GrendonJennings wrote:Ted is an idiot for not picking up a nuisance/washed up player to add to a team that thrives on not having off-field distractions. Great logic.
Don't think anyone said that. Ayt's was sarcasm.
Moderators: MickeyDavis, paulpressey25, humanrefutation
GrendonJennings wrote:Ted is an idiot for not picking up a nuisance/washed up player to add to a team that thrives on not having off-field distractions. Great logic.
LUKE23 wrote:GrendonJennings wrote:Ted is an idiot for not picking up a nuisance/washed up player to add to a team that thrives on not having off-field distractions. Great logic.
Don't think anyone said that. Ayt's was sarcasm.
MetroDrugUnit wrote:If TT doens't at least kick the tires on this he's (Please Use More Appropriate Word) metally challenged
mlloyd10 wrote:DocHoliday wrote:McKinnie sucks
Compared to what we have though
El Duderino wrote:emunney wrote:Why would a "reasonable" contract for Rodgers be 25% more than anybody else has ever gotten?
Plus, my gut feeling with Aaron is that he'll want to get paid in that top tier of quarterbacks, but winning is so important to him that he won't hold out for such a monster contract that he feels could end up restricting the Packers chances to keep key players that help the Packers stay an elite team.
MartyConlonOnTheRun wrote:I cringe every time I hear that. People said that about Brett and love of the game but yet he admitted it ball came down to money. The Saints resurrected Brees career and they have all kinds of contract issues. Even Lebron didn't take less money when he went to win with the Heat. He ended up with the Cavs max plus extra endorsements and the income tax break. In the end, top players want top money. It's part ego and part competition. There's no doubt in my mind Rodgers is going to try be the highest paid player. He is extremely competitive and feel he deserves every penny.
MartyConlonOnTheRun wrote:El Duderino wrote:emunney wrote:Why would a "reasonable" contract for Rodgers be 25% more than anybody else has ever gotten?
Plus, my gut feeling with Aaron is that he'll want to get paid in that top tier of quarterbacks, but winning is so important to him that he won't hold out for such a monster contract that he feels could end up restricting the Packers chances to keep key players that help the Packers stay an elite team.
I cringe every time I hear that. People said that about Brett and love of the game but yet he admitted it ball came down to money. The Saints resurrected Brees career and they have all kinds of contract issues. Even Lebron didn't take less money when he went to win with the Heat. He ended up with the Cavs max plus extra endorsements and the income tax break. In the end, top players want top money. It's part ego and part competition. There's no doubt in my mind Rodgers is going to try be the highest paid player. He is extremely competitive and feel he deserves every penny.
I asked Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers that question during a training camp interview last month. Rodgers had already suggested the Packers would be a better team in 2012, even if it wasn't reflected in their record. (It's difficult, of course, to get to 16 victories when you're already at 15.) Rodgers noted the Packers' efforts to increase their energy level, but he also noted that coaches threw down an early-camp gauntlet of statistics to demonstrate the Packers' room for growth.
According to Rodgers, players have seen where the 2011 team ranked both offensively and defensively against the past four Super Bowl champions in a number of subtle but important categories. As best as I could tell, they include:
Third-down percentage
Red zone touchdown percentage
Red zone touchdowns
Goal-to-go touchdown percentage
I haven't seen the charts that Rodgers referred to, but I've tried to re-create them the best I could in this post. Many thanks to Matt Willis of ESPN Stats & Information for the research and to blog editor Dan Jung, who formatted the charts as you see them. I have a number of thoughts, as I'm sure you will as well. But generally speaking, you can see there has been at least one team that exceeded or nearly matched the Packers' 2011 offensive production in each category. Meanwhile, the charts provide a more nuanced analysis of where the Packers fell short defensively last season than simply the passing yards they allowed.
emunney wrote:I still don't think Hargrove would have made the team fwiw.
Code: Select all
o- - - \o __|
o/ /| vv`\
/| | |
| / \_ |
/ \ | |
/ | |
eagle13 wrote:MartyConlonOnTheRun wrote:I cringe every time I hear that. People said that about Brett and love of the game but yet he admitted it ball came down to money. The Saints resurrected Brees career and they have all kinds of contract issues. Even Lebron didn't take less money when he went to win with the Heat. He ended up with the Cavs max plus extra endorsements and the income tax break. In the end, top players want top money. It's part ego and part competition. There's no doubt in my mind Rodgers is going to try be the highest paid player. He is extremely competitive and feel he deserves every penny.
I disagree with the $ part. I believe he'll accept being paid less than what he could command.
El Duderino wrote:In fact, Jordy said that Sitton constantly teases him about the contract.