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Giving up on the #1 overall pick in a Draft?
#21
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Interesting note from
@mortreport on ESPN just now while talking Baker/Browns ("they're breaking up regardless" of Watson) -- they "want an adult at" QB.

"Jimmy Garoppolo is one I would not ignore for Cleveland."
not that Baker is a proven winner,  but can anybody remind me again how many firsts they spent on QBs in the last 20 years and how many playoffs games they went to in that time prior to Mayfield?   seems to me that they are kinda playing with fire over there.
 

Think the Browns was looking for a 3 way.
Cousins to Browns, Watson to the Vikings and Mayfield to the Texans.
But that didn’t happen.
Reply

#22
Quote: @minny65 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@minny65 said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Wait. Drafting a QB #1 overall didn't solve all of the Browns issues?

GTFO.
So instead, they "might" try and get the 12th pick of the 2017 draft - Watson.  Supposedly we dabbled with some interest and a ton of teams with and without a QB are/should be interested in Watson.  He would be an upgrade for about 25+ teams.  

Some Irony if the Browns pursue Watson:

"The Texans traded up to select Watson with the Browns #12 pick in the 2017 draft.  The Browns got Texans 1st round pick for 2018, which ended up being #1 and selected Mayfield:
"The Texans traded up in the draft to select Clemson’s Deshaun Watson with pick No. 12.
Houston dealt with the Browns to select Watson as their next franchise quarterback, after dealing Brock Osweiler to Cleveland earlier this year.
The Browns acquired pick No. 25 (selected Jabrill Peppers) and Houston’s 2018 first-rounder in the deal (ended up being #1 Mayfield). 




Be careful about saying he's an upgrade for that many teams as his career record is only 28-25, and 1-2 in the playoffs. As we know, this board uses record as it's main determining factor for QB's
Not me, but I think I see 1 or 2 posters using W/L as a big part of an argument to move away from Kirk.  All stats can be very deceiving and twisted for an argument.  There are QB's whose stats (including wins) benefitted from having great surround - Aikman, Bradshaw come to mind quickly.  Thier are also QB's who put up poor stats but still won (Dilfer mostly comes to mind and to a smaller degree Phil Simms).  Warren Moon comes to mind if you want to look at pure stats that were very good but was never really a winner.  I personally go by a combination of many things and a lot of watching NFL for 45+ years.

I have come to the conclusion that Kirk is not the answer for us or any team for a march to a SB.  
In the modern era I think you have to include their cap hit as well.  Kirk is too much like Bradford.  Great stats, gets paid but not good enough when it counts.
Reply

#23
Quote: @Norse said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Interesting note from
@mortreport on ESPN just now while talking Baker/Browns ("they're breaking up regardless" of Watson) -- they "want an adult at" QB.

"Jimmy Garoppolo is one I would not ignore for Cleveland."
not that Baker is a proven winner,  but can anybody remind me again how many firsts they spent on QBs in the last 20 years and how many playoffs games they went to in that time prior to Mayfield?   seems to me that they are kinda playing with fire over there.
 

Think the Browns was looking for a 3 way.
Cousins to Browns, Watson to the Vikings and Mayfield to the Texans.
But that didn’t happen.
I cant see why they would get the Vikings involved,  if they wanted to improve their QB why not just get watson themselves?
Reply

#24
Quote: @greediron said:
@minny65 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@minny65 said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Wait. Drafting a QB #1 overall didn't solve all of the Browns issues?

GTFO.
So instead, they "might" try and get the 12th pick of the 2017 draft - Watson.  Supposedly we dabbled with some interest and a ton of teams with and without a QB are/should be interested in Watson.  He would be an upgrade for about 25+ teams.  

Some Irony if the Browns pursue Watson:

"The Texans traded up to select Watson with the Browns #12 pick in the 2017 draft.  The Browns got Texans 1st round pick for 2018, which ended up being #1 and selected Mayfield:
"The Texans traded up in the draft to select Clemson’s Deshaun Watson with pick No. 12.
Houston dealt with the Browns to select Watson as their next franchise quarterback, after dealing Brock Osweiler to Cleveland earlier this year.
The Browns acquired pick No. 25 (selected Jabrill Peppers) and Houston’s 2018 first-rounder in the deal (ended up being #1 Mayfield). 




Be careful about saying he's an upgrade for that many teams as his career record is only 28-25, and 1-2 in the playoffs. As we know, this board uses record as it's main determining factor for QB's
Not me, but I think I see 1 or 2 posters using W/L as a big part of an argument to move away from Kirk.  All stats can be very deceiving and twisted for an argument.  There are QB's whose stats (including wins) benefitted from having great surround - Aikman, Bradshaw come to mind quickly.  Thier are also QB's who put up poor stats but still won (Dilfer mostly comes to mind and to a smaller degree Phil Simms).  Warren Moon comes to mind if you want to look at pure stats that were very good but was never really a winner.  I personally go by a combination of many things and a lot of watching NFL for 45+ years.

