Not to make too fine a point about it but the Ravens haven't developed QB's particularly well to date. They used Trent Dilfer on their Super Bowl run and basically screwed up Kyle Boller enough that they had to go get Steve McNair to fix things. Now they've got Joe Flacco in limbo-land. I'm not sure Rex was the right guy to make the calls on setting up Sanchez development. Not sure how you avoid that given that he's the head coach but he's on the wrong side of the ball and the team he came from wasn't very good at this stuff either.
Most teams do, It's usually called "Passing Game Coordinator" and it's usually the QB coach. I'm pretty sure that's what John Garrett (Jason's Brother) is doing now on the Cowboys except he's the TE coach.
Cavanaugh may well be a Rex Ryan guy but it seems to me as if the Jets where ready to fire him in case Haley or Daboll had any interest in his position...
Despite what the retards here think, Sanchez has developed pretty well. He is now an average NFL QB which = progress. He should continue to improve to become a good NFL QB - IF he has an OL that can block. He currently has an OL that sucks which is the major reason why the Jets went 8-8 this season and is the major reason Sanchez didn't perform at a higher level. When the OL doesn't block - the QB looks bad and that is what happened. How long will it be until most of you morons understand this simple fact?
ROTFLMAO, especially at your calling people who question Sachez's development "retards" and "morons". You really need to go look in the mirror before you call other posters names and then spew the BS you do in defense of Sanchez. You also need to actually watch Sanchez play and then watch some real NFL QBs play, like tonight. The 23rd ranked starting QB is NOT an "average NFL QB", especially when he was drafted in the top five with the idea that he was a "franchise QB". That's bottom third of the league numerically even if you ignore his obvious faults. You do realize that both Cam Newton and Andy Dalton, rookies, not only got higher ratings (15th and 20th respectively), but that they both also had better completion percentages and yards/attempt. Both were also sacked less, had fewer INTs, and made significantly more 20+ and 40+ yard passing plays than Sanchez. Sanchez did throw more TDs than that pair: 26 to Newton's 21 and Dalton's 20. In plain English, Sanchez, after 50+ professional starts, didn't play as well as 2 rookies who had only 16 starts each by the end of the season. He is still making many of the same mistakes he was making as a rookie, so he has NOT "developed pretty well" at all.