Read More...When welterweight Floyd Mayweather was No. 1 on Sports Illustrated’s Fortunate 50 last year—knocking out Tiger Woods, who had been No. 1 every year since SI started producing the list in 2004—it looked like a fluke, the result of the $85 million he received for his fights with Victor Ortiz and Miguel Cotto. Now Mayweather is proving that he belongs at the top. From just two bouts this year, one earlier this month and the other scheduled for September, he will earn at least $90 million, ...
Login to Join (0 members)
{/exp:tag:subscribed}Page rendered in 1.4983 seconds, 180 querie(s) executed
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
Page 26 of 79 pages
‹ First < 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 > Last ›We covered this earlier in the thread, but I don't think it's that simple. A running quarterback potentially exposes himself to more hits, but I think a hit to a QB in the pocket is more likely to cause damage than one delivered to a QB on the run, due to the fact that the pocket QB has less ability to protect himself against a hit than one on the run. Now, if you're a pocket passer like Peyton, with a combination of intelligence, a quick release and general lack of interest in taking a hit, you're safer than most. Or if you're a running quarterback who also gets hit in the pocket a lot, then you're obviously a DL stint waiting to happen. But I don't think being a scrambling QB is necessarily a death wish in the NFL.
Related, and I don't know the answer to this, but where have Michael Vick's injuries happened? It seems to me like most of them have come from blows he's taken in the pocket, but I don't really know. Anyone?
Griffin: 15 games, 120 rushing attempts, 815 yards, 7 TD, 76 long, 6.8 Y/A, 54 Y/G, 8.0 attempts/game
Luck: 16 games, 62 rushing attempts, 255 yards, 5 TD, 19 long, 4.1 Y/A, 15.9 Y/G, 3.9 attempts/game
Griffin, as expected, runs far more often than Luck, and looks to pick up far more yards per attempt than Luck.
From what I've seen, Griffin looks to run the ball as another play in the playbook; Luck generally runs the ball after the pocket breaks down and he has no receivers open, especially if a first down is within reach. Running appears to be a last resort for Luck, but it is one of the primary options for Griffin.
The stats say that Griffin has 120 rushing attempts and 393 passing attempts. Luck has 62 rushing attempts and 627 passing attempts. So Griffin averages 3.3 passing attempts for every rushing attempt. Luck averages 10.1 passing attempts for every rushing attempt.
What are you arguing, exactly?
Funny how nobody's handwringing over Russell Wilson. He runs nearly as often as Griffin does (7.25 attempts per game the second half of the season), and he's both smaller and lighter than RG3, just built a stockier.
Well, what is that simple is simply looking at the stats to see who is running more and how far they are running. Tripon bizarrely claimed that Luck "also likes to run," implying that he's not all that different from Griffin, when that is quite plainly not the case. Luck does not like to run at all. Four times per game, for 16 yards, as opposed to eight times per game for 54 yards for Griffin.
I watch Vick whenever I can. It seems to me it's been both, but, no, I don't have the info. I can remember a number of times he's been hurt outside the pocket and beyond the line of scrimmage, though. Last year's shoulder injury happened after he got sandwiched between the shoulders by two defenders at the end of a run. But the concussion this year was because he hit his head following a sack.
This is as close as I've come to putting someone on ignore. You just made me waste 20 minutes digging up their rushing stats and posting them here, because you were trolling. Please get a life.
Right. That's why it was a prediction.
edit: And its not waste if you actually needed to look at the data. By now, you should have seen that Andrew Luck DOES run enough to not just be labeled 'a pocket passer'. Really, terms like 'runner QB' and 'pocket passer' needs to go away, they're inaccurate terms at best nowadays.
So Luck ran the ball 58 more times, while he threw the ball 234 more times than Griffin. All those extra pass attempts are going to close the gap between the two in terms of hits taken at least a little (Luck took 11 more sacks than Griffin, for instance).
