fleet wrote:Josh Allen is a monster.
Yep. He has consistently improved. He certainly come into the league as a monster.
I’d love to see Allen win a super bowl w the Bills.
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fleet wrote:Josh Allen is a monster.

fleet wrote:Josh Allen is a monster.

CjayC wrote:fleet wrote:Josh Allen is a monster.
Yeah really shows the draft is a crapshoot at QB in terms of how these guys develop. In college I thought he was goofy, inaccurate, couldn't protect the football, and was pretty much a backyard QB. Now he has the best completion % in the league, and crazy redzone numbers.
fleet wrote:CjayC wrote:fleet wrote:Josh Allen is a monster.
Yeah really shows the draft is a crapshoot at QB in terms of how these guys develop. In college I thought he was goofy, inaccurate, couldn't protect the football, and was pretty much a backyard QB. Now he has the best completion % in the league, and crazy redzone numbers.
Something about those big strong northern plains QBs is intriguing. Throwing through all that brutal cold and wind. I was hoping he would come out in 2017 to have a shot at him. I saw some of his tape with those deep line drives he was launching with minimal effort and it had my wheels turning. Something tells me Pace was head over heels for Biscuit anyway.

fleet wrote:Along those lines, Trey Lance is an interesting lottery ticket I would love to pull the trigger on.
CjayC wrote:Goff broke his thumb so Bears can't depend on someone else doing the job for them next week. I've seen this story before.
Hopefully GB rests some guys, namely #12.

Susan wrote:This city would have NEVER had the patience to develop a QB like the Bills just developed Allen.
There's no hyperarms in the draft this year, Wilson's arm is good but it's closer to Mitch's than it is to Mahomes.

Chicago-Bull-E wrote:Bears need to draft O line/Receiver/Cornerback in the top half of the draft.
Its a pretty deep draft for QBs, there will be some options in rounds 3 and 4 that could hit big.
dougthonus wrote:Chicago-Bull-E wrote:Bears need to draft O line/Receiver/Cornerback in the top half of the draft.
Its a pretty deep draft for QBs, there will be some options in rounds 3 and 4 that could hit big.
Odds are really low to get a great QB outside of the 1st round (or even outside the top 10). Here are starters this year in QBR order up until we get to Mitch. I bolded all the guys who were later than the 2nd round, and of the two guys who were 2nd rounders, you had Brees whom was 32nd which is now a 1st rounder and Carr whom was 36th which is 4 picks away from a 1st rounder.
Of the guys whom weren't 1st rounders, no one is going to tell you that you're looking for the next Ryan Fitzpatrick, so you're down to Dak Prescott, Russell Wilson, Kirk Cousins, and Tom Brady. Of those guys, Brady had scant resume so obvious why people missed. I'm not a big college football guy, but looks off the cuff, like Cousins/Wilson weren't particularly special in college. Not sure on the story with Dak.
Overall, I think what this means is that while lots of guys rate QBs as 1st round talents that aren't really 1st round talents and end up being busts, there are very few (almost no one) QBs that are 1st round talents and can lead a franchise but fall past the 1st round.
Aaron Rodgers (24th)
Patrick Mahomes (10th)
Josh Allen (7th)
Dak Prescott (135)
Ryan Tannehill (8th)
Ryan FitzPatrick (250th)
Drew Brees (32nd)
Russell Wilson (75th)
Lamar Jackson (32nd)
Tom Brady (199th)
DeShaun Watson (12th)
Derek Carr (36th)
Baker Mayfield (1st)
Kyler Murray (1st)
Justin Herbert (6th)
Matthew Stafford (1st)
Terry Bridgewater (32nd)
Matt Ryan (3rd)
Phillip Rivers (4th)
Daniel Jones (6th)
Kirk Cousins (102nd)
Ben Roethlisberger 11th
Jared Goff (1st)
Mitch Trubisky (2nd)

