How to improve the WR position

BaseballJones

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The Ravens under Lamar have won 1 more playoff game in 5 years as the Pats have won with Mac in 2 years. So no, that's not how I'm really defining success. We were talking about improving receivers. Lamar is a weird one (as is Fields) because IMO, he's a running back that sometimes throws. That's his value. In Lamar's case, his career passing numbers over 5 seasons is ok to pretty good, but how much of that is because teams are so focused on not letting him beat them on the ground making it much easier for him to throw? As his injuries mount, and his running slows down, I'm not sold on him as a QB down the road.
Last 4 seasons: 14-2, 11-5, 8-9, 10-7, playoffs 3 of the 4 years. I mean, that's certainly success. It's not what Pats fans have become accustomed to as success, but it's definitely success.

But... that's why I asked you the question, and you answered it. No, you would not define this as success.

Tannehill has had 2 seasons, IMO, that were markedly better than Mac Jones. They also happen to be 2 seasons in which he had AJ Brown and the best running back in the NFL. Over those 26 starts, he put up a 110.6 rating. They still have those guys, the team goes 12-5, but Tannehill falls off a cliff and goes for an 88.9 rating, and they get ousted in the playoffs as he tosses 1td and 3 picks in a 19-16 loss to Cincy. Vrabel does not get enough credit, IMO. If that team had a QB....
For sure. But...they've certainly been successful with not many high end passing targets.
 

lexrageorge

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Depends on what you mean by "succeed". The Ravens under Lamar have been pretty solid the past four years, and they really haven't had that much at the skill positions. Andrews is really good but otherwise....? I'd say that Tannehill and the Titans have been pretty solid, while not having a ton of weapons other than Henry. Brown was good obviously but it's not like they've been overflowing with talent on the offense, but the team has been good.
It's funny when people say the bolded. I mean it's not inaccurate, but here are the Ravens accomplishments during that time period:

Upset loss in divisional round after going 14-2
Wild card win followed by loss to Buffalo in divisional round
Playoff DNQ
10-7 record with a loss in wild card round

Other than Lamar's rookie year, the Ravens haven't exactly lit the AFC on fire and their past 2 seasons were mirror reversal images of the Pats.
 

Deathofthebambino

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All of those teams (except PHI) had terrible records and non-existant offensive lines. The Patriots in 2021 had a very good offensive line, which is really key when you're an immobile QB.
If we're deducting points from Mac because he had a good offensive line in 2021 (again, I dispute how good that offensive line was, after watching a lot of the same guys completely quit on plays over and over again last year), are we deducting points from Hurts and Tua and Josh Allen who were in their 3rd seasons before they had a season as good as Mac's rookie season, or Geno's 7th season or whatever it was?
 

Cellar-Door

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If we're deducting points from Mac because he had a good offensive line in 2021 (again, I dispute how good that offensive line was, after watching a lot of the same guys completely quit on plays over and over again last year), are we deducting points from Hurts and Tua and Josh Allen who were in their 3rd seasons before they had a season as good as Mac's rookie season, or Geno's 7th season or whatever it was?
We aren't deducting anything. We aren't even comparing really. We're saying "Mac had a really good rookie year.... for a rookie" he was in a pretty good situation, there were positives and some real concerns about his long term growth potential. He had a worse situation year 2 and his performance tanked, showing all the same causes for concern, and maybe some new ones.
You're the one who keeps wanting to draw parallels to other guys for no clear reason, particularly when almost all of them have very different athletic/physical makeups from Mac.
I don't care what anyone else did, I'm not scoring them against each other.... I'm asking what Mac Jones can do long term, and this discussion started with the idea that if Mac was rookie Mac he was going to get a $40M a year type deal from New England, and my not thinking that was how BB has operated.
 

BaseballJones

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It's funny when people say the bolded. I mean it's not inaccurate, but here are the Ravens accomplishments during that time period:

Upset loss in divisional round after going 14-2
Wild card win followed by loss to Buffalo in divisional round
Playoff DNQ
10-7 record with a loss in wild card round

Other than Lamar's rookie year, the Ravens haven't exactly lit the AFC on fire and their past 2 seasons were mirror reversal images of the Pats.
I didn't say they lit the AFC on fire. Just that they were pretty solid, which I think is true. For many teams, that would be wildly successful. For the BB/TB era Patriots, it would have been a disaster.
 

lexrageorge

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I didn't say they lit the AFC on fire. Just that they were pretty solid, which I think is true. For many teams, that would be wildly successful. For the BB/TB era Patriots, it would have been a disaster.
And for a lot of posters here, it would be just as upsetting as the current Pats situation.
 

Deathofthebambino

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It's funny when people say the bolded. I mean it's not inaccurate, but here are the Ravens accomplishments during that time period:

Upset loss in divisional round after going 14-2
Wild card win followed by loss to Buffalo in divisional round
Playoff DNQ
10-7 record with a loss in wild card round

Other than Lamar's rookie year, the Ravens haven't exactly lit the AFC on fire and their past 2 seasons were mirror reversal images of the Pats.
Just to clear this up, the 14-2 season wasn't Lamar's rooke year. It was his 2nd year. In his rookie year, he started 7 games, and the Ravens went 6-1 when he took over for Joe Flacco. He threw for a whopping 75ypg, 6td's, 3ints, and a rating of 84.5. they got into the playoffs, and lost in the WC to San Diego, when Lamar threw for 194 yards, 2tds, 1int. 170 of those passing yards and both touchdowns came in the last 9 minutes of the 4th, after they had fallen behind 23-3.

This season will be Lamar's 6th season, not his 5th.
 

Deathofthebambino

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We aren't deducting anything. We aren't even comparing really. We're saying "Mac had a really good rookie year.... for a rookie" he was in a pretty good situation, there were positives and some real concerns about his long term growth potential. He had a worse situation year 2 and his performance tanked, showing all the same causes for concern, and maybe some new ones.
You're the one who keeps wanting to draw parallels to other guys for no clear reason, particularly when almost all of them have very different athletic/physical makeups from Mac.
I don't care what anyone else did, I'm not scoring them against each other.... I'm asking what Mac Jones can do long term, and this discussion started with the idea that if Mac was rookie Mac he was going to get a $40M a year type deal from New England, and my not thinking that was how BB has operated.
I'm not drawing parallels. I initially responded to someone making the claim that QB's make receivers better, and not vice versa. Again, I'm showing evidence of the opposite of that theory. With a couple of extremely rare exceptions, all evidence, virtually all of it in the modern NFL game shows that skill position players elevate quarterbacks. That's how you see guys like Brock Purdy succeeding out of nowhere in San Fran, or a guys like Cousins and Goff and Geno being rejuvenated. Derek Carr and Dak are examples of guys who get better skill position players and don't elevate their own games.

