He'd improve, of course. Better owner at the top that won't fuck with football operations. Tuna and Pete Carroll taught him the hard way and he reaped the benefits Sad but real.
The real Woody Johnson emerged from his pants-fly in 2008 to force Tannenbaum and Mangini to trade for Favre. Since then it's become apparent that this team will have no lasting success. I blame everything on him. And lately I find myself wondering if this team is deserving of my fanhood....
part of me pray that happens I'm so angry with this franchise I would almost wanna watch Sanchez go to the Pats then come back and WHUP the jets just to show some of these haters how a "bad" qb play with a real team
This. A lot of the physical elements of QBing can be taught or trained, but attitude, leadership, football IQ, and drive are things that players bring with them from day 1. Steve Young was a crap passer entering the league, but his other qualities allowed him to get better and better. Manning and Brady are pretty low-tier when it comes to physical gifts. Sanchez has a stronger arm than either, but that counts for nothing when it comes to successful QBing. Hate to bring up the backup, but BB was definitely interested in him for a reason.
Here is all you need to know. Matt Cassell 2008 stats 63.4 % completion 3693 yards 21 TD 11 INT 7.2 YPA 89.4 QB rating In 3 of 4 years since, he has thrown more picks than TDs, his completion % is around 56%, his YPA are closer to 6 than 7 and his QB ratings have been in the 60s and 70s. Tom Brady's stats in 2006 (before the Pats started running up the score and passing stats) 61.8 % Completion 3529 yards 24 TDs and 12 INT 6.8 YPA 87.9 QB rating That looks incredibly similar to Cassell's 2008 season.
Then we would injure Brady/his backup in a game and Sanchez would go on to win multiple Super Bowls all not in a Jets uniform. Life as a Jets fan :shit:
Unlikely... Belichick used to bring in the occasional veteran quarterback, past prime, not expensive, but capable. Doug Flutie and Vinnie Testaverde come to mind, both towards the ends of their rather long careers. Of late, the preference has been to bring in a rookie, hold on to him for the length of the rookie contract, then let him go. For a while, the Patriots would keep one of each, a rookie and a vet. Don't think Sanchez fits the pattern well. Either too much experience, or not enough.
The "running up the score and padding stats" argument is a two way road. If you say that stat padding began in 2007, then Cassel's 2008 stats are "inflated" just like Brady's are now.
The something hes doing now.he just not that good.he needed to stay in college a few more year to became a better prepared player.some player just look for fame and attention hes one of does guys. on my opinion. Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2
BB can not do anything with Sanchez because Sanchez isn't talented enough to be an NFL quarterback period. Stop blaming everyone else..the problem is with your QB. I have read nothing but excuses from folks here, he came out too early, he is getting better but has more to learn, his o line sucks, his receivers suck, his OC sucks... How about we get to the root of the problem. Sanchez sucks. He still stares down his targets, takes too long to release the ball when he does make a decision on who to throw too, takes too long to make all his reads, and makes poor decisions by throwing into heavy coverage. As with any QB, there will always be disconnects between the WR and the QB in terms of what route to run, when to cut for a second move, and when to come back for a pass, but all NFL qbs deal with those issues. The bottom line is that Sanchez has plenty of time. Any more then 3.5 to 4.0 seconds is crazy long for a QB to make his reads and decide who is getting the ball. He just takes too long to make his mind up. Also, when he sees that he is going to get sacked, he doesn't throw the ball away like the elite QBs do to avoid the sack and subsequent yardage loss.
Right... because a good, thick NY accent makes a person sound so scholarly! (And I don't disagree with you... for professional reasons, I've spent my entire adult life trying to pronounce my Rs and avoiding using the word "wicked" as much as possible.) I just think it's funny when New Yorkers rag on the Boston accent thing. My wife is from Queens and my mother-in-law sounds like Mort Goldman from Family Guy. Seriously. "Whiny" is the best way to describe it. On topic though... Sanchez, from what I've seen, would not thrive in the Belichick offensive system. There was no question in 2001, when evaluating Bledsoe and Brady, which guy had the superior physical skills. Bledsoe had a stronger arm by a long shot at that time. But Brady was the better decision-maker, and didn't try to force anything. That's the key to producing in this offense, which has gone through a lot of variations over the years but is basically still the offense Belichick brought with him in 2000. Sanchez has had good moments in his career, but on the whole, one of the biggest criticisms of him is in his decision-making, and his lack of an "internal clock" that tells him he's got to stop holding the ball and get rid of it. Sure you can chalk some of that up to play-calling, but his ability to read defenses and know where to go with it before the snap is very much unproven at this point. He seems like he's over-thinking everything, and not just letting it all hang loose.
what is this "personal responsibilty" nonsense? how exactly is sanchez not personally responsible? where is your proof of this? maybe he's just not that good huh? dont mean he's not giving his best.... u watch too much fox news i bet
I mean we were able to do enough with him in his first two years, I think BB could develop as system for him, especially if he had the fallback of I'm a 3 time SB coach, 5 time appearances, give me time to get this to work.