NorthHawk wrote:I think Wilson is pretty good, and may be ahead of the curve at this point, but I'm going to wait for another few years before making any statements about the 2012 QB draft class.
As for this ranking, its about reputation and peoples initial impressions about what a QB should be.
After about 5 years, we should have a better measuring stick.
Hawktown wrote:future, you might as well throw in the towel, your not thinking well, i am afraid you have a concussion
Futureite wrote:Hawktown wrote:future, you might as well throw in the towel, your not thinking well, i am afraid you have a concussion
We can count the number of QBs out of this class that were put behind center beginning wwek 1 and asked to deal from the pocket like a 10 yr vet. That was Andrew Luck. He did not have an 8 or 9 game break in period like Wilson, or any time on the bench like Kaep. I think Wilson is a dynamic QB that is capable of doing a lot of things very well, but he is not the caliber of a pure pocket thrower as luck. Luck makes NFL.throws that few vets (let alone 2nd yr QBs) can make. His full compliment of abilities was on display as he marched down the field in the 4th qtr V your D, which was clearly the NFL's best. Hitting guys with Hawks in his face, on the move, and delivering beautifully from the pocket. No matter what anyone says, Luck stepped into a 2 win team that had nowhere near the surrounding talent that the Hawks or Niners had, and he carried the load almost exclusively. Very few guys in the history of the entire NFL have done what he did. IMO he is the best young QB bar none.
Futureite wrote:Hawktown wrote:future, you might as well throw in the towel, your not thinking well, i am afraid you have a concussion
We can count the number of QBs out of this class that were put behind center beginning wwek 1 and asked to deal from the pocket like a 10 yr vet. That was Andrew Luck. He did not have an 8 or 9 game break in period like Wilson, or any time on the bench like Kaep. I think Wilson is a dynamic QB that is capable of doing a lot of things very well, but he is not the caliber of a pure pocket thrower as luck. Luck makes NFL.throws that few vets (let alone 2nd yr QBs) can make. His full compliment of abilities was on display as he marched down the field in the 4th qtr V your D, which was clearly the NFL's best. Hitting guys with Hawks in his face, on the move, and delivering beautifully from the pocket. No matter what anyone says, Luck stepped into a 2 win team that had nowhere near the surrounding talent that the Hawks or Niners had, and he carried the load almost exclusively. Very few guys in the history of the entire NFL have done what he did. IMO he is the best young QB bar none.
HumanCockroach wrote:Futureite wrote:Hawktown wrote:future, you might as well throw in the towel, your not thinking well, i am afraid you have a concussion
We can count the number of QBs out of this class that were put behind center beginning wwek 1 and asked to deal from the pocket like a 10 yr vet. That was Andrew Luck. He did not have an 8 or 9 game break in period like Wilson, or any time on the bench like Kaep. I think Wilson is a dynamic QB that is capable of doing a lot of things very well, but he is not the caliber of a pure pocket thrower as luck. Luck makes NFL.throws that few vets (let alone 2nd yr QBs) can make. His full compliment of abilities was on display as he marched down the field in the 4th qtr V your D, which was clearly the NFL's best. Hitting guys with Hawks in his face, on the move, and delivering beautifully from the pocket. No matter what anyone says, Luck stepped into a 2 win team that had nowhere near the surrounding talent that the Hawks or Niners had, and he carried the load almost exclusively. Very few guys in the history of the entire NFL have done what he did. IMO he is the best young QB bar none.
Guess for me, it boils down to turnovers in the post season, he has in general minus one fantastic half against an injury riddled KC team played not just mediocre but horribly in the post season. Hell, a large reason he had to play flawless ( though he didn't) against KC to pull that game out of the fire was because of his turnovers and ineptitude in the first half, that was followed by one of the worst games against a fairly poor defense I've seen in the post season in recent memory. Until Luck expands beyond physically gifted, I reserve judgement. There has been so many QB's that could "make throws that ten year vets" can't when young that have had mediocre or less careers, that until I see a truly impressive stretch of games, I'm not sold yet.
Luck can have his "soft landing for other" excuse if you want ( though not sure how the same could be said about RGIII AS HE Was the offense from the get go, and had a pretty miserable team, and it showed the following year), but that excuse became invalid at the end of his first season, and certainly by the playoffs. I don't think anyone is arguing his talent, but once again, it takes far more than simply talent to become a great QB. IMO Wilson currently is ahead of Luck, and most stats bear that out as true.