Accepting that Griffin is much faster and more athletic than Luck, if they were equally cautious while running, it'd be reasonable to expect Griffin to have a much better average per attempt. I don't think the YPC means much here in terms of injury concerns.
I don't know which one is more of an injury risk. I'd guess it's Griffin, but I don't think the information out there makes it so clear. The sample of QBs who run as often as Griffin does is too small to reach any sort of conclusions. Ray, given that when discussing baseball you're so focused on the data that people call you a robot (I know that's only part of the reason people call you a robot), it's sort of amusing that you're so willing to accept conventional wisdom on this topic.
My point had nothing to do with Luck vs. Griffin, so the simplicity of checking which one runs more is irrelevant. I'm talking about the part I actually quoted, where you claimed that it's bizarre that pocket passers could be more at risk than scrambling QBs. You may be right, but until I see injury data on the types of plays and injury rates for QBs, I'm going to hold off on making major pronouncements. See, unlike you, who clearly flies by the seat of his pants, shooting off opinions sans information, I prefer a more methodical, data-based approach to these questions. You should try it some time. (-:
Bobby Douglass (1972) - I know his name, but that's it. Only had 1 more season where he started most of his team's games. The stats make it appear that he was generally healthy but just not good enough to start.
Randall Cunningham (1989, 1990) - 1990 was his age 27 season, so he was several years older than Griffin is now. Got himself hurt in the first game of the 1991 season and missed the rest of the year. Afterwards, had only 3 seasons in which he started 14 or more games. Part of this was due to injury, part of this was due to being relegated to backup duty much of the time (quite possibly due to loss of skill from injuries, given that he was an all-pro from '88-'90).
Steve McNair (1997) - From 1998-2006, averaged 14 games per season. Ran 70-80 times per season from '98 through '02, before becoming more of a pocket passer.
Daunte Culpepper (2002) - Played 14 games in '03 with 73 rushing attempts. Set the record for total yards in '04, playing every game and carrying the ball 88 times. Got hurt half way through the '05 season, spent the rest of his career alternating between injuries and ineffectiveness.
Michael Vick (2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2010) - Only slightly less mobile now than he was when he was a kid, possibly aided by his time off. Good bet for about 12 games/year.
Tim Tebow (2011) - Deemed unworthy of starting over Mark Sanchez and Greg McElroy for reasons having nothing to do with his health.
Cam Newton (2011, 2012) - 2 seasons, 32 starts, 253 carries. Different body type, obviously, but no problems so far.
Robert Griffin III (2012)
So that gives us a total of 4 guys (Cunningham, McNair, Culpepper, and Vick) to really work with. All were relatively healthy (averaging 13+ games) for at least 5 year stretches, averaging 80 or so rushing attempts per season. I don't why Griffin is such a worse bet than any of them were, especially since I'd imagine his coaching staff is going to try to avoid having him carry the ball 120 times/season in the future. I'm not going to start placing bets on him matching Manning's consecutive starts streak, but RG3 playing 12 games a year for 5 years at something near his current level would be very far from a bust.
Even though multiple people have pointed it out already, I'll say it too. Luck runs more than most QBs. He was tied with Vick for 5th most carries by a QB this year. He only "does not like to run at all" if your standard for liking to run is Griffin/Newton/Wilson.
Agree - It's still really hard to second guess the decision. Griffin has been on one leg the last two weeks against Dallas and Philly. It seemed the team had gotten used to it and I certainly know we did as fans.
There was something clearly wrong today when his hand offs to Morris looked really sloppy - it was obvious to see. But what were they meant to do? (Lichtensteiger getting hurt didn't help the cause either) But they lead most of the game and it seemed they might scrape through.
I am convinced he will go on and continue to play to his 2012/13 levels once it is hopefully confirmed that this is just an LCL tear (fingers crossed) . Must say I am really surprised by the criticism leveled at the coaching staff on this , in any case I am gutted more so knowing that the injury throws up a huge "what if" about what the Skins could have done this year if he was healthy.