Chicago-Bull-E wrote:I agree for the most part, but a couple of counter points:
A lot of this can be draft dependent. The reality is there are few QBs drafted in rounds 2-5 period, due to a lack of talent and teams not interested/not needing a franchise QB. If you look at the QBs drafted in late 2nd-5th in drafts over the last few years, you’ll only get around 2-5 players total in each draft and the red flags were pretty apparent. 2017 is a pretty apparent example of those rounds not going to produce anyone worthwhile.
This draft just feels a little deeper to me than most. Who knows, maybe not. But a guy like Mac Jones, 6-3”, 32TD/4INT, good deep ball, gonna win the national championship, isn’t ranked in the top 5 of QBs coming out will likely be a mid 2nd rounder, 3rd rounder.
Also I think the risk is pretty low for a large reward. The Bears just gave away a 4th rounder for Foles, a guy who lost his job in Jacksonville. There is nothing more important in football than getting a franchise QB, nothing even close. If you don’t have that you should be doing everything possible to get one, so the risk-reward payoff seems lopsided to me.
Also, if you get an average QB, you have a good backup QB and can often trade those guys for future draft capital (Jimmy G). Not a bad problem to have.

transplant wrote:The Bears are screwed QB-wise. They had their high-percentage shot and they drafted Trubisky. They built well enough around him to be a middle of the draft team even with below average QB play. That's where they are. Wish I could say I see a high-percentage way out, but it's just not there.
Of course, there's no law against hoping to beat the odds.
dougthonus wrote:Chicago-Bull-E wrote:I agree for the most part, but a couple of counter points:
A lot of this can be draft dependent. The reality is there are few QBs drafted in rounds 2-5 period, due to a lack of talent and teams not interested/not needing a franchise QB. If you look at the QBs drafted in late 2nd-5th in drafts over the last few years, you’ll only get around 2-5 players total in each draft and the red flags were pretty apparent. 2017 is a pretty apparent example of those rounds not going to produce anyone worthwhile.
This draft just feels a little deeper to me than most. Who knows, maybe not. But a guy like Mac Jones, 6-3”, 32TD/4INT, good deep ball, gonna win the national championship, isn’t ranked in the top 5 of QBs coming out will likely be a mid 2nd rounder, 3rd rounder.
Also I think the risk is pretty low for a large reward. The Bears just gave away a 4th rounder for Foles, a guy who lost his job in Jacksonville. There is nothing more important in football than getting a franchise QB, nothing even close. If you don’t have that you should be doing everything possible to get one, so the risk-reward payoff seems lopsided to me.
Also, if you get an average QB, you have a good backup QB and can often trade those guys for future draft capital (Jimmy G). Not a bad problem to have.
I guess that's the problem, historically, the risk reward for non 1st round QBs is awful. They're almost all bad. I mean this is basically all starters right now, so of the accumulation of all 3rd+ round QBs in the past 15 or so years, you've basically got three that panned out really great (Brady, Dak, Wilson).
Your risk reward argument is why the Bears should take someone with their 1st rounder, but obviously they have to believe in that guy whomever he is.

Brothaman33 wrote:Agreed, they probably have to take a QB in the first round, but there are so many issues here:
1. Is Pace making the decision, and if he is, the pick is going to be immensely scrutinized. But that actually may lower expections a bit because it'll be a pick from a guy most want fired and has failed once before.
2. Is Mitch back and does he want to be back with a rookie QB who literally everyone wants him to be replaced with.
3. If Mitch is gone does Foles start off the bat or does the rookie QB start off the bat? For me, I can't imagine after watching Foles play that they can shove Foles back as a starter with a shiny new toy ready to go. I think Foles is terrible and should be exclusively the backup, regardless of who else is on the roster.
4. Is A-Rob back? This significantly affects the QB because without him, your ability to be a good QB drops a ton.
5. If everyone is fired, which I highly doubt, a new front office may have a completely different take on the whole situation.
To me, they are forced to draft a QB with the first pick, which is a terrible spot to be in because it makes you either reach for a QB you don't want and on top of that, perhaps leave better talent on the board because you HAVE to take one.
I don't think the Bears are all the great, but I am SUPER interested on how these next few games and the offseason go. Almost everything is at stake.