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- Jan 14, 2013
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Newton might be a superior athlete, but I really believe that if Jones were playing in the same offense Newton played in at Auburn, he'd look very similar coming out of college. And methinks Hogan is a better athlete that you give him credit.
Looking for that quality traditional drop back passer that most teams never find? I'd pass, too. But, in the end, every single QB in this draft class needs development. The key is whether or not they go to a coaching staff that plays them to their strengths and not continue to try to fit these square pegs into round holes, IMO.
I think this is a major stretch. Urban Meyer's offense isn't all that different to begin with. I don't see the same mental processing speed with Cardale that I saw with Newton. Cardale obviously doesn't have a lot of experience so I'm willing to take a shot on him to develop in the right area of the draft...but counting on him to be an immediate starter doesn't seem like a great plan.
And maybe I am selling Hogan short but he's never impressed me as a passer or a runner.
I've hard your perspective on the traditional course of action. And while I don't think it's the best plan, I think it's a plan that can work to an extent. My problem is that you might be guilty of what you're accusing others of doing...trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.
But in this draft class, I'd rather take a run at a traditional passer in the first round unless they're all gone. If that happens, I'm open to your plan...especially with a guy like Kaepernick who gives us a chance to develop a Cardale Jones or Jacoby Brissett behind him.
However, Hogan seems like an odd choice to me.
I am also curious what you think of guys like Johnny Manziel or Trevone Boykin. Are you not interested because you think they're too small to hold up at the NFL level in this sort of scheme?