But there is very, very little evidence that quarterbacks elevate their receivers, especially young QB's like Mac. Most NFL Qb's, including top of the 1st round picks, don't even start from day one like Mac did, never mind have his success, never mind do it with flotsam and jetsam to throw the ball to...

Here's what Mac can do short term, long term and medium term.

Absolutely nothing but mediocreness if BB continues to give him the likes of Nelson Agholor and Davante Parker and Jonnu Smith and Hunter Henry and Kendrick Bourne and Tyquan Thornton and Jakobi/Juju as the guys to throw to. This is a thread about improving the WR position, and none of these young QB's I've mentioned have had success with WR/TE groupings that look like that. And with all of that, Mac was one stupid lateral play away or one Rham fumble away from having this squad in the playoffs in back to back years.
 

rodderick

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I just have no clue how "receivers make the QB and very seldom do you see it work the other way around" is a good argument for keeping Mac. Just upgrade skill positions and start Zappe or some rookie who played a ton in college then. Why pay Mac if these guys can only be expected to be as good as their surrounding cast?
 

Cellar-Door

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I just have no clue how "receivers make the QB and very seldom do you see it work the other way around" is a good argument for keeping Mac. Just upgrade skill positions and start Zappe or some rookie who played a ton in college then. Why pay Mac if these guys can only be expected to be as good as their surrounding cast?
I think there is a much better case for "Offensive playcallers make both WR and QB better" than "WR make QBs"
 

Deathofthebambino

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I just have no clue how "receivers make the QB and very seldom do you see it work the other way around" is a good argument for keeping Mac. Just upgrade skill positions and start Zappe or some rookie who played a ton in college then. Why pay Mac if these guys can only be expected to be as good as their surrounding cast?
That's how to build a strawman, I guess. Maybe the Bengals shouldn't resign Burrow and should have handed the job over to Brandon Allen instead.

Nobody is advocating for paying Mac right now. Mac is under contract for 2 more years, and the club has an option for a third already in place.

The point is if you don't give him anything to work with, he's going to be mediocre, just like all of those other guys not named Mahomes and Brady (and maybe fucking Rodgers). If you give weapons to Bailey Zappe, maybe he succeeds too, but I'm pretty comfortable that Mac would do more with them than Bailey, and I'm pretty sure BB and the Pats made it clear that they do as well.

Or we can continue to not give him any weapons, continue to watch a mediocre offense for a couple of years, and then watch their next rookie QB be mediocre with mediocre weapons. Lather, rinse, repeat.

Or maybe we get the next Mahomes. I guess that's the third option.
 

Shelterdog

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I just have no clue how "receivers make the QB and very seldom do you see it work the other way around" is a good argument for keeping Mac. Just upgrade skill positions and start Zappe or some rookie who played a ton in college then. Why pay Mac if these guys can only be expected to be as good as their surrounding cast?
I think the argument--which I basically agree with--is that Brad Hoyer would still suck with Chase Gronk and Randy Moss.

The Pats offense, especially the passing game, sucked last year--so was it Jones/skill position/play callers/the line. I think the DOTB view is that the biggest problem is skill position talent and maybe coaching next.
 

Shelterdog

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That's how to build a strawman, I guess. Maybe the Bengals shouldn't resign Burrow and should have handed the job over to Brandon Allen instead.

Nobody is advocating for paying Mac right now. Mac is under contract for 2 more years, and the club has an option for a third already in place.

The point is if you don't give him anything to work with, he's going to be mediocre, just like all of those other guys not named Mahomes and Brady (and maybe fucking Rodgers). If you give weapons to Bailey Zappe, maybe he succeeds too, but I'm pretty comfortable that Mac would do more with them than Bailey, and I'm pretty sure BB and the Pats made it clear that they do as well.

Or we can continue to not give him any weapons, continue to watch a mediocre offense for a couple of years, and then watch their next rookie QB be mediocre with mediocre weapons. Lather, rinse, repeat.

Or maybe we get the next Mahomes. I guess that's the third option.
That is something that gets brought up a lot. The argument goes Mac will never be Herbert/Mahomes/Allen so we shouldn't re-sign him to some Daniel Jones like deal and instead we should take a chance on a potential franchise QB. Ok, good plan, you drafted Zach Wilson, now what?
 

JM3

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That is something that gets brought up a lot. The argument goes Mac will never be Herbert/Mahomes/Allen so we shouldn't re-sign him to some Daniel Jones like deal and instead we should take a chance on a potential franchise QB. Ok, good plan, you drafted Zach Wilson, now what?
Hire a more competent GM who wouldn't draft Zach Wilson?
 

Pesky Pole

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DJ Chark played on a 1 yr / $10M contract for the Lions last year in an effort to show he was healthy. He didn't exactly do that by playing in 11 games (502 yards and 3 TD's). It was expected he would get a multi-year agreement in the $10M+ per year range. Obviously that hasn't happened so does he try another short contract. He'll be 27 in September and he ran a 4.3 out of college as a X (he's 6'4 and caught 8 of 16 contested balls last year while also averaging 16.7 yards per reception). If they're not liking the price on Hopkins or Jeudy, does Chark get a look as the best option left?
 

Cellar-Door

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That is something that gets brought up a lot. The argument goes Mac will never be Herbert/Mahomes/Allen so we shouldn't re-sign him to some Daniel Jones like deal and instead we should take a chance on a potential franchise QB. Ok, good plan, you drafted Zach Wilson, now what?
You pay a vet cheap to moderate money to compete with your young QB and get between 85 and 110% of the performance for a fraction of the price?
Then you try again in the draft.
The worst thing you can do in the NFL at QB is pay top dollar long term for mediocre or worse performance. If you're going to get mediocre performance make it cheap.

Edit- I mean we JUST saw this the last several years with SF, they had Jimmy on moderate money, then cheap, they (thus far) totally whiffed on their rookie QB, but they were still contenders because they got competent play at far less than top $. The problem with the Jets last year was they didn't go get a real backup. If they signed Brisset or something they make the playoffs.
 