You know me, don't heap praise on QB's that cause the situation that makes them come back and win the game because of their own mistakes in the beginning, and Luck as of now seems to be following that model.
HumanCockroach wrote:Sorry Future, I don't agree with your assessment about how "bad" that Colts D and running game were ( and the actual stats support that position) there is a vast difference between MEDIOCRE QB play ( which what Seattle had) and HORRID QB play ( which is what the Colts rolled with, not to mention NO experience) you can paint Lucks poor play however you feel like painting it, I'm just not sold on the guy yet. He has time to change that opinion, I'm not writing him off.... yet, but the SAME was professed about guys like Jeff George not all that long ago, so I'm not about to polish the dudes nob like many fans and media are lining up to do.
For do for my money I want the guy that doesn't consistently put his team in a hole , and when called aponupon makes the clutch necessary plays to win important do or die games. The fact remains Wilson has out performed Luck to date, it really is that simple.
Futureite wrote:
Don't you think that argument works both ways though? QBs with great Ds and running game do not have to take many chances. They can wait for the game to come to them without forcing anything. Evenbif their team falls behind 14 in the 4th, there is a good chance the D will create a turnover or run game will get them back in the game. I remember the 49ers comeback V Philly from 23-3 played out just like that. Alex continued to dink and although he made some good throws, that comeback was not made on his arm.
In contrast, you put a team 14 down with a bad D and the QB is going to need to score everytime he touches the ball to have a shot at winning. A QB is nearly always going to make more turnovers when asked to carry the team, with once in a generation type exceptions like Manning or possibly Rodgers. Even guys who IMO arw just a hair below that level such as Drew Brees have had 4 and 5 int games. It comes with the territory when you are asked to be the focal point of the entire team.
I honestly cannot remember any great pocket passers who did not turn the ball over to hurt their teams. Montana threw 3 ints in the catch game. I could say he only made the comeback because he put his team in position to need one, but in reality his team is never even in the Champ game without Montana playing the style that he did, as the centerpiece of the O.
Same is true with Luck. With bad QB play the Colts were a 2 win team. With bad QB play the Hawks were a 7 win team. That illustrates the pressure Luck and RW were under to start their careers better than any other stat could.
Futureite wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:Sorry Future, I don't agree with your assessment about how "bad" that Colts D and running game were ( and the actual stats support that position) there is a vast difference between MEDIOCRE QB play ( which what Seattle had) and HORRID QB play ( which is what the Colts rolled with, not to mention NO experience) you can paint Lucks poor play however you feel like painting it, I'm just not sold on the guy yet. He has time to change that opinion, I'm not writing him off.... yet, but the SAME was professed about guys like Jeff George not all that long ago, so I'm not about to polish the dudes nob like many fans and media are lining up to do.
For do for my money I want the guy that doesn't consistently put his team in a hole , and when called aponupon makes the clutch necessary plays to win important do or die games. The fact remains Wilson has out performed Luck to date, it really is that simple.
So Kerry Collins who had thrown 5 TDs in a Champ game and was given a legit opportunity is horrible and Tarvaris Jackson mediocore? TJack is a terrible starting NFL QB. And so was the kid that took over for Collins in Indy. If you are even remotely comparing the Colt's D to Seattle then this entire discussion is a joke. The Chiefs threw all over them the entire game and the Pats saw that and decided hey, let's just run on them for 200+ yds because it's easier.
The Colts also have nothing close to Marshawn Lynch and never have. No one stacks the box to stop Donald Brown or Trent Richardson.
Look at the Houston game. Down 20-3 going into the 4th and it goes down as a comeback victory for RW. In reality 10 pts came from a forced fumble = FG and then Sherman's pick 6. In OT a couple of personal fouls set up the winning FG. RW threw for just over 100 yds and a pick. If he did not have that D he'd have been forced to do exactly what Luck has had to in countless games.
Look at the fail mary game. Held GB high powered o to 12 pts while Seattle O had mustered 7 pts just prior to the final drive, where not a single pass was completed. That goes down as an RW comeback, yet it was clearly won by the D.
I have no idea why it is so important to prove RW is better than Luck. He is not. I am as big of Kaep fan as you'll find, and I have no problem admitting Luck is better at pure QB. RW and Kaep are dangerous because of their feet, which each use in different ways. Luck is dangerous because of his arm and ability to command a prostyle O. That is not what SF or Seattle currently run, with 50% run and gimic plays like the read option, jet sweeps and basic WR/RB screens. It is no great accomplishment that neither of our QBs turn the ball over. They shouldn't in that style of O.
