I've always liked Cousins, and it amazes me how some people can turn their noses up at a guy with production like his. He has passed for 4,000 yards in seven of the last eight seasons and we haven't had anyone do that since 1967. I wish we'd been able to land him in 2018, just think of the players we could have added to the roster instead of drafting Darnold and Wilson. Having said that, I don't see any way he would come here and I have recently been very encouraged by Zach's progress, so it's a fun debating point but nothing more.
Ahh. Gotcha. I understand. It’s about the pick (s) What 3rd round talent are you looking to pick up in the draft? He must be pretty damn good if you’d choose him over our first playoff appearance in a decade.
That's what many headlines might lead someone to think, but further investigation shows many people a lot closer to the game than us believe differently. That's why I was looking for something with more substance to it than headline language.
I don't get the "Kirk might get you to the playoffs but we'll be one and one" argument. I mean sure we'd all love to bang the prom queen but as we're going through a lengthy drought then I'm quite happy to cop off with her chubby but cute BFF!
I get that, but the fact that someone who has shown to have the physical abilities that he has is still unemployed (with all the scrub backups in the league) lends me to believe where there's smoke, there's fire....
Could be, but what of those guys closer to the game than us who blame the situation he was in rather than the guy. And to agree with the poster who said Wentz could never work for Saleh questions the professionalism of both.
he fell apart in philly, he might be a dick who knows but he’s simply better than at QBing than Zach Wilson is. The Jets suck every year, let’s worry about winning instead of people’s feelings for once.
100%, they call football “the ultimate individual sport” for a reason. They call him a locker room cancer because he identifies as a cancer zodiac sign NOT because he kills a locker room’s cohesion.