I have come to the conclusion that Kirk is not the answer for us or any team for a march to a SB.  
In the modern era I think you have to include their cap hit as well.  Kirk is too much like Bradford.  Great stats, gets paid but not good enough when it counts.
Except for this year when Kirk was quite literally clutch in all aspects. Completion percentage was 7% higher when the final margin was 7 points or less, and 7% higher during NFC opponents. His highest passer rating was when it was 3rd down or longer. Overtime he was 10/13 with a TD. The stats go on and on about how clutch he was this past year. 

Want to know what wasn't clutch? The running game. 3.1 YPC in OT and 3.5 YPC in the 4th quarter last year.

Want to know why we faced so many crappy third downs (outside of numerous penalties)? 3.3 YPC when we faced 2nd and 7-9...that isn't because Dalvin sucks (Mattison 1.8 YPC in those situations). Also, Mattison was pathetic on downs not named 1st last year and averaged 3.2 YPC or less on plays where we faced less than 10 yards to gain.

Stats like these are why I dont give a shit about W/L. Stats like this confirm what we watched, which was a bad OL and constant bad play calling.
Reply

#25
Quote: @Hawkvike25 said:
@greediron said:
@minny65 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@minny65 said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Wait. Drafting a QB #1 overall didn't solve all of the Browns issues?

GTFO.
So instead, they "might" try and get the 12th pick of the 2017 draft - Watson.  Supposedly we dabbled with some interest and a ton of teams with and without a QB are/should be interested in Watson.  He would be an upgrade for about 25+ teams.  

Some Irony if the Browns pursue Watson:

"The Texans traded up to select Watson with the Browns #12 pick in the 2017 draft.  The Browns got Texans 1st round pick for 2018, which ended up being #1 and selected Mayfield:
"The Texans traded up in the draft to select Clemson’s Deshaun Watson with pick No. 12.
Houston dealt with the Browns to select Watson as their next franchise quarterback, after dealing Brock Osweiler to Cleveland earlier this year.
The Browns acquired pick No. 25 (selected Jabrill Peppers) and Houston’s 2018 first-rounder in the deal (ended up being #1 Mayfield). 




Be careful about saying he's an upgrade for that many teams as his career record is only 28-25, and 1-2 in the playoffs. As we know, this board uses record as it's main determining factor for QB's
Not me, but I think I see 1 or 2 posters using W/L as a big part of an argument to move away from Kirk.  All stats can be very deceiving and twisted for an argument.  There are QB's whose stats (including wins) benefitted from having great surround - Aikman, Bradshaw come to mind quickly.  Thier are also QB's who put up poor stats but still won (Dilfer mostly comes to mind and to a smaller degree Phil Simms).  Warren Moon comes to mind if you want to look at pure stats that were very good but was never really a winner.  I personally go by a combination of many things and a lot of watching NFL for 45+ years.

I have come to the conclusion that Kirk is not the answer for us or any team for a march to a SB.  
In the modern era I think you have to include their cap hit as well.  Kirk is too much like Bradford.  Great stats, gets paid but not good enough when it counts.
Except for this year when Kirk was quite literally clutch in all aspects. Completion percentage was 7% higher when the final margin was 7 points or less, and 7% higher during NFC opponents. His highest passer rating was when it was 3rd down or longer. Overtime he was 10/13 with a TD. The stats go on and on about how clutch he was this past year. 

Want to know what wasn't clutch? The running game. 3.1 YPC in OT and 3.5 YPC in the 4th quarter last year.

Want to know why we faced so many crappy third downs (outside of numerous penalties)? 3.3 YPC when we faced 2nd and 7-9...that isn't because Dalvin sucks (Mattison 1.8 YPC in those situations). Also, Mattison was pathetic on downs not named 1st last year and averaged 3.2 YPC or less on plays where we faced less than 10 yards to gain.

Stats like these are why I dont give a shit about W/L. Stats like this confirm what we watched, which was a bad OL and constant bad play calling.

The problem with Cousins and why he is not a great QB is he simply cannot make a play when the play breaks down around him. Zimmer knew it and stated it! Kirk is very good in a manufactured offense when the script goes as called. When it doesn't..he sucks, and will simply take a sack or chuck it into the stands. It's why Mahomes, Allen, Wilson, Jackson, and those guys are considered top tier at the position and Cousins is more middle of the pack. Our 3rd down conversion rate was garbage last year and we had "3 and outs" more then almost any team in the league. Team game, yes, but Cousins shares a big chunk of that blame. It's why every pundit and talk show host believes having Cousins as our QB is a mark against us and not for us, especially when we continue to pay him like an elite quarterback and hamstring our cap. I like Cousins as a person, but understand he is limited as a quarterback. 
Reply

#26
Quote: @supafreak84 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@greediron said:
@minny65 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@minny65 said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Wait. Drafting a QB #1 overall didn't solve all of the Browns issues?

GTFO.
So instead, they "might" try and get the 12th pick of the 2017 draft - Watson.  Supposedly we dabbled with some interest and a ton of teams with and without a QB are/should be interested in Watson.  He would be an upgrade for about 25+ teams.  

