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Hall of Fame
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2013
- Messages
- 4,360
Yes and I think it makes sense to a degree. Most difficult position in sports. Touches the ball on every play (except in the wildcat). Gets all the credit and all the blame. Also, makes the most money. But......Like OROY, MVP, Heisman trophy etc, the weight leans heavily towards the QB.
It is what it is.
Puka needs 8 rec and 147 yards to set new rookie records for receiving.
Stroud need 743 yards (372 per game if he plays the last 2), 11 TDs, 187 attempts, 122 completions to set new rookie records in those catagories. And if he throws 50 passes the next 2 games and completes them all, he still won't set the record for completion percentage.
I don't know how many record setting QBs come out every year but at WR, Jaylen Waddle broke an 18 year old record in 2021 for rookie receptions and the record for rookie yardage is 63 years old....almost as old as I am. To contrast that with rookie passing records, the record for yardage is 11 years old and the record for TDs is 3 years old. A TD record was set in 1998, tied in 2012, broken in 2018 and again in 2020. So for my money, if Stroud doesn't break them....and he won't.....then how special was his season compared to Puka's?
Not arguing here, just presenting a case for our guy.
And on the Eisen show a guy brought up a good point (which may suggest how important QB is and just how great Stafford has been).....Stafford receivers have the two highest single season yardage outputs, the second highest season reception output, and the 3rd highest season rookie reception output, soon to be the #2 or #1 and with 74 more yards, the 3rd highest rookie output and 73 more yards after that, the best rookie output. Damn.
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