Shelterdog

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You pay a vet cheap to moderate money to compete with your young QB and get between 85 and 110% of the performance for a fraction of the price?
Then you try again in the draft.
The worst thing you can do in the NFL at QB is pay top dollar long term for mediocre or worse performance. If you're going to get mediocre performance make it cheap.

Edit- I mean we JUST saw this the last several years with SF, they had Jimmy on moderate money, then cheap, they (thus far) totally whiffed on their rookie QB, but they were still contenders because they got competent play at far less than top $. The problem with the Jets last year was they didn't go get a real backup. If they signed Brisset or something they make the playoffs.
Teams rarely do what you suggest because they don't want to jettison a competent face of the franchise to bring in someone who might suck and these moderate QB whos can perform at 85-110 percent of the level of starting NFL QBs don't actually exist. Let's take the Giants. What should they do at QB this season? Who is the cheap veteran you're getting instead of Jones and what is your approach to the draft? Brissett at 8 million and then basically hope that Tanner McKee is available at 25 and is good? You realize that's a shitty shitty plan in practice for a team that just made the playoffs, right?
 

Cellar-Door

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Teams rarely do what you suggest because they don't want to jettison a competent face of the franchise to bring in someone who might suck and these moderate QB whos can perform at 85-110 percent of the level of starting NFL QBs don't actually exist. Let's take the Giants. What should they do at QB this season? Who is the cheap veteran you're getting instead of Jones and what is your approach to the draft? Brissett at 8 million and then basically hope that Tanner McKee is available at 25 and is good? You realize that's a shitty shitty plan in practice for a team that just made the playoffs, right?
I Mean so is what they did. Though Danny Dimes isn't a great comp because he has rushing upside. But the question is what your goal is. If it's make the playoffs and then decline in a Flacco spiral ... Sure.
Part of the problem for NYG is that they had no plan. They declined the 5th year option without any real alternative planning, then when Jones had a good year they felt they had to pay him. It's not even that bad of a deal...its just unlikely they can win the super bowl. I also think Mac is going to be different, because if he's mediocre in the passing game like Jones he's less valuable because Jones is a real rushing threat. If Mac is good... Hey pay him.

The key is... you need to plan ahead, the minute you decline the 5th year option you need a plan. If not you pick it up while you develop a plan.

Edit also the idea that cheap to moderate vets who can give you mediocre production don't exist is demonstrably wrong. We saw at least 3 last year in Brissett, Jimmy G and Geno Smith
 

Shelterdog

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I Mean so is what they did. Though Danny Dimes isn't a great comp because he has rushing upside. But the question is what your goal is. If it's make the playoffs and then decline in a Flacco spiral ... Sure.
Part of the problem for NYG is that they had no plan. They declined the 5th year option without any real alternative planning, then when Jones had a good year they felt they had to pay him. It's not even that bad of a deal...its just unlikely they can win the super bowl. I also think Mac is going to be different, because if he's mediocre in the passing game like Jones he's less valuable because Jones is a real rushing threat. If Mac is good... Hey pay him.

The key is... you need to plan ahead, the minute you decline the 5th year option you need a plan. If not you pick it up while you develop a plan.

Edit also the idea that cheap to moderate vets who can give you mediocre production don't exist is demonstrably wrong. We saw at least 3 last year in Brissett, Jimmy G and Geno Smith
It’s not demonstrably wrong-the point isn’t that backups never go well, it’s thatis there aren’t veterans you can bring in to be competent starters for cheap and expect competence. If you’re day one starting qb is Brissett or Smith you’re screwed-and if you wanted it to be Jimmy G you would have had to pay him starter money which no one was willing to do
 

Super Nomario

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You pay a vet cheap to moderate money to compete with your young QB and get between 85 and 110% of the performance for a fraction of the price?
Then you try again in the draft.
The worst thing you can do in the NFL at QB is pay top dollar long term for mediocre or worse performance. If you're going to get mediocre performance make it cheap.

Edit- I mean we JUST saw this the last several years with SF, they had Jimmy on moderate money, then cheap, they (thus far) totally whiffed on their rookie QB, but they were still contenders because they got competent play at far less than top $. The problem with the Jets last year was they didn't go get a real backup. If they signed Brisset or something they make the playoffs.
Jimmy's deal was for record-setting APY at the time. SF just front-loaded the cap hits and the cap rose enough that it didn't look that bad by the end of it. But it wasn't really an example of a cheap vet deal until the very end.

Part of the problem for NYG is that they had no plan. They declined the 5th year option without any real alternative planning, then when Jones had a good year they felt they had to pay him. It's not even that bad of a deal...its just unlikely they can win the super bowl. I also think Mac is going to be different, because if he's mediocre in the passing game like Jones he's less valuable because Jones is a real rushing threat. If Mac is good... Hey pay him.

The key is... you need to plan ahead, the minute you decline the 5th year option you need a plan. If not you pick it up while you develop a plan.
I agree with this. NYG backed themselves into a corner. That contract is awful IMO.

Edit also the idea that cheap to moderate vets who can give you mediocre production don't exist is demonstrably wrong. We saw at least 3 last year in Brissett, Jimmy G and Geno Smith
There are a handful of teams that try to do this every year and they usually don't work out that well. I think last year we had an unusual number of successes. I also think it's interesting that Jimmy G and Geno signed contracts this offseason that suggest they're in that lower middle class range - usually we wind up with deals like the Daniel Jones one, where a semi-competent-I-guess quarterback signs a top-of-the-market contract essentially. Maybe it's a sign of a new trend. But normally the FA market is all like Case Keenums and Josh McCowns.
 

Cellar-Door

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It’s not demonstrably wrong-the point isn’t that backups never go well, it’s thatis there aren’t veterans you can bring in to be competent starters for cheap and expect competence. If you’re day one starting qb is Brissett or Smith you’re screwed-and if you wanted it to be Jimmy G you would have had to pay him starter money which no one was willing to do
I mean... how is that different from the mid-level guys who get overpaid? Do you think the Giants are going to have a real SB shot next year? How did top of the market Derek Carr work out for LV? You might be locking in mediocre, but the ceiling is still low and you don't have the extra $ spread around to make the rest of the team better.

