Portiseyes wrote:
Just humble yourself Nagy and check the ego. This team can do well once you do that. You suck as a play caller.
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Portiseyes wrote:
ChiCitySPORTS#1 wrote:Fields is the real deal top to bottom. One of the best prospects ever in college football and his years at OSU proved it. He’s not a bust. If he fails, it’s on the bears.
dougthonus wrote:Dresden wrote:I only brought it up because someone else mentioned that Fields doesn't look like Dan Marino.
Relative to his era, he doesn't. Marino was 7-2 as a starter and had among the best TD/INT ratios and was 6th in TDs per game. He was trivially a top 10 QB as a rookie. Fields isn't on that path.
I mean I don't care that he's not on that path for his rookie season, but objectively it's an accurate assessment. It's weird to bring up one of the all-time great QBs from 40 years ago anyway (for whomever did). It'd make more sense to say he doesn't look like MaHomes or Watson or Murray or some other great modern young QB.
Thank you for that, I was SMH at the comparison to Dan Marino.Dresden wrote:TheAlanParsons wrote:I did not say he had a bad one. I'm saying he had an ok day. I've been watching the NFL for many many years. I don't expect a rookie to come out and set the world on fire, and maybe Fields will develop into a great QB. But I'm not seeing a rookie Dan Marino out there.
Marino's first two starts: 90 yards, then 155 yards. His rookie season he averaged 200 yards per game. And that was on a team that had Mark Clayton, Mark Duper, and Nat Moore and went 12-4.
Stratmaster wrote:Fields has played 2 games as a starter. Maybe we should look after game 9 as a starter and decide if Fields is on that path.
People are hoping Fields will be one of those greaat QB's and it is pretty natural to want to assess that although we would all agree it is too early to be accurate in the assessment.
Dresden was responding to a direct comparison, and responded with Marino's first 2 games as a starter because that is how many games Fields has started. Fields is certainly unlikely to go 7-2, because his team pales in comparison to the team Marino played on. His TD rate and QB rating will also suffer because of that. It is not out of the realm of possibility that he will exceed Marino's 201 yards per game (his rookie season average), and that wasn't just the "era". In Marino's 2nd season he jumped to 317 yards per game. I would love to see that same trajectory for Fields, and it is not out of the question. Marino's career QB rating was 86.4, which is about what Fields put up last game. I would be willing to bet that Fields long term completion percentage will be as good as Marino's was.
But then, I don't think as highly of Marino as you do. Many rate him in the top 10, but I wouldn't. I would consider Drew Brees more of an all-time top 10 great than Marino. I think there are a lot of QB's in this era who are way better than some of the old timers who make top 25 lists. All that to say, I am probably biased against 20th century QB's when comparing them to the QB's in this league the last 21 years.
Dresden wrote:I'm actually ok with Nagy starting Dalton Sunday v. the Raiders as long as he uses the same sort of play calling as he did v. DET- i.e. a fair amount of deep to medium routes, and not just dink and dunk all over the field.
It's ok for Justin to sit a game or two, it's not going to kill him. And the Raiders are a good team. Most likely it will be an ugly day for the offense again. But let Dalton have another game or two to see what he can do. If it is more of like what we saw the first couple of games, and esp. if the Bears are 2-4 at that point, then it makes sense to go back to Justin.
But whoever plays on Sunday, it's likely not going to be pretty. I think Carr is going to Carrve up the Bears defense, so we'll be playing from behind, which is going to make our running game less of a threat.
I also don't believe any of this garbage about Nagy's ego getting in the way, or him not connecting with Justin, or him trying to sabotage Justin. All that is just gossip as far as I'm concerned. Let's see the results on the field, and if they aren't good, then it's up to Nagy to adjust.
Dresden wrote:I'm actually ok with Nagy starting Dalton Sunday v. the Raiders as long as he uses the same sort of play calling as he did v. DET- i.e. a fair amount of deep to medium routes, and not just dink and dunk all over the field.
It's ok for Justin to sit a game or two, it's not going to kill him. And the Raiders are a good team. Most likely it will be an ugly day for the offense again. But let Dalton have another game or two to see what he can do. If it is more of like what we saw the first couple of games, and esp. if the Bears are 2-4 at that point, then it makes sense to go back to Justin.
But whoever plays on Sunday, it's likely not going to be pretty. I think Carr is going to Carrve up the Bears defense, so we'll be playing from behind, which is going to make our running game less of a threat.