The Colts also have nothing close to Marshawn Lynch and never have. No one stacks the box to stop Donald Brown or Trent Richardson.
Look at the Houston game. Down 20-3 going into the 4th and it goes down as a comeback victory for RW. In reality 10 pts came from a forced fumble = FG and then Sherman's pick 6. In OT a couple of personal fouls set up the winning FG. RW threw for just over 100 yds and a pick. If he did not have that D he'd have been forced to do exactly what Luck has had to in countless games.
I have no idea why it is so important to prove RW is better than Luck. He is not.
RW and Kaep are dangerous because of their feet
Luck is dangerous because of his arm and ability to command a prostyle O.
Futureite wrote:I have no idea why it is so important to prove RW is better than Luck. He is not. I am as big of Kaep fan as you'll find, and I have no problem admitting Luck is better at pure QB. RW and Kaep are dangerous because of their feet, which each use in different ways. Luck is dangerous because of his arm and ability to command a prostyle O. That is not what SF or Seattle currently run, with 50% run and gimic plays like the read option, jet sweeps and basic WR/RB screens. It is no great accomplishment that neither of our QBs turn the ball over. They shouldn't in that style of O.
Futureite wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:Sorry Future, I don't agree with your assessment about how "bad" that Colts D and running game were ( and the actual stats support that position) there is a vast difference between MEDIOCRE QB play ( which what Seattle had) and HORRID QB play ( which is what the Colts rolled with, not to mention NO experience) you can paint Lucks poor play however you feel like painting it, I'm just not sold on the guy yet. He has time to change that opinion, I'm not writing him off.... yet, but the SAME was professed about guys like Jeff George not all that long ago, so I'm not about to polish the dudes nob like many fans and media are lining up to do.
For do for my money I want the guy that doesn't consistently put his team in a hole , and when called aponupon makes the clutch necessary plays to win important do or die games. The fact remains Wilson has out performed Luck to date, it really is that simple.
So Kerry Collins who had thrown 5 TDs in a Champ game and was given a legit opportunity is horrible and Tarvaris Jackson mediocore? TJack is a terrible starting NFL QB. And so was the kid that took over for Collins in Indy. If you are even remotely comparing the Colt's D to Seattle then this entire discussion is a joke. The Chiefs threw all over them the entire game and the Pats saw that and decided hey, let's just run on them for 200+ yds because it's easier.
The Colts also have nothing close to Marshawn Lynch and never have. No one stacks the box to stop Donald Brown or Trent Richardson.
Look at the Houston game. Down 20-3 going into the 4th and it goes down as a comeback victory for RW. In reality 10 pts came from a forced fumble = FG and then Sherman's pick 6. In OT a couple of personal fouls set up the winning FG. RW threw for just over 100 yds and a pick. If he did not have that D he'd have been forced to do exactly what Luck has had to in countless games.
Look at the fail mary game. Held GB high powered o to 12 pts while Seattle O had mustered 7 pts just prior to the final drive, where not a single pass was completed. That goes down as an RW comeback, yet it was clearly won by the D.
I have no idea why it is so important to prove RW is better than Luck. He is not. I am as big of Kaep fan as you'll find, and I have no problem admitting Luck is better at pure QB. RW and Kaep are dangerous because of their feet, which each use in different ways. Luck is dangerous because of his arm and ability to command a prostyle O. That is not what SF or Seattle currently run, with 50% run and gimic plays like the read option, jet sweeps and basic WR/RB screens. It is no great accomplishment that neither of our QBs turn the ball over. They shouldn't in that style of O.
Futureite wrote:In this particular debate RW falls into (1). He does a lot of things extremely well that Carroll asks him to do, and he plays well under pressure. That said, Luck could go to Seattle and do what RW does. Clearly Luck has a high football IQ and is great under pressure. In fact, he became a phenom in college by playing that exact same style of QB under Jim Harbaugh. But I have a hard time envisioning RW going to Indy and doing what Luck does, which is to sit in the pocket consistently and beat great teams, with no run game or D.