Jimmy's deal was for record-setting APY at the time. SF just front-loaded the cap hits and the cap rose enough that it didn't look that bad by the end of it. But it wasn't really an example of a cheap vet deal until the very end.
I agree with this. NYG backed themselves into a corner. That contract is awful IMO.
There are a handful of teams that try to do this every year and they usually don't work out that well. I think last year we had an unusual number of successes. I also think it's interesting that Jimmy G and Geno signed contracts this offseason that suggest they're in that lower middle class range - usually we wind up with deals like the Daniel Jones one, where a semi-competent-I-guess quarterback signs a top-of-the-market contract essentially. Maybe it's a sign of a new trend. But normally the FA market is all like Case Keenums and Josh McCowns.
Jimmy G 3-4 years ago I agree, but last year he was on a $6.5M deal (with a bunch of incentives) rather than get cut for nothing, if he thought there was a team out there offerring a starting gig he'd have been gone. And last year isn't the only one, 2021 there were a couple... Teddy Bridgewater put up middle of the pack numbers on a 4.5M deal, Jameis put up pretty decent numbers on a cheap deal for 7 weeks then got hurt.

And yes, I agree that the odds of those type deals working out long term is not great, BUT... the return is actually probably higher than with locking up guys in the 14-20 range to big deals, because if it busts you have cap space to try again (and likely a higher draft pick). It's especially the case when you're talking about having a plan in place to go after your potential star.

The only situation in which paying a middle of the pack or lower guy top $ makes sense is if you don't care about contending, you just want to make sure the team isn't bad. Otherwise, you should be looking to draft a guy a year ahead if possible and picking up one of the fringe guys and building out the rest of the roster.
 

Shelterdog

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I mean... how is that different from the mid-level guys who get overpaid? Do you think the Giants are going to have a real SB shot next year? How did top of the market Derek Carr work out for LV? You might be locking in mediocre, but the ceiling is still low and you don't have the extra $ spread around to make the rest of the team better.


Jimmy G 3-4 years ago I agree, but last year he was on a $6.5M deal (with a bunch of incentives) rather than get cut for nothing, if he thought there was a team out there offerring a starting gig he'd have been gone. And last year isn't the only one, 2021 there were a couple... Teddy Bridgewater put up middle of the pack numbers on a 4.5M deal, Jameis put up pretty decent numbers on a cheap deal for 7 weeks then got hurt.

And yes, I agree that the odds of those type deals working out long term is not great, BUT... the return is actually probably higher than with locking up guys in the 14-20 range to big deals, because if it busts you have cap space to try again (and likely a higher draft pick). It's especially the case when you're talking about having a plan in place to go after your potential star.

The only situation in which paying a middle of the pack or lower guy top $ makes sense is if you don't care about contending, you just want to make sure the team isn't bad. Otherwise, you should be looking to draft a guy a year ahead if possible and picking up one of the fringe guys and building out the rest of the roster.
I’m certainly not here to defend the giants or the Jones contract but the basic logic of why you’d sign the number fifteen qb to a big contract is pretty powerful. If you don’t have Mahomes there’s nothing wrong with having a Joe Flacco or Andy Dalton or Carr and winning games selling out stadiums and if everything works out maybe you do make a playoff run. Plus I think the value of tanking in a year where Andrew Luck isn’t in the draft is overstated-your plan of replacing Daniel Jones with a Caleb Williams might result in replacing Daniel Jones with Sam Darnold
 

JM3

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I’m certainly not here to defend the giants or the Jones contract but the basic logic of why you’d sign the number fifteen qb to a big contract is pretty powerful. If you don’t have Mahomes there’s nothing wrong with having a Joe Flacco or Andy Dalton or Carr and winning games selling out stadiums and if everything works out maybe you do make a playoff run. Plus I think the value of tanking in a year where Andrew Luck isn’t in the draft is overstated-your plan of replacing Daniel Jones with a Caleb Williams might result in replacing Daniel Jones with Sam Darnold
What team has made a run paying Flacco/Dalton/Carr real $?
 

Deathofthebambino

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You pay a vet cheap to moderate money to compete with your young QB and get between 85 and 110% of the performance for a fraction of the price?
Then you try again in the draft.
The worst thing you can do in the NFL at QB is pay top dollar long term for mediocre or worse performance. If you're going to get mediocre performance make it cheap.

Edit- I mean we JUST saw this the last several years with SF, they had Jimmy on moderate money, then cheap, they (thus far) totally whiffed on their rookie QB, but they were still contenders because they got competent play at far less than top $. The problem with the Jets last year was they didn't go get a real backup. If they signed Brisset or something they make the playoffs.
They were still contenders because they built a team that could succeed with anyone playing QB. If you gave Mac, a quarterback still playing at far less than top $, that offensive line, Deebo, Aiyuk, McCaffrey, Kittle, Juszczyk, do you not believe Mac would succeed? Not to mention Shanahan?

That team was loaded with one glaring hole at running back, and mid season they went and got arguably the best RB in the game. The Patriots have holes all over their offense, they got BoB back, and they are going out and getting Juju to replace Meyers and Gesicki to replace Jonnu. It's like apples and hand grenades.
 

Super Nomario

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I mean... how is that different from the mid-level guys who get overpaid? Do you think the Giants are going to have a real SB shot next year? How did top of the market Derek Carr work out for LV? You might be locking in mediocre, but the ceiling is still low and you don't have the extra $ spread around to make the rest of the team better.
I don't think spreading the money around to the rest of the team is actually going to make you better compared to having better quarterback play. We saw with the Patriots' 2021 offseason that turning spending money into roster improvements efficiently is easier said than done. I don't know if anyone has actually done an analysis on this, but I would be surprised if spending anyone else on the roster is as efficient as spending at QB, even granting that you're getting marginal returns at some point here. Most of the FA market is marginal returns too.

And yes, I agree that the odds of those type deals working out long term is not great, BUT... the return is actually probably higher than with locking up guys in the 14-20 range to big deals, because if it busts you have cap space to try again (and likely a higher draft pick). It's especially the case when you're talking about having a plan in place to go after your potential star.
I don't really think the cap space is that big a deal. The larger issue to me is opportunity cost. The Eagles were fine paying Wentz what they did because they were still willing to draft Hurts when he became available. The Rams were OK even with overpaying Goff because they moved on for Stafford when they had the opportunity. The Patriots played Bledsoe but still looked at draft QBs and selected Brady. But most teams pay a Carr or a Daniel Jones or a Sam Bradford and then think they're done and don't continue to invest draft capital in the position. That's the mistake.