That will haunt me more than anything.
Textbook begging the question: Only teams with QB's that are considered elite can win the SB. Why are they considered elite? Cause they won the SB.
once a very good defense like seattle recognized that griffith running was not a concern they could play differently.
cousins should have come in at the start of the third quarter. it would have been a surprise to seattle, given washington a momentary edge (cripes joe webb managed a drive for a field goal until green bay adjusted) and maybe washington sneaks in a field goal or even a touchdown. as for the remainder of the game you run morris, you run play action and you have a qb who can plant and deliver a ball to a spot versus sailing everything high
shanahan failed his player and his team last night.
and credit to the washington defense which played way over its head. i think they sacked wilson 5 times and forced him to throw the ball away several other times. just a tremendous effort. haslet did a great job.
Textbook begging the question: Only teams with QB's that are considered elite can win the SB. Why are they considered elite? Cause they won the SB.
Not necessarily, not if they're Trent Dilfer or Brad Johnson. But when you perform like Eli Manning did against two of the stronger teams in recent memory, in the final game of the year and with half the world watching, it does tend to jack up your reputation a tad.
Right, except for either Manning, Brady, Brees. Carson Palmer is not mobile. Kurt Warner only retired three years ago. Stafford and Matt Ryan only have average mobility. Most QBs cut back on their running years before they lose their ability to play. That hasn't changed.
Well, I don't live in Seattle but if I did I wouldn't be prognosticating a long career for him either.
Not sure if you're being literal, Matt Ryan, Eli Manning and Peyton Manning average a similar numbers of rushing attempts per game as Bledsoe did, about 1.5-2 game. Brady's only slightly higher, and most of his are short yardage sneaks (he had 4 rushing TDs this year).
I don't know, why do you think I need to do that?
So what? The point was that both teams relied on running games over passing games.
So? That wasn't my point.
Yes they did and he wasn't as important as the running game.
So? That wasn't my point.
Lichtensteiger is a huge and underrated part of the line. The line looked reasonably ok last year until he got hurt.
Well, there are no more quarterbacks named Drew Bledsoe, so his statement is literally true.
You draft a scrambling/running QB because of their mobility as well as their arm and other QB skills. His mobility tends to compensate for the lack of skills in other areas and thus if he loses his mobility his flaws become exposed plus injuries tend to deteriorate those other skills as well.
9th HC candidate, 7th OC. Supposedly they also might be talking to a CFL head coach, but I doubt he's a real candidate. There sure seems like a lot of interviews for Emery to do.
To be fair, you drop RGIII into New England's offensive scheme, or onto a team with Roddy White, Julio Jones, Tony Gonzalez and Michael Turner, he's probably going to run a lot less than he did in DC this year.
1, demarcus millner, CB, alabama
2/3/4, joseph fauria, TE, UCLA; bacarri rambo, S, georgia; devin taylor, DE, south carolina; tyrann mathieu, DB, LSU
5/6/7, brian winters, OT, kent state; kyle long, OT, oregon; dj swearinger, S, south carolina; dj hayden, CB, houston
in total:
6 defense (DE, 5 DB)
3 offense (TE, 2 OL)
assuming that someone takes an axe to the eagles secondary, this draft should go a ways towards rebuilding it. even assuming that hayden misses the start of the season due to injury, you'd still bring in the best cover corner in this draft (millner), and 2 other playmakers (rambo and mathieu). if you add brandon boykin, colt anderson, and some combination of brandon hughes/curtis marsh/trevard lindley, that's a potentially decent secondary.
then devin taylor is just a guy i have a feeling about. the eagles have noone who looks like him (6'8, 290 lbs), so since what they've been doing hasn't worked anyway, you might as well go against the grain.
and then on offense, if there was a high level WR coming out this year, i'd be all-in for him at 3, but since there's no aj green, or calvin johnson or larry fitzgerald in this draft, i'll happily settle for fauria. if you figure that the eagles have sucked in the redzone because their receiving corps is full of midges, bringing in the 6'7 fauria would be a strong step towards changing that.
and then, with the OL, well, with andy reid having the #1 overall pick, there's really very little doubt in my mind that he'll take luke joeckel, so i'd wait to address the need until later in the draft. long and winters are each big, somewhat athletic linemen, and i'd figure that at the very least, they could challenge dennis kelly as the first injury replacement off the bench.
since i've noted my preference for an almost complete rebuild, i'd view this draft as the first building block towards that goal.
