wait_a_sec wrote:Call me crazy but I picked Cards. SF has all the pressure on them. It's SB or bust with a coach that doesn't get along with the higher ups. Key players aging. Haven't seen anything on offense that supposedly has improved. Yes it's preseason. But 3 points total thus far should worry them. New stadium pressure will only add to the fire. The fans will be out for blood if they experience any series of losses. Lots of potential for implosion. Cards have nowhere to go but up.
Rams offense just won't cut the mustard. If Bradford does finally have the year he was drafted to do, then good for them. But just don't see it happening.
HumanCockroach wrote:It surprises me a bit that you don't think that Harbaugh would be interested in Pryor to be honest, every time time I see him play I immediately think of year one Kaepernick, I would think that Harbaugh if he is the "Quarterback whisperer" we've been lead to believe might indeed be interested in a QB with similar traits and abilities to the one that he has tied his wagon to for the forseable future and spent a second round draft pick initially to attain for pretty much nothing.
Doesn't bother me that you don't think he will be or anything, just thought that was an odd statement.
We don’t have verified measurables on Pryor but he is about the same size as Cam Newton (6-5 and 245 pounds) and may be a little better athlete. He has speed, quick feet and outstanding body control to go along with very good strength. He has outstanding arm strength and can throw a tight, catchable ball. Unlike many of the “spread” formation quarterbacks, Pryor has played a number of plays from under center. It could be as much as 30–40 percent of the Ohio State offense, so playing from under center will not be a skill that he will have to learn when he makes the jump to the NFL.
Pryor has all the arm strength necessary to make every NFL throw. Pryor also has more than enough arm strength to hit his receivers in stride 50 yards or more down the field without putting a tremendous amount of air under the football. He has also displayed the ability to connect on the 15 yard out.
Futureite wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:It surprises me a bit that you don't think that Harbaugh would be interested in Pryor to be honest, every time time I see him play I immediately think of year one Kaepernick, I would think that Harbaugh if he is the "Quarterback whisperer" we've been lead to believe might indeed be interested in a QB with similar traits and abilities to the one that he has tied his wagon to for the forseable future and spent a second round draft pick initially to attain for pretty much nothing.
Doesn't bother me that you don't think he will be or anything, just thought that was an odd statement.
Lol except that Pryor has none of Kaep's traits. His arm strength is not NFL quality. Didn't score too high on the Wonderlic.He did not test out high in accuracy drills in the combine; Kaep did extremely well in all 3.
Why stop at Pryor HC. Why not go for the full "ba bing bang ching" drum roll and suggest we pick up Tebow. You really sold yourself short on this post.
I disagree on Cards too. They have enough weapons on O to sustain a fairly high level of play. Like Hawks and Ninrrs, they have developed a system and an identity on D too. Minter and possibly even Sopoaga could fit in well as plug and play players. They are still a good ball club.
kalibane wrote:Future where do you get this stuff? Pryor's arm is not NFL quality? Quotes from scouting reports prior to the supplemental draft:We don’t have verified measurables on Pryor but he is about the same size as Cam Newton (6-5 and 245 pounds) and may be a little better athlete. He has speed, quick feet and outstanding body control to go along with very good strength. He has outstanding arm strength and can throw a tight, catchable ball. Unlike many of the “spread” formation quarterbacks, Pryor has played a number of plays from under center. It could be as much as 30–40 percent of the Ohio State offense, so playing from under center will not be a skill that he will have to learn when he makes the jump to the NFL.Pryor has all the arm strength necessary to make every NFL throw. Pryor also has more than enough arm strength to hit his receivers in stride 50 yards or more down the field without putting a tremendous amount of air under the football. He has also displayed the ability to connect on the 15 yard out.
There are a ton of things you could easily use to pick Pryor apart with but instead you choose to just completely make something up showing that you've never paid attention to him on the field or even bothered to read about him. Then you wonder why people give you crap. I'm really starting to wonder how much football you watch or if you just read comments from ProFootball talk.
savvyman wrote:I like the Rams a lot - especially with the recent draft upgrades.
I think that the 49er's will not be the Hawks biggest threat next year for the division title - I believe the toughest competition will come from the Rams.
What do you think?
rottweiler wrote:savvyman wrote:I like the Rams a lot - especially with the recent draft upgrades.
I think that the 49er's will not be the Hawks biggest threat next year for the division title - I believe the toughest competition will come from the Rams.
What do you think?
I think you're prolly wishin' you'd never said ^ that ^.
Zorn76 wrote:Foles? Is there another one besides the guy starting for the Eagles?
Anyhow, the options are garbage for the Rams.
Sanchez? He'd guarantee them the #1 pick next spring.
Pryor is junk, also.