What team has made a run paying Flacco/Dalton/Carr real $?
Dalton and Carr didn't make a run making peanuts either. I think the larger issue is not mid-level quarterbacks getting paid, it's that you need a lot to go right for mid-level quarterbacks to win period. (Flacco's SB run is kind of a special case; the Ravens were not especially great team for a SB winner but he had as good a four-game run as any QB in playoff history. He was not elite, but he played elite for that stretch)
 

Cellar-Door

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I don't think spreading the money around to the rest of the team is actually going to make you better compared to having better quarterback play. We saw with the Patriots' 2021 offseason that turning spending money into roster improvements efficiently is easier said than done. I don't know if anyone has actually done an analysis on this, but I would be surprised if spending anyone else on the roster is as efficient as spending at QB, even granting that you're getting marginal returns at some point here. Most of the FA market is marginal returns too.


I don't really think the cap space is that big a deal. The larger issue to me is opportunity cost. The Eagles were fine paying Wentz what they did because they were still willing to draft Hurts when he became available. The Rams were OK even with overpaying Goff because they moved on for Stafford when they had the opportunity. The Patriots played Bledsoe but still looked at draft QBs and selected Brady. But most teams pay a Carr or a Daniel Jones or a Sam Bradford and then think they're done and don't continue to invest draft capital in the position. That's the mistake.
It depends on how much better. We were discussing mediocre QBs, where year to year a cheap guy could well be better. I think you're looking at....
Expensive mediocre QB- basically no chance to win a SB, could make the playoffs... not set up to win if you draft a QB and hit.
Cheap mediocre QB- just over no chance to win a SB, could make the playoffs.... much better set up to win if you draft a QB and hit

They were still contenders because they built a team that could succeed with anyone playing QB. If you gave Mac, a quarterback still playing at far less than top $, that offensive line, Deebo, Aiyuk, McCaffrey, Kittle, Juszczyk, do you not believe Mac would succeed? Not to mention Shanahan?

That team was loaded with one glaring hole at running back, and mid season they went and got arguably the best RB in the game. The Patriots have holes all over their offense, they got BoB back, and they are going out and getting Juju to replace Meyers and Gesicki to replace Jonnu. It's like apples and hand grenades.
I mean, yes I agree the offense needs to add a lot and should try to while Mac is cheap. Then, unless Mac is a top 10 or so QB they should be looking for his replacement, because you can't keep that and pay him a 2nd deal. We were discussing the merits of paying mediocre QBs, and this is if anything a great case for why you shouldn't. SF took a step forward when their QB cap hits dropped and they could pay for all those talents on both sides.
 

Super Nomario

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It depends on how much better. We were discussing mediocre QBs, where year to year a cheap guy could well be better. I think you're looking at....
Expensive mediocre QB- basically no chance to win a SB, could make the playoffs... not set up to win if you draft a QB and hit.
Cheap mediocre QB- just over no chance to win a SB, could make the playoffs.... much better set up to win if you draft a QB and hit
I don't agree with "much better set up to win." The money doesn't go that far.

I mean, yes I agree the offense needs to add a lot and should try to while Mac is cheap. Then, unless Mac is a top 10 or so QB they should be looking for his replacement, because you can't keep that and pay him a 2nd deal. We were discussing the merits of paying mediocre QBs, and this is if anything a great case for why you shouldn't. SF took a step forward when their QB cap hits dropped and they could pay for all those talents on both sides.
The 49ers won the same number of games in 2019 when Jimmy was in year two of his big deal.
 

Deathofthebambino

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I don't think spreading the money around to the rest of the team is actually going to make you better compared to having better quarterback play. We saw with the Patriots' 2021 offseason that turning spending money into roster improvements efficiently is easier said than done. I don't know if anyone has actually done an analysis on this, but I would be surprised if spending anyone else on the roster is as efficient as spending at QB, even granting that you're getting marginal returns at some point here. Most of the FA market is marginal returns too.


I don't really think the cap space is that big a deal. The larger issue to me is opportunity cost. The Eagles were fine paying Wentz what they did because they were still willing to draft Hurts when he became available. The Rams were OK even with overpaying Goff because they moved on for Stafford when they had the opportunity. The Patriots played Bledsoe but still looked at draft QBs and selected Brady. But most teams pay a Carr or a Daniel Jones or a Sam Bradford and then think they're done and don't continue to invest draft capital in the position. That's the mistake.


Dalton and Carr didn't make a run making peanuts either. I think the larger issue is not mid-level quarterbacks getting paid, it's that you need a lot to go right for mid-level quarterbacks to win period. (Flacco's SB run is kind of a special case; the Ravens were not especially great team for a SB winner but he had as good a four-game run as any QB in playoff history. He was not elite, but he played elite for that stretch)
The Eagles still had to go through a 4-11-1 season, and an 9-8 season in those first two seasons with Hurts on the roster, before they made their run in Hurts 3rd year. What did the Eagles do after they went 4-11-1 in Hurts rookie season, they used the 10th pick in the draft to get him Smith, even after they used a 1st round pick on Reagor in the previous season. That wasn't enough, so they went and got him AJ Brown after the 9-8 season.

After that SB run, I think they made Flacco the highest paid player (20mil a year sounds like a steal now), they had a good season the following year, going 10-6, winning a wild card game and then taking the Pats to the wire in a 35-31 loss in the Divisional round. Then he tore is ACL and MCL in week 11 the following season, and was never really the same, but Joe Flacco won football games, the epitome of a game manager, career w/l in the playoffs of 10-5. 98% of drafted QB's can only dream of having his career, IMO.
 

Deathofthebambino

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I mean, yes I agree the offense needs to add a lot and should try to while Mac is cheap. Then, unless Mac is a top 10 or so QB they should be looking for his replacement, because you can't keep that and pay him a 2nd deal.
I don't disagree with this at all.

The problem is there is, once again, no indication that the Pats are adding a lot. If they're saving to make a run at Lamar, all will be forgiven (although I'm not a big Lamar guy, and I doubt Bill is going to give him what he wants), but in reality, I see BB going back to his usual, put a bunch of average (a couple of slightly above average) weapons around the QB and hope to beat the opposition on scheme. That worked with the GOAT. It simply won't work with Mac or anyone else. The one thing I want less than anything is another year of not figuring out if Mac can be a top 10 guy.

And I want nothing to do with bringing in the Tyler Heinecke's of the world to bridge gaps. Blow it up, and find a young stud in the draft next year, or go for it by trying to put pieces around Mac now and if Mac doesn't work out, then you have the pieces in place to roll with a veteran journeyman for a year while your next rookie QB sits on the bench.
 

