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What really gripes me is throwing short on 3rd and long (or running a draw play). Once in a blue moon, it works but generally it leads to a punt. In today's NFL, you have fairly decent chance of an illegal contact or PI call if it's not complete, so why not throw it past the sticks? And then to add insult to injury, after the five yard pass on 3rd and 15, the punt team will come out and take an intentional delay of game penalty to give Colquitt more room. :facepalm:
I'm thinking Mahomes won't settle for dump offs very often on 3rd and longs. |
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Good read Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
2. Patrick Mahomes, Texas Tech
Games Played: 30 | Passer Efficiency Rating: 157.0 | AY/A: 9.2 Top Statistical Comp: Steve McNair If we were judging this based just on collegiate efficiency, then Patrick Mahomes would hold the top spot. He had the best AY/A in the class, and his passer efficiency rating was second by a hair. With the discrepancy between Kaaya and Mahomes in games played, though, Mahomes slides down to a respectable second. Mahomes took big strides between his 2015 sophomore season and last year in limiting interceptions, something that helped vault him to the top of this list. He threw 15 picks as a sophomore, leading the Big 12, but he cut that to 10 this year despite adding 18 more total attempts. When you couple that with a gaudy 41 touchdowns, it's easy to see how his AY/A got so meaty. This isn't to say he cowers over previous first-round picks, though. Going back to our group of 60 candidates, Mahomes ranks 26th in AY/A and 29th in passer efficiency rating. This is all while starting for just two-plus seasons, limiting him to 30 games played. Even the elite in this class bring some serious questions. Whenever Mahomes' name is brought up this draft season, you can bet someone will make mention of his playing in the Big 12. This isn't a conference known for stellar defense, potentially tainting his efficiency stats. Looking back at how past Big 12 first-round picks have fared likely won't help his case. Since 1995, there have been seven quarterbacks from the Big 12 drafted in the first round. Here's a look at how they've fared in the NFL through the eyes of NEP, again focusing on top-15 seasons in years in which they had at least 200 drop backs. Quarterback School Top-15 NEP Seasons Qualified Seasons Robert Griffin III Baylor 1 3 Sam Bradford Oklahoma 1 6 Vince Young Texas 1 3 Brandon Weeden Oklahoma State 0 2 Josh Freeman Kansas State 1 4 Ryan Tannehill Texas A&M 1 5 Blaine Gabbert Missouri 0 3 In 26 qualified seasons, former Big 12 quarterbacks have finished in the top 15 in Total NEP just five times. Sam Bradford didn't get his first top-15 finish until this year. You can bet Mahomes is going to hear about this, whether it's fair or not. Perhaps it's fitting, then, that Mahomes' top comp is the late Steve McNair, who played his college ball at Alcorn State, which was -- at the time -- Division I-AA. His stats there weren't anything otherworldly, either, and he and Mahomes line up well across the board. Quarterback Games Pass. Eff. Rat. AY/A Steve McNair: 33 155.4 9.0 Patrick Mahomes: 30 157.0 9.2 McNair was a tremendous NFL player despite putting up just decent stats against lower-level competition in college; it's probably not right to write off Mahomes simply because he played in an offensive-minded conference. Mahomes is similar to Kaaya in that he's not likely to cost a team a first-round pick. That makes any warts and worries he may present less frightening. He showed some reasons for excitement when he was at Texas Tech, and it would seem fully justifiable to target him at some point beyond the first round. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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When you listen to the way Reid talks about Mahomes, it sounds like he thinks he could start THIS year. He certainly doesn't rule it out. |
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Albert Breer spends the first 5 minutes talking about this years QB class. He then interviews Daniel Jeremiah starting at the 30 minute mark and they start talking about the QB's at the 35:20 mark...
<iframe src="https://art19.com/shows/the-mmqb-podcast-with-albert-breer/episodes/04aa460a-1048-4bd8-812e-c106ee53aed5/embed?theme=dark-blue" style="width: 100%; height: 200px; border: 0 none;" scrolling="no"></iframe> |
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What a moron. |
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">It's typical of most rookies, they have no idea how complicated pro football Mahomes: "Chiefs' playbook 'a lot harder than I thought'</p>— Michael Lombardi (@mlombardiNFL) <a href="https://twitter.com/mlombardiNFL/status/861576995112534016">May 8, 2017</a></blockquote>
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:) |
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Play on field is what matters but for what it's worth: Talked to Bronco player who said "Paxton has been first one in meetings." <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/9sports?src=hash">#9sports</a></p>— Mike Klis (@MikeKlis) <a href="https://twitter.com/MikeKlis/status/854341365743853568">April 18, 2017</a></blockquote> <script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> :) I also think Paxton is more receptive to coaching than Pat Mahomes. Mahomes has an "I do it my way" kind of vibe to him. |
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