HumanCockroach wrote:I find it odd when people use the "players" the Seahawks had vs. Colts in assessing what each QB had to work with...... Over half the offense has been replaced, and about half of the defense. Wilson walked in with NO notable receivers, an injured young offensive line, and Lynch. NONE of those LB's, Sherman was a part time player the season before ( though to be fair it wasn't difficult to see how good he could be if one had the mind to see it)Chancellor had started one season, no Wagner, KJ had played half a season as a starter, Irvin hadn't been drafted, they had lost one of the four starters on the D line. Pretty much the Hawks knew what they had in Mebane,Red,Clem,Thomas and Browner with any amount of certainty, on the O it was even more of a cluster F. WILLIAMS for the love of god had a decent shot at being a starting receiver before he got so fat during rehab , Braylon Edwards was a "go to " receiver, TO made an appearance, It was a JOKE on offense coming into that season....
Old but Slow wrote:I have to reflect back to Northhawks reply that we need to wait for a few years to really judge. I would not trade Wilson for anyone, currently, but that is just me. If we are judging by how they have done so far, then Wilson is a winner. If we try to project, that is a totally different animal. Maybe Kaep will learn to read better, and go to his second or third receiver. If he does, he could be one of the best. Maybe Luck will cut down on turnovers, have a less reckless style, and become great. Maybe Jake Locker will get it together and fulfill his promise. And, Wilson, could regress, and become merely average.
Personally, I am betting on Wilson. He has a drive to get better, and to be the best, that, so far, indicates that he will continue his growth. What he already has produced, with his friends,is a Super Bowl trophy and ring. So, he has a step up already, but greatness is a measure over time, and we will have to wait for that.
The wait should be a real pleasure. I am sure of that.
kalibane wrote:I don't even know why we are entertaining this from a 49er fan honestly (both here and the Sherman thread). Let an argument start up about who was better, Montana or Marino. All these ideas about "system player" will magically evaporate.
Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:I don't even know why we are entertaining this from a 49er fan honestly (both here and the Sherman thread). Let an argument start up about who was better, Montana or Marino. All these ideas about "system player" will magically evaporate.
No, that was a valid argument. But in that case Montana was throwing to a receiver that was a late rd draft pick as his best target in Dwight Clark and Freddie Solomon for his first 2 SB wins while Marino was throwing to some of the best WRs in the league in Duper and Clayton. Montana put up 28 pts and marched his team downfield at the end of the NFC Champ game for a game winning TD v one of the NFL's best Ds in 1981. Msrino.put up 13 pts and did not play well V one of the NFL's best Ds in the SB. Montana led the NFL in QB rating a record 8 straight yrs and had one of the best statistical seasons of his career at age 39 on the Chiefs. Marino did?
So, that argument is easily distinguishable from this one. Montana was good with any supporting cast, on any team V any D. In our argument Andrew Luck stepped onto a 2 win team while RW threw 1 TD in the playoffs to get his team to the SB. The difference is talent between the two teams is obvious. The difference between what each QB is asked to do is obvious. I ask again, what did RW do at the end of the game V Indy's mediocore D, and what did Luck do V your #1 D? Of course one game does not decide everything, but that game illustrates my point. It's like a microcosm of their two careers. Luck.is constantly called upon to carry the entire team and he does an incredible job. Wilson is asked to do it in certain situations and b any objective measure has far, far less pressure on his shoulders on a game by game basis. If you claim Luck couldn't have thrown 1 TD for Seattle last year in the playoffs I call BS.
And River;
Kaep's career rating is 94.8. Luck has exceeded him in some stats, but not that one. Kaep's D also fell apart in the postseason in 2012, giving up over 30 ppg and yet Kaep nearly won us a SB. Lol so no, it's not "easier foe me to admit" Luck is better; I just believe he is at this point in his career. He is better than Kaep and RW.
kalibane wrote:The whole legend of Dan Marino is that he never had the supporting Cast. His best WR was a late round pick and both Clayton and Duper were shrimps. To say the were some of the best WRs in the league is a joke, neither ever made an all pro team. (Dwight Clark did though) Marino never had Wendell Tyler, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman, John Taylor, Brent Jones or that Jerry Rice kid who was kind of good. Marino was also a superior pocket passer and Montana could never have made a lot of the throws Marino made on a regular basis.
Andrew Luck has never been to the big game. In the Playoffs Andrew Luck has 6 TDs, 8 Ints, has a 70 passer rating, has a completion percentage of 55% and a playoff record of 1-2.
Russell Wilson won the Superbowl. In the playoffs Wilson has 6 TDs, 1 Int, has a passer rating of 102, 63% completion, and a playoff record of 4-1.