Bring back Ditka to Da Bears.
Bear in mind I know nothing about college football.
If you start with the assumption that you are rolling the dice with Nick Foles, and I have no problem with that, esp. with no Luck/RG3 in this draft, I think going OT is a pretty safe/smart route. The Eagles proved you can never really have enough OTs and they are traditionally good value picks in the top 5. Jason Peters in 2011 was as good at LT as any player I've seen in watching football for more than 30 years; no idea if that same player still exists. If he's back I'd move Herremans back inside to guard and cut your losses on the Danny Watkins experiment.
That said, I see the most pressing needs on defense. I'd love a big receiver and would love a TE upgrade, but going forward with a core of McCoy/Brown, Jackson, Maclin, Avant, Johnson, Celek at skill positions isn't the worst thing in the world.
The secondary is a total shamockery. Four new starters would be a welcome sight.
Assuming you keep a 4-3 defense, you have talent in the front 7: Ryans was a good find, Kendricks will hopefully step up and be a difference-maker at Will. A stud strongside linebacker who can cover TEs wouldn't hurt but really, this position is more promising than it has been for years.
Given the instability on the coaching staff, the defensive line isn't half-bad. Even if you assume Cole is done as a true impact player, he's still a viable starter. Graham absolutely deserves to start. Fletcher Cox has All-Pro potential.
Get a good coach, add a midlevel free agent or two, draft well...if Foles can be adequate, I can see the Eagles competing in 2013.
i'm of the opinion that this team is toxic right now, and that the veteran core (cole, jenkins, patterson, asomugha, DRC, vick) needs to be excised before the start of next season. i don't think they're winning anything of significance with those players, so by getting rid of them all in one fell swoop, i'd aim to create a void of leadership which would hopefully be filled by guys like nick foles, demeco ryans, lesean mccoy, brandon graham, and fletcher cox.
i agree about foles, by the way. when i hear people say that the eagles shouldn't commit to him this offseason, i just shake my head. his salary is minuscule, due to his being a 3rd round pick, and it really costs the team absolutely nothing for him to be given the keys to the franchise next year. they're not getting anyone who's better; not in the draft, nor in free agency, and again, since he's making no money, there's no commitment to him past this season.
and w/r/t danny watkins, personally, i didn't like that they picked him on draft day to begin with, and i was royally pissed when the ####### 26 year old rookie offensive lineman held out from his first training camp looking for..###### if i know. i don't know if the NFL has compensation picks, but i'd have cut bait on him then and made the goofy looking ###### go back into the next year's draft as a 27 year old rookie offensive lineman.
oh, and w/r/t the linebacking corps, in a vacuum, i would love to get another stud, but the truth is, they have kendricks and ryans, and considering how often NFL offenses use 3 and 4 WR sets, i just don't see it as a big need for them to get a third starting-caliber LB.
but basically, i don't think the smart money here is to try for a quick fix. you're already starting the year with an entirely new coaching staff, 3 offensive linemen coming off major injury, a 2nd year starting QB originally drafted in the 3rd round, a TE who probably shouldn't step back onto the field again considering how many massive blows to the head he's taken, and a secondary that is...well, the less that's said, the better.
with all of that hanging over the team's collective heads, just give me a fresh start with a new core.
1) Good old fashioned rehab
2) they can get in there and synthetically re-enforce the ACL (is this what happened to Peterson , even though I assume he total a total synthetic reconstruction?)
