolls from one to the other).
That said, perfectly content with a QB that wins, to one like Romo that puts up decent fantasy points, real life matters to me. Fantasy is a nice distraction, and has made me some decent money, but beyond that, meh.
Zorn76 wrote:Q: How many game managing QB's win Super Bowls?
A: Not many.
Brad Johnson and Trent Dilfer are the last ones to do so, in the truest sense of the word.
RiverDog wrote:Zorn76 wrote:Q: How many game managing QB's win Super Bowls?
A: Not many.
Brad Johnson and Trent Dilfer are the last ones to do so, in the truest sense of the word.
There's also not many defense-orientated teams that win Super Bowls, either, and the Bucs and Ravens were the last two prior to the Hawks winning it this season.
HC pointed out that Troy Aikman could be considered a game manager QB, and I would tend to agree.
Zorn76 wrote:RiverDog wrote:Zorn76 wrote:Q: How many game managing QB's win Super Bowls?
A: Not many.
Brad Johnson and Trent Dilfer are the last ones to do so, in the truest sense of the word.
There's also not many defense-orientated teams that win Super Bowls, either, and the Bucs and Ravens were the last two prior to the Hawks winning it this season.
HC pointed out that Troy Aikman could be considered a game manager QB, and I would tend to agree.
Well, it boils down to an individual's definition of "game manager."
I wouldn't categorize Aikman as a game manager, because he was too clutch for his career to be grouped that way. He made too many plays in big games. Again, game managing QB's, in my mind, are more about "not losing", and seldom are able to put their team on their shoulders and will them to victory, when necessary.
RiverDog wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:As always with fantasy, each season is a product of itself. Wilson outscored Stafford last season, as well as Brees the season before. Points in fantasy for yardage is a bi product, rushing yardage and TD's are where points are scored, and Wilson consistently put up 20 or more points. Fantasy person could do worse. Investigate the scoring system before writing off Wilson is my advice. He scores a LOT more points than people think ( which IMHO is a BIG misperception that rolls from one to the other).
That said, perfectly content with a QB that wins, to one like Romo that puts up decent fantasy points, real life matters to me. Fantasy is a nice distraction, and has made me some decent money, but beyond that, meh.
My first ever forage into the world of fantasy football and I got my ass whooped by the guy that drafted Peyton Manning.