Funny how that works huh? Can't keep a consistant argument to save your life.
You can make up all the B.S. you want you can act like I don't know what I'm talking about but at least I'm conisistant in my arguments. I've always been Montana over Marino, Brady over Manning and now Wilson (so far) over Luck. My position doesn't change based on which Jersey the players are wearing.
kalibane wrote:The whole legend of Dan Marino is that he never had the supporting Cast. His best WR was a late round pick and both Clayton and Duper were shrimps. To say the were some of the best WRs in the league is a joke, neither ever made an all pro team. (Dwight Clark did though) Marino never had Wendell Tyler, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman, John Taylor, Brent Jones or that Jerry Rice kid who was kind of good. Marino was also a superior pocket passer and Montana could never have made a lot of the throws Marino made on a regular basis.
Andrew Luck has never been to the big game. In the Playoffs Andrew Luck has 6 TDs, 8 Ints, has a 70 passer rating, has a completion percentage of 55% and a playoff record of 1-2.
Russell Wilson won the Superbowl. In the playoffs Wilson has 6 TDs, 1 Int, has a passer rating of 102, 63% completion, and a playoff record of 4-1.
Funny how that works huh? Can't keep a consistant argument to save your life.
You can make up all the B.S. you want you can act like I don't know what I'm talking about but at least I'm conisistant in my arguments. I've always been Montana over Marino, Brady over Manning and now Wilson (so far) over Luck. My position doesn't change based on which Jersey the players are wearing.
RiverDog wrote:kalibane wrote:The whole legend of Dan Marino is that he never had the supporting Cast. His best WR was a late round pick and both Clayton and Duper were shrimps. To say the were some of the best WRs in the league is a joke, neither ever made an all pro team. (Dwight Clark did though) Marino never had Wendell Tyler, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman, John Taylor, Brent Jones or that Jerry Rice kid who was kind of good. Marino was also a superior pocket passer and Montana could never have made a lot of the throws Marino made on a regular basis.
Andrew Luck has never been to the big game. In the Playoffs Andrew Luck has 6 TDs, 8 Ints, has a 70 passer rating, has a completion percentage of 55% and a playoff record of 1-2.
Russell Wilson won the Superbowl. In the playoffs Wilson has 6 TDs, 1 Int, has a passer rating of 102, 63% completion, and a playoff record of 4-1.
Funny how that works huh? Can't keep a consistant argument to save your life.
You can make up all the B.S. you want you can act like I don't know what I'm talking about but at least I'm conisistant in my arguments. I've always been Montana over Marino, Brady over Manning and now Wilson (so far) over Luck. My position doesn't change based on which Jersey the players are wearing.
Nice post, Kal.
I guess I'm in a minority (what else is new?) that doesn't mind Futureite claiming that Luck is a better QB than Russell. It's his opinion, and he's entitled to it and has every right to post it on "our board" as any one of us. It's how he's going about justifying it that's worrisome. I wish he'd just admit that his claim is based almost entirely on conjecture or opinion vs. fact or stat based, which is fine by me, so long as he admits it and quits trying to qualify stats that refute his argument and cherry pick those few that support it.
In nearly every statistical category, including team performance, which is the trump card Montana holds over Marino, Russell has the edge, and as we all know, quarterback is the most quantifiable position on the field.
kalibane wrote:The whole legend of Dan Marino is that he never had the supporting Cast. His best WR was a late round pick and both Clayton and Duper were shrimps. To say the were some of the best WRs in the league is a joke, neither ever made an all pro team. (Dwight Clark did though) Marino never had Wendell Tyler, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman, John Taylor, Brent Jones or that Jerry Rice kid who was kind of good. Marino was also a superior pocket passer and Montana could never have made a lot of the throws Marino made on a regular basis.
Andrew Luck has never been to the big game. In the Playoffs Andrew Luck has 6 TDs, 8 Ints, has a 70 passer rating, has a completion percentage of 55% and a playoff record of 1-2.
Russell Wilson won the Superbowl. In the playoffs Wilson has 6 TDs, 1 Int, has a passer rating of 102, 63% completion, and a playoff record of 4-1.
Funny how that works huh? Can't keep a consistant argument to save your life.
You can make up all the B.S. you want you can act like I don't know what I'm talking about but at least I'm conisistant in my arguments. I've always been Montana over Marino, Brady over Manning and now Wilson (so far) over Luck. My position doesn't change based on which Jersey the players are wearing.
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