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Haha. That's how I want my funeral to go too. Line all my friends up in front of an industrial floor fan and dump my ashes in front of it.
Give everyone a Paulie facial.
Haha. That's how I want my funeral to go too. Line all my friends up in front of an industrial floor fan and dump my ashes in front of it.
No QB today has a clean pocket most of the time. The QB and audibles can mitigate a lot of pass rushes and pressure though, and I think its crazy to take OL over one. Yes, every once in a blue moon you get the 2000 Ravens defense to fall back on with a guy like Dilfer, good luck with that...its the exception not the rule. You hit on a QB once you have your playcaller for the next 10-15 years who can win almost on their own (Rodgers and Ben are fantastic at mitigating bad line play because they move so well in the pocket or are hard to bring down).
Problem is historically only about a quarter of the teams at any given moment possesses one of these guys. Besides, if you have a great OL you can still make the playoffs with a lesser guy while waiting for MR. Right. Course, Cleveland, Detroit, Cincinnati, Tampa Bay and a few others have waited decades for that guy. I'd say odds are better going with OL. Besides , SBs are won by playcallers and coordinators as much as QBs.
No single player has a bigger effect on the game than the QB. I mean the fact that we're deciding who's more important, one man (the QB) or 5 men (the OL) gives you your answer right there...
Assuming fantasy is reality and you could pull from a league-wide player pool. What would be the first position you draft (sign), all the way down to the 11th? And keep in mind that by the 11th pick, the law of diminishing returns is in full effect.
Your first pick is a 100 rating and your last is a 79.
1. QB (name him if you want, but not necessary)
.... then what?
Funny, true story about that clip.
Guess I''m not going to be able to figure out your stance.I would take franchise QB over the franchise LT if I was starting from scratch.
Again, given the exercise in the OP I'd start with QB and probably go oline next.
I certainly don't think you just win with stud oline and jag at QB.
Assuming this is a pool of players from the available talent, I would go RB first. There is no position that has less elite talent that is indispensable.
1) RB (Bell)
2) QB (Manning)
3) DE (Quinn)
4) CB
5) FS
6) Everyone else.
If you can run the ball, pass the ball, disrupt the pass, you win. You don't need stars if you have a stable.
Well, you're confusin yourself by posting out of context quotes man.Guess I''m not going to be able to figure out your stance.
Earlier, you said: "I guess that would be a fair response if someone said that QB was most important, and o-line last. I dont think anyone is saying that."
Sure sounds like you are saying QB is more important, so, yeah, someone is saying that.
Oh, what the hell... I get confused so easily now-a-days.
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Always come back to the same question:
How far can a QB throw a football while flat on his back?