I would not watch the draft with my family in the room...just in case Bob does the unthinkable.
He will take Bortles before he takes Manziel. JFF is just about everything BOB does not want in a QB.
I would not watch the draft with my family in the room...just in case Bob does the unthinkable.
JFF...Aggies sawing off horns at Reliant... me.
I will miss the rest of the draft as I will drink myself unconscious before they finish the first round.
I think anyone who passes on Bridgewater will regret doing so for the rest of their life. He literally throws some of the most amazing passes I have ever seen, and with ease. His accuracy is second to no one in this draft. You can't coach accuracy. He throws a great deep ball, has arm strength. Has shown he is very smart and makes great decisions. Handles audibles and play calling duties. Yet people are afraid of him. And why? Because of his size? Because he is slim? He has a small frame? This is modern day NFL, you can't even sneeze on a QB anyway. Besides, Bridgewater will bulk up, he will never be big. But he will put on more mass, more muscle. He will be fine. IMO he is a rare talent.
his deep ball needs work, his audibles usually changes a play from left to right and i dont think think he handles playcalling duties because theyre embarrassing, he is the best game manager in college i have ever seen. He is a shorter and skinnier alex smith with a bigger arm.
Bledsoe? Lol.
? An argument Bledsoe wasn't a damn good NFL qb is a ty one.
The Owner wants Manziel, BoB doesn't, so it will be interesting to see.
And I'd rather trade back with Cleveland to get their picks and take Bridgewater at 4.
This. Drew was a boss from 1994-2002 imo
how the did you deduce that?
i saw most of his games this season especially against rutgers, one of the worst pass defense in college but their gameplan was run run pass the whole ing game even when he was ting on that pass defense![]()
Bledsoe was a good QB who had extreme flaws. Tony Romo anyone. Does everything right most of the game, puts up big numbers, throws mind numbing interceptions. Believe me, I grew up really liking Bledsoe, defending him to friends. You want to love the guy, but he does it to himself. Just like Romo.
What the ?
They are 2 completely different QB's--do you just make up all the time?
yeah wtf?
I never saw Bledsoe that much outside of when he was in Dallas but I would think the obvious flaw was his lack of mobility especially behind a shaky Dallas o-line.
I remember one game where they played Philly when they are all blitz happy with that one guy who died recently. The Eagles would bring 6 or 7 guys to the line, blitz, and Dallas just had no answer for it since Bledsoe couldn't dodge the heat. Felt bad tbh
Jim Johnson was that crazy aggressive coordinator who died, and the eagles defense has been since
Id rather have Johnny Football
as I said, ty argument.
You are 100% wrong. The whole world knows it. Whatever you gotta tell yourself inside of your little closed mind.
, as no one agrees with you. Good take.
The inside blitz is what would kill Drew...funny you bring up the Philly D b/c I was at the game where Drew's career took a precipitous drop from that point on: a 2003 home game vs. the Eagles (Brian Westbrook's breakout game)...it was painful to watch. He used to be a boss though and threw one of the prettiest deep balls.
back when the Eagles still had Duce Staley, Brian Westbrook, and Correll Buckhalter. heck of the trio that was
Bledsoe was a gambler but his arm was so goddamn awesome he could get away with it. While I'm sure there's been more talented guys, I personally (and blinded by homerism i know) have never seen a more dynamic and impressive arm than Bledsoe's. The way he could effortlessly zip balls into tight windows or drive it downfield was amazing to watch.
As mentioned, his biggest problem was decision making under pressure. He was actually sneaky athletic like Peyton, but even more reluctant to take off and run. And he was a notorious ball patter. He ALWAYS wanted to make the big throw downfield and would ignore his checkdowns even when under a heavy rush. He'd pat the ball like crazy and then take a big risk downfield. Thats the biggest reason Bill benched him for Brady permanently. Brady wouldn't hesitate to checkdown while Drew always forced a downfield throw or took a bad sack instead.
He's the opposite of Romo because he always played like that and was never scared to sling it. He played QB in clutch situations the exact same as he played in the 1st quarter of Week 1. Meanwhile Romo seems to have a knack for playing great in nonpressure situations then fearfully changing his style and going away from what works whenever he feels pressure. Both approaches resulted in alot of interceptions but I don't see how Bledsoe's approach could really be classified as "choking".
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