![]() |
Quote:
|
Honestly this is the make or break year for Pioli at the QB position. I will give him the benefit of the doubt before that. Because in
Year 1: He realized we needed a QB and traded for one (Cassel) who showed the potential to be a legit QB. Plus there were no sure fire QB's in the draft. Year 2: Realizing that some of Cassel's struggles could have been the result of crap talent around him, Pioli gives Cassel more talent around him and Weis. Year 3: No need to address the QB situation because Cassel is coming off a Pro Bowl season. Now Cassel has proven that he is not the solution at QB and it obvious to virtually everyone. There are studs out there for the taking. If Pioli is unwilling to address the QB position in the 1st, then his job should be tied to Cassel. For that to happen though the fans need to make their voices heard by not going to the games. Sadly what will happen is the fans will still show up because there are many outside of the message board realm that still believe in Pioli and Cassel. They will blindly support this team regardless. This team will win enough to keep the seats filled and thusly maintain the status quo. The fan base is so conditioned to mediocrity that a 9-7 season and a playoff berth is considered a success. We came close to a winning record and playoff berth this year with all of our injuries and brutal schedule. It will be much easier next year when they come back and an easier schedule. |
Quote:
However, when the need arises, I hire experts who know more than I do about their given specialty area. A lot of people do that sort of thing. Given that expertise has a purpose, is it too much to assume that NFL talent evaluators ... especially ones who have received numerous Executive Of The Year Awards ... should possess the capability to assess a quarterback's abilities without the benefit of observing three years of bone-headed decisions and screw-ups? FAX |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Except Robinson never said any of that. As you said, FAX, the story was that Haley and Weis disagreed on how to develop Cassel and Haley took over those duties. Robinson never said that Haley loved Cassel. Likewise, he never said that Weis didn't like Cassel, and he specifically clarified that in subsequent tweets. He pointed out that if Weis didn't like Cassel then he wouldn't have come here and/or the team wouldn't have hired him. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
He even went out of his way to make that clear: https://twitter.com/#!/CharlesRobinson - Dec 13 Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Likewise, Robinson never said a word about Haley having any kind of particular fondness for Cassel, but people still act like he did. |
Wonder how Weiss wanted to develop him, because that year, we very heavily relied on our running game. Cassel just didnt shit the bed. Its not like we did anything crazy with Cassel, it was basically, option 1-2, if no one open run. lol. our second option was the RB.
I would like to know how Charlie wanted to use him. lol. |
Quote:
FAX |
I wonder if cassel witnessed pioli murder someone or something
|
Quote:
I saw it with my own two eyes So you can wipe off that grin Know where you've been It's all been a pack of lies |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:29 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.