Needless to say I will not rest well until I know what the diagnosis but I rang an Orthopedic Surgeon freaking out and he gave us the above advice and possible courses of action. He also thinks I'm nuts , but we all knew that...
Anyway, guess it's a waiting game till the results come in - if he is out next year I'll be totally gutted - the Skins were finally coming good it seems.
Somewhere, Brad Biggs is opening a bottle of champagne.
he's the dale sveum of football coaches. decent enough guy but there ain't much rattling around the attic
This sounds logical but really isn't that far removed from the Reid/Banner-era line of thinking, which then leads you to having a defense filled with 7th-round picks, and guys like Mark Simoneau and Matt McCoy. I'd settle for someone who can either cover or stop the run, as opposed to the glorified special teamers the Eagles have been trotting out there for years.
I hated every second of the 2011 draft almost as much as I loved the 2012 draft.
Difference being that you don't need to be much of a great thinker to lead a baseball team. Different story in the NFL.
hartnell - giroux - read
simmonds - briere - schenn
talbot - couturier - voracek
holmstrom - wellwood - rinaldo
zolnierczyk, fedotenko
timonen - schenn
coburn - grossman
gustaffson - walker
gervais, manning, meszaros
the way i look at the forwards, i want to build up matt read as much as possible because when the time comes to extend giroux and schenn and couturier, it would be really nice to have a young-ish ~30 goal, ~70 point scorer to trade for some young, cheap, controllable roster filler.
also, the talbot - couturier - voracek line would be an attempt to form a checking line. it's kind of a waste of voracek's offensive talent, but on the plus side, there's a chance that putting him on couturier's wing will allow couturier to tap into his offensive ability.
also, i'm still in favor of putting the C on briere's chest. i know people love giroux, and hell, i do too, but i just think briere is the right guy.
and then with the 4th line, i'd just want some bangers. i'm fairly sure that the flyers will have at least 1 surprise callup - either laughton or cousins or...someone - but yeah, i want that 4th line to be a crash line. also, i'm fairly sure that fedotenko has absolutely nothing left.
as for the defense, again, i like the idea of having a shutdown pair, which would be the hope in putting together coburn and grossman. then schenn and timonen have a nice combination where timonen is the talent and schenn is the muscle. likewise, you'd have a similar thing going with gustaffson and walker...at least until meszaros comes back.
overall, i'm not really at all sure of what to expect.
the eagles issues on defense have been related more to poor drafting than a lack of investment. nate allen and jaiquawn jarrett were 2nd round picks, curtis marsh and daniel teo-nesheim were 3rd rounders. casey matthews, trevard lindley, and keenan clayton were 4th rounders. all in 2010 and 2011. go back to 2010 and think of what this team could look like if they had drafted earl thomas, daryl washington and sean lee instead of brandon graham, nate allen, and daniel teo-nesheim. or if you go to 2011, what would this defense have looked like if the eagles drafted richard sherman instead of curtis marsh?
i mean, it's easy to say that they should just draft better, but that's really what's been the problem. well, that and the death of jim johnson. but otherwise...
All depends on how torn the ACL is as well. I can live with 6-8 months, I've been fairly defensive of his style but the thought of not having him the next few years is sickening, he's going to have to change a few things next season.
Cam Newton - 25%
RG3 - 20%
Wilson - 18%
Kaepernick (sp?) - 17%
Looks like the Raiders luck of drafting busts from the SEC is continuing.
I don't think you can C Danny. My guess is he gets bought out in the off season.
I'm very pumped for the Bruins. If Horton comes back and Hamilton lives up to his promise it could be a very good squad.
Hortons health and Seguin improving on the powerplay, where he was suprisingly inefficient would go along way to a high seed.
What I notice most about this is that they're all first- and second-year players. I imagine if you want to survive as an NFL QB, you learn how not to get hit.
Page 26 of 79 pages
‹ First < 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 > Last ›You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.