Cellar-Door

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I don't disagree with this at all.

The problem is there is, once again, no indication that the Pats are adding a lot. If they're saving to make a run at Lamar, all will be forgiven (although I'm not a big Lamar guy, and I doubt Bill is going to give him what he wants), but in reality, I see BB going back to his usual, put a bunch of average (a couple of slightly above average) weapons around the QB and hope to beat the opposition on scheme. That worked with the GOAT. It simply won't work with Mac or anyone else. The one thing I want less than anything is another year of not figuring out if Mac can be a top 10 guy.

And I want nothing to do with bringing in the Tyler Heinecke's of the world to bridge gaps. Blow it up, and find a young stud in the draft next year, or go for it by trying to put pieces around Mac now and if Mac doesn't work out, then you have the pieces in place to roll with a veteran journeyman for a year while your next rookie QB sits on the bench.
I think they're making a run at Hopkins, which is interesting, it implies they want to run for a title in the 2-3 cheap Mac years. I also think they were a victim of circumstance a bit, this is the worst WR class in years, they got the best one arguably. They got probably the best receiving TE in the class. OT wasn't great, they were allegedly in on Taylor but he understandably chose KC. Having money to spend is great, but there has to be someone to spend it on.
 

Shelterdog

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What team has made a run paying Flacco/Dalton/Carr real $?
Well certainly all three made the playoffs when making real money which is my point. Fans here like saying super bowl contender or bust but if you aren't one of the three teams lucky enough to have a top three QB just making the playoffs and crossing your fingers is a good functional plan (and better than being shitty and changing QBs every year or two until you happen to draft Mahomes) Lately the AFC championship has rotated between brady/mahomes/allen/burrows team but the Jaguars and Titans both made it within the past decade.

I would contend perhaps more controversially that the Giants won two super bowls despite having a very average QB who was well paid (Manning was not average in the playoffs and has tremendous ability but his performance was often not so great; he is remarkable for having a long healthy career that really was never up to the standards of the best QBs of his day.
 

Deathofthebambino

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I would contend perhaps more controversially that the Giants won two super bowls despite having a very average QB who was well paid (Manning was not average in the playoffs and has tremendous ability but his performance was often not so great; he is remarkable for having a long healthy career that really was never up to the standards of the best QBs of his day.
Even more recently, the Rams went to 2 Super Bowls in 4 years, winning 1, with 2 different, above average and immobile, but not top 5 QB's. Right in between those 2, you had Jimmy G. getting there with the Niners.

There are paths to getting to the Super Bowl without a Mahomes/Brady/Allen/Burrow at QB. It just requires a shit ton of talent elsewhere.
 

Jimbodandy

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Even more recently, the Rams went to 2 Super Bowls in 4 years, winning 1, with 2 different, above average and immobile, but not top 5 QB's. Right in between those 2, you had Jimmy G. getting there with the Niners.

There are paths to getting to the Super Bowl without a Mahomes/Brady/Allen/Burrow at QB. It just requires a shit ton of talent elsewhere.
Rams are a great example. Loaded roster, meh QB. Not even super special receivers.

There is more than one way to skin a cat. Whenever someone says that you need an elite QB or a true differencemaker "#1" WR, I chuckle.
 

Deathofthebambino

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Rams are a great example. Loaded roster, meh QB. Not even super special receivers.

There is more than one way to skin a cat. Whenever someone says that you need an elite QB or a true differencemaker "#1" WR, I chuckle.
Let's not undersell the receiving corps on the Rams. In 2018, Robert Woods had 86 catches, over 1,200 yards (not a fluke either, he followed it up with 90 catches and 1,100 yards the following year) and Brandon Cooks who had 80 catches and 1,200 yards (his 4th consecutive 1,000 yard season at that point), and Cooper Kupp who got hurt and only played 8 games had 40 catches, for 566 yards and 6tds. They went 7-1 in those games. Oh and Gurley.

In 2021, Kupp went supernova with 145 catches, 1,947 yards and 16tds and won the receiving triple crown. There is no better example of a true #1 that 2021 Kupp. Late in the season, they went and got OBJ, who played all 4 playoff games and went 25/316/2 on the other side, in the playoffs.
 

Jimbodandy

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Yeah Kupp is great. Can't believe that I forgot about him.

Point is the same. Rams were loaded everywhere. That's why they won. Pats won a bunch of Super Bowls with mostly meh guys at WR, and everyone says "yeah but they had the GOAT". But who was the best Chiefs wide receiver last year? "But they had Kelce". And when Baltimore won with Joe Flacco and a bunch of jags catching the ball, "but that defense". Eli.

Many ways to skin a cat.
 

JM3

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Well certainly all three made the playoffs when making real money which is my point. Fans here like saying super bowl contender or bust but if you aren't one of the three teams lucky enough to have a top three QB just making the playoffs and crossing your fingers is a good functional plan (and better than being shitty and changing QBs every year or two until you happen to draft Mahomes) Lately the AFC championship has rotated between brady/mahomes/allen/burrows team but the Jaguars and Titans both made it within the past decade.

I would contend perhaps more controversially that the Giants won two super bowls despite having a very average QB who was well paid (Manning was not average in the playoffs and has tremendous ability but his performance was often not so great; he is remarkable for having a long healthy career that really was never up to the standards of the best QBs of his day.
Carr is 0-1 in the playoffs in his 9 year career (his best season he got injured before the playoffs during his rookie contract).

Dalton is 0-4 in the playoffs in his 12 year career. The last time he was in the playoffs was in '14 - the 1st year of his 1st non-rookie contract when the cap hit was much lower.

Flacco has a very impressive 10-5 career playoff record, but is only 1-1 in the 11 seasons since his rookie contract expired.

Eli was very average & the Giants got around it,
twice, but his cap hit wasn't actually that high. Posting the below is the easiest way for me to show it since I'm on my phone, but I think it's still kind of interesting. Even though Mahomes smashed the record last season.

This was something I looked into a lot for dumbazz reasons a few years ago on another message board (I vehemently argued that a team could never win a Super Bowl paying Kirk Cousins full market value).

