Mel gave us a C+ on the draft.
NorthHawk wrote:I was saying at the time, Flynn was almost a rookie himself and his 2 wonder games were not an indication of future performance.
I really thought he was a product of McCarthy's system and coaching which didn't automatically mean he would be real good here.
As it turned out, Wilson stole the job from the start.
Knowing what we know now about Pete and how he looks at players, I think maybe Flynn was somewhat complacent and didn't really compete.
Maybe he just doesn't have the serious focus and drive Pete looks for, either.
NorthHawk wrote:We don't see what goes on behind the scenes in the film and locker rooms or how players relate to their teammates.
As we know now, strength of character is a big deal to PC so if Flynn didn't show much leadership or "presence" while Wilson did then the choice would have been easy for Pete.
They were building a locker room with very strong personalities and if Flynn was in any way lacking, Pete could not start him no matter if he was 100% if he was to be true to his philosophy.
Regarding the play on the field, from what I saw I didn't see much separation at first which to me meant the rookie had more upside.
What I didn't know was if he had enough character to survive the questions that would come from the entrenched doubters when he made a mistake.
It took guts to start Wilson, and I wouldn't have done that, but that's why I'll never be a coach.
Some say it was a gamble to start Wilson, but there would have been a gamble to start Flynn, too. Sometimes being too conservative costs you more than taking a good risk and obviously in hindsight Wilson was a good risk at that time. Again, we didn't see if either was respected or favored over the other behind the scenes by the coaching staff and/or players but I bet that was a huge factor in the decision.
Lucky for Pete, the shoulder injury to Flynn took care of a lot of the decision for him during TC and the rest is history.
RiverDog wrote:NorthHawk wrote:We don't see what goes on behind the scenes in the film and locker rooms or how players relate to their teammates.
As we know now, strength of character is a big deal to PC so if Flynn didn't show much leadership or "presence" while Wilson did then the choice would have been easy for Pete.
They were building a locker room with very strong personalities and if Flynn was in any way lacking, Pete could not start him no matter if he was 100% if he was to be true to his philosophy.
Regarding the play on the field, from what I saw I didn't see much separation at first which to me meant the rookie had more upside.
What I didn't know was if he had enough character to survive the questions that would come from the entrenched doubters when he made a mistake.
It took guts to start Wilson, and I wouldn't have done that, but that's why I'll never be a coach.
Some say it was a gamble to start Wilson, but there would have been a gamble to start Flynn, too. Sometimes being too conservative costs you more than taking a good risk and obviously in hindsight Wilson was a good risk at that time. Again, we didn't see if either was respected or favored over the other behind the scenes by the coaching staff and/or players but I bet that was a huge factor in the decision.
Lucky for Pete, the shoulder injury to Flynn took care of a lot of the decision for him during TC and the rest is history.
Absolutely true, and I disagree with Monkey when he says that Flynn didn't show any leadership skills. That's not something you can see on the field, at least not us. It's one of those subjective things that you have to be there in person to witness.
I guess I feel, or rather, felt, the opposite if it were my decision. If the on field performance was a toss up, I would tend to lean towards age/experience, especially at the quarterback position. In any event, Pete made the right call, perhaps the best single call he's made during his tenure. The whole Russell Wilson experience has caused me to re-think some of my basic assumptions.
NorthHawk wrote:Remember Flynn's experience was only a few games. I believe by game 4 Russell had more game experience than Flynn so he wasn't a savvy veteran that many portray him to be.
If he was equivalent to McCown (last years Bears QB) who played a good part of the season with consecutive games as well as previous years game experience then it might have been a different story.
But having only 2 full starts and playing in a few other games didn't give me the confidence he could be the answer or better player.
Having said that, I might have started him if I thought it was close or I thought Wilson's development would be hurt by any mistakes he made and the pressure to answer for those mistakes. That's where the behind the scenes work is invaluable.
RiverDog wrote:NorthHawk wrote:Remember Flynn's experience was only a few games. I believe by game 4 Russell had more game experience than Flynn so he wasn't a savvy veteran that many portray him to be.
If he was equivalent to McCown (last years Bears QB) who played a good part of the season with consecutive games as well as previous years game experience then it might have been a different story.
But having only 2 full starts and playing in a few other games didn't give me the confidence he could be the answer or better player.
Having said that, I might have started him if I thought it was close or I thought Wilson's development would be hurt by any mistakes he made and the pressure to answer for those mistakes. That's where the behind the scenes work is invaluable.
Flynn's playing experience was only 4 games. He spent 4 years in one of the better offensive systems in the league backing up a future HOF'er, experience which can't be easily dismissed. Russell had zero experience of any kind in the NFL.
NorthHawk wrote:I'm of the opinion that playing experience is the key and holding a clipboard might give you an idea of what the game plans look like but only game experience counts in a big way.
You just can't replicate the pressure and expectations from your teammates, crowds, speed and intensity of a real game in practice.
For those reasons I saw Flynn as little more than a lightly experienced rookie.
NorthHawk wrote:There's definitely a comfort level that a raw rookie wouldn't have by charting plays and watching.
However, with good quality QBs it's not as much of an issue these days because they are far better coached at the collegiate level and much more ready to play.
The coaches that say every QB should sit a year are probably the same ones that say 5'10 is too short to play QB.
It's hard to break out of patterns.
burrrton wrote:Mel gave us a C+ on the draft.
He's had to eat his words a bit too often on our drafts to really be taken seriously by me anymore.
HumanCockroach wrote:https://m.facebook.com/OfficialTheLegionOfZoomSeattle?_rdr
you're a bit late Monkey.....
NorthHawk wrote:I'm usually against starting a rookie QB, too, but when the rookie is clearly better than a relatively inexperienced veteran, the choice is obvious.
monkey wrote:*In the voice of Dennis Hopper*
Pop quiz hotshot. The offense needs 6 yards for a first down. There's Harvin on one side, Richardson on the other, Lynch in the backfield, and Wilson can run. What do you do? What do you do?
Eaglehawk wrote:monkey wrote:*In the voice of Dennis Hopper*
Pop quiz hotshot. The offense needs 6 yards for a first down. There's Harvin on one side, Richardson on the other, Lynch in the backfield, and Wilson can run. What do you do? What do you do?
You blow up the O line!
HumanCockroach wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:monkey wrote:*In the voice of Dennis Hopper*
Pop quiz hotshot. The offense needs 6 yards for a first down. There's Harvin on one side, Richardson on the other, Lynch in the backfield, and Wilson can run. What do you do? What do you do?
You blow up the O line!
And hence give up a huge 80 yard TD to either Richardson or Harvin that starts as a bubble screen or 5 yard slant...... works for me
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