fleet wrote:dice wrote:fleet wrote:Come on man
hey, you just go with whatever suits your narrative. speak up every time carter has a big game. OR you can be intellectually honest and look at the bigger picture. like this:
2024
dexter 39 pressures in 356 pass snaps (11.0%) carter 53 in 541 (9.8%)
carter 36 hurries (6.7%), dexter 19 (5.3%)
dexter 6 sacks, carter 5 sacks
dexter 39.5 tackles, carter 32.5
carter 27 stops, dexter 24
dexter 14 hits, carter 12
carter 6 batted, dexter 2
carter 2 FF, dexter 0
carter 74 PFF, dexter 70
there has been no bigger critic of ryan poles around here than me. but i have no problem giving him credit where due. carter's market value was what it was for a reason. trading down, taking OT in rd. 1 instead of DT, and taking a DT w/ the additional acquired pick later in the draft is usually the smart move. and this was no exception. DESPITE carter being a stud on his best behavior
I suppose downplaying Carter’s impact game last night is intellectually honest.
of course it is. you have to account for the competition. but i never said that carter didn't have an excellent game
As already pointed out, Dexter was not part of the trade. The punter is now. Honestly, I can’t believe you’re arguing that Dexter’s stats make him as valuable as Jalen Carter. I don’t even know how to respond.
because you invented the idea that i said dexter was as valuable. mischaracterizing my position and then shooting it down with exasperation is just more intellectual dishonesty. what i SAID was that dexter played comparably to carter this year. over the course of the regular season
Box score watching does not capture what is happening on the football field. There is nobody in the league that watches both players who would entertain this comparison.
well, PFF watches every damn play and scored dexter in the neighborhood of carter. and they don't give a **** about box scores
the irony is that this conversation started with you providing carter's box score, ignoring the context of those numbers

