Here's a chart I just made:

Year SB Winner QB Salary Cap % of Cap
2022​
$208,200,000​
2021​
Rams Matthew Stafford
$20,000,000​
$182,500,000​
10.96%​
2020​
Buccaneers Tom Brady
$25,000,000​
$198,200,000​
12.61%​
2019​
Chiefs Patrick Mahomes
$4,479,808​
$188,200,000​
2.38%​
2018​
Patriots Tom Brady
$22,000,000​
$177,200,000​
12.42%​
2017​
Eagles Nick Foles
$1,600,000​
$167,000,000​
0.96%​
2016​
Patriots Tom Brady
$13,764,706​
$155,270,000​
8.87%​
2015​
Broncos Peyton Manning
$17,500,000​
$143,280,000​
12.21%​
2014​
Patriots Tom Brady
$14,800,000​
$133,000,000​
11.13%​
2013​
Seahawks Russell Wilson
$681,085​
$123,600,000​
0.55%​
2012​
Ravens Joe Flacco
$8,000,000​
$120,600,000​
6.63%​
2011​
Giants Eli Manning
$14,100,000​
$120,375,000​
11.71%​
2010​
Packers Aaron Rodgers
$6,500,000​
UNCAPPED
#VALUE!​
2009​
Saints Drew Brees
$10,660,400​
$123,000,000​
8.67%​
2008​
Steelers Ben Roethlisberger
$7,970,000​
$116,000,000​
6.87%​
2007​
Giants Eli Manning
$10,046,666​
$109,000,000​
9.22%​
2006​
Colts Peyton Manning
$10,566,668​
$102,000,000​
10.36%​
2005​
Steelers Ben Roethlisberger
$4,220,250​
$85,500,000​
4.94%​
2004​
Patriots Tom Brady
$5,058,750​
$80,582,000​
6.28%​
2003​
Patriots Tom Brady
$3,318,750​
$75,007,000​
4.42%​
2002​
Buccaneers Brad Johnson
$5,500,000​
$71,101,000​
7.74%​
2001​
Patriots Tom Brady
$310,833​
$67,405,000​
0.46%​
2000​
Ravens Trent Dilfer
$1,000,000​
$62,172,000​
1.61%​
1999​
Rams Kurt Warner
$750,000​
$57,288,000​
1.31%​
1998​
Broncos John Elway
$2,543,666​
$52,388,000​
4.86%​
1997​
Broncos John Elway
$2,058,666​
$41,454,000​
4.97%​
1996​
Packers Brett Favre
$4,175,000​
$40,753,000​
10.24%​
1995​
Cowboys Troy Aikman
$3,500,000​
$37,100,000​
9.43%​
1994​
49ers Steve Young
$4,025,000​
$34,608,000​
11.63%​


As you can see, Tom Brady set the record for highest % of the cap taken up by a Super Bowl winning QB in 2020 at 12.61%. That means that if any QB who costs more than $26.3m against the cap wins the Super Bowl this year, they would set that record.

This is the list:

2022​
Titans Ryan Tannehill
$38,600,000​
$208,200,000​
18.54%​
2022​
Chiefs Patrick Mahomes
$35,793,381​
$208,200,000​
17.19%​
2022​
Vikings Kirk Cousins
$31,416,668​
$208,200,000​
15.09%​
2022​
Lions Jared Goff
$31,150,000​
$208,200,000​
14.96%​
2022​
Packers Aaron Rodgers
$28,533,569​
$208,200,000​
13.70%​
2022​
Commanders Carson Wentz
$28,294,119​
$208,200,000​
13.59%​
2022​
49ers Jimmy Garoppolo
$26,950,000​
$208,200,000​
12.94%​


Of course that record is likely to be broken soon as QBs cost relatively more & more, but it should be clear that it will be easier for the Bills to win this year than next:

2022​
Bills Josh Allen
$16,372,281​
$208,200,000​
7.86%​
2023​
Bills Josh Allen
$39,772,281​
$218,200,000​
18.23%​


The $218.2m is Spotrac's projections.
I think my conclusion is a bit overblown, though. There's tons of different ways to handicap your team that you can possibly get around. I think paying a mediocre QB full market value is one of the tougher handicaps to get around, though.
 

Shelterdog

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I think my conclusion is a bit overblown, though. There's tons of different ways to handicap your team that you can possibly get around. I think paying a mediocre QB full market value is one of the tougher handicaps to get around, though.
Tougher handicap is to get around a bad QB.

I get it, paying Daniel Jones a lot of money isn't ideal, even if the Giants had lined him up to a lower contract. But the real issue here is not strategy, it's logistics. You're the Giants GM (or the Pats GM in a year and Mac Jones's play hasn't clear up whether he's clearly worthy of exercising the option on _or_ cutting because maybe he's shown some growth). What's the actual next concrete step towards making your team better? Are we really saying the optimal strategy is to never sign a quarterback to second contract unless they're a top five [or top ten] guy and and your best option is to just cut the dude Daniel Jones and start fresh?
 

JM3

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Tougher handicap is to get around a bad QB.

I get it, paying Daniel Jones a lot of money isn't ideal, even if the Giants had lined him up to a lower contract. But the real issue here is not strategy, it's logistics. You're the Giants GM (or the Pats GM in a year and Mac Jones's play hasn't clear up whether he's clearly worthy of exercising the option on _or_ cutting because maybe he's shown some growth). What's the actual next concrete step towards making your team better? Are we really saying the optimal strategy is to never sign a quarterback to second contract unless they're a top five [or top ten] guy and and your best option is to just cut the dude Daniel Jones and start fresh?
Eh...Trent Dilfer & Brad Johnson won Super Bowls.

I think the big question regarding the 2nd contract is the real details. If you're only locked in for a couple years & the actual guarantees aren't as bad as out looks, it can be non-disastrous, & how much outside of the top 10 is this QB?

Taking these rankings for '22, which were just the 1st ones I saw on Google, they have Daniel Jones as the #18 QB & Mac Jones as the #26 QB.

https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-qb-index-ranking-all-32-teams-primary-starting-quarterbacks-at-the-end-of-th

You have to be projecting a rather large jump for those guys to want to pay them Mahomes-adjacent $.

If you're paying $40m for the 18th best QB in the league... it's problematic. & yes, sometimes those guys can take a jump, but oftentimes they regress & now you're paying the 25th best QB $40m.

& yes, I would rather trade Daniel Jones, or even let him walk for a 3rd round comp pick if absolutely necessary, rather than pay him a lot of $ to be...Daniel Jones.
 

Devizier

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Tougher handicap is to get around a bad QB.
Right, and it's also worth reiterating that you can't apply "The Process" here. There are no guarantees even at the top of the draft, and you can't count on free agency. Best you can do is take your best shot with the quarterbacks you have or can easily get.
 