Stl is sunk. I don't think they would be anything more than a 7-8 win team even with Bradford, but they're toast.
wait_a_sec wrote:With the injury bug hitting Rams & Cards. And SF looking terrible (yes, I know - PRESEASON!) the division is looking like ours to lose. Just pray we don't lose any key players ourselves. Knock on wood.
How bout some Kaepernick highlights from yesterdays game against San Diego?
http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-game-high ... highlights
HumanCockroach wrote:What Mccown did last season is the exception, not the rule. Also last I checked, there was no Forte, Jeffries or Marshall currently playing in St. Louis. If Bradford was worse than Hill, I doubt he would have entered the season as the in questioned starter.The odds that Hill turns into that type of player is about as solid as Clemmons doing it last year. Not a realistic hope at this point. He's an OK back up who has kicked around the league and never excelled at any of his stops, thinking he will in St. Louis based on an anomaly seems off the mark ( to me at least).
Hawktawk wrote:I remember Shaun Hill coming into Seattle with the 9ers to face the defending NFC West champs in the 2008 season opener. He was very solid and outplayed Hasslebeck in a 9ers win. He can play. He is not as mobile as Clemmens was backing up Bradford last year. We will see.........
He'll get splattered once or twice and his wife will remind him that he is making all of $1.25 million for the season.
NorthHawk wrote:Any QB they sign will take a few weeks to understand the playbook.
They could strip it down quite a bit, but that would handcuff the Offense even more than a backup would.
It'll be interesting to see what they do.
savvyman wrote:rottweiler wrote:savvyman wrote:I like the Rams a lot - especially with the recent draft upgrades.
I think that the 49er's will not be the Hawks biggest threat next year for the division title - I believe the toughest competition will come from the Rams.
What do you think?
I think you're prolly wishin' you'd never said ^ that ^.
No because when I said it Bradford was projected to return as starting Quarterback.
Obviously because of recent events this weekend, I feel less optimistic on the Rams chances.
Still there are many excellent players remaining on a very young Rams team. I expect Fisher to rally his troops and prepare them to fight the other team each week - - in the same manner as how the Rams played towards the end of last season.
HumanCockroach wrote:I don't see Arizona being able to win games with their defense this year, so unless that offense takes a monumental step forward, I really don't see Arizona as anything more than an eight or nine win team. Could be wrong, just don't see it, they have basically lost half of that front seven that kept them in games, and allowed them to win games where the offense was woefully outplayed......
kalibane wrote:That makes no sense Future. You live in Northern California and somehow you missed how strong the arm of the Oakland Raiders QB was and managed to confuse him with a QB that isn't in the NFL anymore? Not to mention Vince Young has an NFL caliber arm anyway. It's not as strong as Pryor's but markedly stronger than guys like Steve Young and Hass, probably on the level of Peyton, pre neck surgery.
No one is debating that Pryor is the equivalent of Kapernick but the are in fact the same type of QB. Big, Mobile, Strong armed and raw coming out of college. Kaep is more intelligent and was harder working than Pryor coming out of college but the primary difference between them is Pryor never received proper coaching. Seattle is the first place he's been in his football career where he has good coaches to work with.
It would be only logical for Pryor to be a back up to Kaep because he is a poor man's Kaep and the coaching staff wouldn't have to rejigger the offense they way they will if Gabbert has to play. It probably won't happen because why would you bring in a project QB this late and expect him to pick up the offense to the point you were comfortable handing him the ball and keeping the ship afloat. But it makes complete sense if the timing isn't off.
kalibane wrote:P.S. I don't object to comparing Turbin to Lynch. It's a completely flawed analogy because RB is an instinctual position and you can't really "teach" a RB when and where to make his cuts the way you can "teach" a QB footwork, proper throwing mechanics or going through progressions.
RiverDog wrote:kalibane wrote:P.S. I don't object to comparing Turbin to Lynch. It's a completely flawed analogy because RB is an instinctual position and you can't really "teach" a RB when and where to make his cuts the way you can "teach" a QB footwork, proper throwing mechanics or going through progressions.
I don't mean to horn in on this discussion or change the subject, but that line caught my eye. It is extremely difficult to "teach" a quarterback proper throwing mechanics, at least at the NFL level. Tim Tebow is a prime example, as coaches for 7 years tried to change his wind up style as they knew it wasn't going to be good enough to succeed in the NFL. By the time you are in your 20's, your body is done growing and muscle memory is pretty much developed and extremely difficult to alter. I seem to remember Mike Holmgren, himself a pretty decent QB guru, talking about the challenges of changing a quarterback's throwing motion by the time they get to the pros. It's an attribute that they must have when they are drafted.
I don't know much about coaching up footwork. I haven't heard anyone comment about it as much as I have about altering throwing mechanics.
Agreed about running style. It seems to me that it is pure instinct and difficult if not impossible to coach up.
Once again, sorry for changing the subject, but I couldn't let that one pass.
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