I also don't believe any of this garbage about Nagy's ego getting in the way, or him not connecting with Justin, or him trying to sabotage Justin. All that is just gossip as far as I'm concerned. Let's see the results on the field, and if they aren't good, then it's up to Nagy to adjust.
micromonkey wrote:Fields looks almost nothing like Dan Marino
I was looking at my Dan Marino rookie card picture and confirmed it.
I haven't found a famous/semi-famous doppelganger yet (in a zoomed out "Foundation" Apple TV ad the actor kind of looked like him--if you squinted)--but these things take time...
On a serious note--yes there are some that come in ready and some that take a little time. But I think after a full season you start having an idea on how a guy will translate. They can still improve aspects and get more efficient--but if by year 3 you are seeing "not superstar" you are probably right. I can't think of any recent top tier QB who wasn't showing something by year 2 and cementing it the following year.
But I'm not convinced that its 100% the QB. IMO the reality is that the team and scheme make a huge difference--and its hard to discern between the two. Look at prime Randall Cunningham in PHI vs his 35 yo self in MIN (coming out of retirement). In Minny he had a great line and insane WR corp and largely was able to eclipse his probowl days as a youth. Moss/Reed and Carter can do that, as well as Robert Smith at RB.
Jeff George, Rich Gannon, Jake Plummer, Steve Young were guys on bad teams (at least for them) that started playing much better with a change of scenery and scheme. Steve Young likely ends up being an unknown had he stayed with the Bucs his entire career. Many guys probably had wasted careers and could have won (or won more) elsewhere Neil Lomax, and to some extent Moon (who did win but not as much as his numbers would suggest). Other guys won past their prime Elway, P Manning with a great team around them--when for a lot of their primes they were carrying some mediocre teams (in one way or another). I think we will see Stafford show much better than expected --even though this is past his prime.
So it all has to line up to be a Mahomes. Not taking away his stats or ability but if he ended up on the Jags he could still be a good QB but we might not have the rest (scheme/players, etc) around him to really show all he can do. Heck he might have had significantly worse numbers had we drafted him... We'd likely know hes a stud--but his W/L could be more Deshawn Watson
imagge wrote:Dresden wrote:I'm actually ok with Nagy starting Dalton Sunday v. the Raiders as long as he uses the same sort of play calling as he did v. DET- i.e. a fair amount of deep to medium routes, and not just dink and dunk all over the field.
It's ok for Justin to sit a game or two, it's not going to kill him. And the Raiders are a good team. Most likely it will be an ugly day for the offense again. But let Dalton have another game or two to see what he can do. If it is more of like what we saw the first couple of games, and esp. if the Bears are 2-4 at that point, then it makes sense to go back to Justin.
But whoever plays on Sunday, it's likely not going to be pretty. I think Carr is going to Carrve up the Bears defense, so we'll be playing from behind, which is going to make our running game less of a threat.
I also don't believe any of this garbage about Nagy's ego getting in the way, or him not connecting with Justin, or him trying to sabotage Justin. All that is just gossip as far as I'm concerned. Let's see the results on the field, and if they aren't good, then it's up to Nagy to adjust.
The problem is Andy can't throw the deep route anymore hence the dinking and dunking. So if you want more intermediate and deep routes you should be rooting for Fields to start
imagge wrote:Dresden wrote:I'm actually ok with Nagy starting Dalton Sunday v. the Raiders as long as he uses the same sort of play calling as he did v. DET- i.e. a fair amount of deep to medium routes, and not just dink and dunk all over the field.
It's ok for Justin to sit a game or two, it's not going to kill him. And the Raiders are a good team. Most likely it will be an ugly day for the offense again. But let Dalton have another game or two to see what he can do. If it is more of like what we saw the first couple of games, and esp. if the Bears are 2-4 at that point, then it makes sense to go back to Justin.
But whoever plays on Sunday, it's likely not going to be pretty. I think Carr is going to Carrve up the Bears defense, so we'll be playing from behind, which is going to make our running game less of a threat.
I also don't believe any of this garbage about Nagy's ego getting in the way, or him not connecting with Justin, or him trying to sabotage Justin. All that is just gossip as far as I'm concerned. Let's see the results on the field, and if they aren't good, then it's up to Nagy to adjust.
The problem is Andy can't throw the deep route anymore