Cellar-Door

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Tougher handicap is to get around a bad QB.

I get it, paying Daniel Jones a lot of money isn't ideal, even if the Giants had lined him up to a lower contract. But the real issue here is not strategy, it's logistics. You're the Giants GM (or the Pats GM in a year and Mac Jones's play hasn't clear up whether he's clearly worthy of exercising the option on _or_ cutting because maybe he's shown some growth). What's the actual next concrete step towards making your team better? Are we really saying the optimal strategy is to never sign a quarterback to second contract unless they're a top five [or top ten] guy and and your best option is to just cut the dude Daniel Jones and start fresh?
I mean, people keep saying things as if you can't start looking for your next QB until you get rid of your current one. The Giants are a great example of totally fucking up (even if it pans out) because they declined the 5th year option.... but didn't make any moves to get a new QB. Now if they had lined up a young guy... they have options. If they pick up the option, they get 2 years to get the young guy (and potentially get 2 good years out of Jones and decide to re-sign him on that). The point is that any well run team should be making decisions early on "do I think this guy is going to be top 7-10 every year of his next deal?" if not start looking early.

A great example is the Chiefs... they had a nice year in 2016, went 12-4, won the West, had an excellent defense, a top playcaller and some strong skill players, matched with an average QB that ended up 13th in offense. Lost in the playoffs in their 1st game. Their QB had a couple years left on his deal, was going to be the 14th highest paid QB in 2017, and they already knew they probably didn't want to pay his next deal in 2018 (ended up getting 4/94).....
So they started scouting QBs to develop. In 2017, they traded up using two 1sts and a 3rd to draft a QB to develop. He came on much stronger than expected, so after 2017, they decided he was ready and traded their mediocre QB to recoup some of the cost.
 

BaseballJones

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That is a great example, but what if Mahomes didn't work out? Then, when they were already a playoff team, they would have traded a lot of valuable assets that could have helped that team improve into a legit SB contender and blown those assets on a first round QB that ended up being a waste.

I mean, it worked out fabulously for them. But THAT is the trick, right? Taking your shot and NAILING it.
 

JM3

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That is a great example, but what if Mahomes didn't work out? Then, when they were already a playoff team, they would have traded a lot of valuable assets that could have helped that team improve into a legit SB contender and blown those assets on a first round QB that ended up being a waste.

I mean, it worked out fabulously for them. But THAT is the trick, right? Taking your shot and NAILING it.
You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
 

BaseballJones

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You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.
Well.....that's kinda true, depending on the sport. I mean, it's true, yes. But trading a ton of assets to take your shot may end up not having a neutral effect; it may have a hugely negative effect on your organization for YEARS. So you have to be pretty confident that the shot you're taking as a GM is the right shot.
 

Shelterdog

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I mean, people keep saying things as if you can't start looking for your next QB until you get rid of your current one. The Giants are a great example of totally fucking up (even if it pans out) because they declined the 5th year option.... but didn't make any moves to get a new QB. Now if they had lined up a young guy... they have options. If they pick up the option, they get 2 years to get the young guy (and potentially get 2 good years out of Jones and decide to re-sign him on that). The point is that any well run team should be making decisions early on "do I think this guy is going to be top 7-10 every year of his next deal?" if not start looking early.
So the problem is I think a pretty obvious one--if you're going to replace someone because you don't think they can be a top 7-10 guy then you generally need to spend a first, maybe a high first to replace them (and you probably need to move on from the old guy as well). That's going to be tough in practice particularly if the player you have is like a Carr or a Dalton or a Flacco or maybe Kirk Cousins where you can win games and they are decent enough

EDIT: I think the situation changes a lot with a QB in their 30s like Smith was. It's a lot easier to move from a decent but not HOF QB when those guys are 32 than preemptively doing it when they're on year 3 or 4 of a rookie deal.
 

JM3

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Well.....that's kinda true, depending on the sport. I mean, it's true, yes. But trading a ton of assets to take your shot may end up not having a neutral effect; it may have a hugely negative effect on your organization for YEARS. So you have to be pretty confident that the shot you're taking as a GM is the right shot.
Lol yeah I was joking. But being good enough at your job to be in position to take those shots with a high probability of success & having the confidence to do so is pretty important.
 

Cellar-Door

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That is a great example, but what if Mahomes didn't work out? Then, when they were already a playoff team, they would have traded a lot of valuable assets that could have helped that team improve into a legit SB contender and blown those assets on a first round QB that ended up being a waste.

I mean, it worked out fabulously for them. But THAT is the trick, right? Taking your shot and NAILING it.
Then they would have been around the playoffs but not real contenders through the end of the Smith deal, same as they were.

A top QB is the most valuable thing in the sport, the 2nd most is a good QB on a rookie deal, if you don't have one you take shots until you do.

Also, QBs who don't work out (at all) is usually a product of bad scouting and bad coaching. Mahomes didn't have to be MAHOMES to give them a better chance to win, just Alex Smith but cheaper, or ideally better than Alex Smith.

Sure very few shots will work out as well as that one did, but it's the kind of move you make if you want to win. PHI is another good example without the trade up. They knew their QB situation wouldn't cut it so they kept taking shots.


Edit- now, part of this is philosophy, I am looking at it from the perspective that you want to win a ring. Not always true, some GMs are just looking to not get fired, some owners are just looking to win 8-10 games. In that case they choose to settle in for teams they know aren't going to win a title, but will be... okay.
 

Shelterdog

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Edit- now, part of this is philosophy, I am looking at it from the perspective that you want to win a ring. Not always true, some GMs are just looking to not get fired, some owners are just looking to win 8-10 games. In that case they choose to settle in for teams they know aren't going to win a title, but will be... okay.
Not sure it's fair to say someone is settling or that they know they aren't going to win a title if they decide to keep an average or even good quarterback rather than blowing up the position in hopes of getting Mahomes.
 

Cellar-Door

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34,617
Not sure it's fair to say someone is settling or that they know they aren't going to win a title if they decide to keep an average or even good quarterback rather than blowing up the position in hopes of getting Mahomes.
I mean, that isn't at any point what I said... but. Yeah, if you pay a league average QB top $ you have very little chance at winning a title, and even less of competing over a longer period of time, as those teams always bleed talent as guys need new deals and you can't afford it all because of the QB. And that is the point. If you pay big money the QB has to be good or elite, if you pay small money then you can offset some of that, even if they don't turn out good or elite.