Some Irony if the Browns pursue Watson:

"The Texans traded up to select Watson with the Browns #12 pick in the 2017 draft.  The Browns got Texans 1st round pick for 2018, which ended up being #1 and selected Mayfield:
"The Texans traded up in the draft to select Clemson’s Deshaun Watson with pick No. 12.
Houston dealt with the Browns to select Watson as their next franchise quarterback, after dealing Brock Osweiler to Cleveland earlier this year.
The Browns acquired pick No. 25 (selected Jabrill Peppers) and Houston’s 2018 first-rounder in the deal (ended up being #1 Mayfield). 




Be careful about saying he's an upgrade for that many teams as his career record is only 28-25, and 1-2 in the playoffs. As we know, this board uses record as it's main determining factor for QB's
Not me, but I think I see 1 or 2 posters using W/L as a big part of an argument to move away from Kirk.  All stats can be very deceiving and twisted for an argument.  There are QB's whose stats (including wins) benefitted from having great surround - Aikman, Bradshaw come to mind quickly.  Thier are also QB's who put up poor stats but still won (Dilfer mostly comes to mind and to a smaller degree Phil Simms).  Warren Moon comes to mind if you want to look at pure stats that were very good but was never really a winner.  I personally go by a combination of many things and a lot of watching NFL for 45+ years.

I have come to the conclusion that Kirk is not the answer for us or any team for a march to a SB.  
In the modern era I think you have to include their cap hit as well.  Kirk is too much like Bradford.  Great stats, gets paid but not good enough when it counts.
Except for this year when Kirk was quite literally clutch in all aspects. Completion percentage was 7% higher when the final margin was 7 points or less, and 7% higher during NFC opponents. His highest passer rating was when it was 3rd down or longer. Overtime he was 10/13 with a TD. The stats go on and on about how clutch he was this past year. 

Want to know what wasn't clutch? The running game. 3.1 YPC in OT and 3.5 YPC in the 4th quarter last year.

Want to know why we faced so many crappy third downs (outside of numerous penalties)? 3.3 YPC when we faced 2nd and 7-9...that isn't because Dalvin sucks (Mattison 1.8 YPC in those situations). Also, Mattison was pathetic on downs not named 1st last year and averaged 3.2 YPC or less on plays where we faced less than 10 yards to gain.

Stats like these are why I dont give a shit about W/L. Stats like this confirm what we watched, which was a bad OL and constant bad play calling.

The problem with Cousins and why he is not a great QB is he simply cannot make a play when the play breaks down around him. Zimmer knew it and stated it! Kirk is very good in a manufactured offense when the script goes as called. When it doesn't..he sucks, and will simply take a sack or chuck it into the stands. It's why Mahomes, Allen, Wilson, Jackson, and those guys are considered top tier at the position and Cousins is more middle of the pack. Our 3rd down conversion rate was garbage last year and we had "3 and outs" more then almost any team in the league. Team game, yes, but Cousins shares a big chunk of that blame. It's why every pundit and talk show host believes having Cousins as our QB is a mark against us and not for us, especially when we continue to pay him like an elite quarterback and hamstring our cap. I like Cousins as a person, but understand he is limited as a quarterback. 
He definitely has his faults and he's not elite...but I think what I posted above answers the why did we have so many 3 and outs. Our running game put us in so many awful 3rd down positions, especially long ones. For example, Vikes had 72 plays of 3rd and 10+...the league average was 58. Number of Vikings plays with 3rd and 1-3 was 57...the league average was 63.

League average YPC on 2nd and 7-9, also known as the down of get to a manageable 3rd down, was 4.7. Vikes was 3.3. Overall, we ran the ball on 2nd down more than the league average and the production was well below, not to mention we also led the league in runs stopped at the line of scrimmage. Does Cousins deserve some blame for the Three and Outs? Sure, nobody is exempt...but to say he needs to share a big chunk of that blame is downright false. Terrible OL and predictable play calling is the reason for the 3 and outs
Reply

#27
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
@Norse said:
@JimmyinSD said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Interesting note from
@mortreport on ESPN just now while talking Baker/Browns ("they're breaking up regardless" of Watson) -- they "want an adult at" QB.

"Jimmy Garoppolo is one I would not ignore for Cleveland."
not that Baker is a proven winner,  but can anybody remind me again how many firsts they spent on QBs in the last 20 years and how many playoffs games they went to in that time prior to Mayfield?   seems to me that they are kinda playing with fire over there.
 

Think the Browns was looking for a 3 way.
Cousins to Browns, Watson to the Vikings and Mayfield to the Texans.
But that didn’t happen.
I cant see why they would get the Vikings involved,  if they wanted to improve their QB why not just get watson themselves?
Was looking for an easy way to get rid of Mayfield...Maybe to the Colts now?
Reply

#28
Interesting nugget from Doogie in the mentions.

https://twitter.com/purplebuckeye/status...7213791234
Reply

#29
I actually could see Baker doing ok once he gets out of Cleveland. Not saying it’s a Drew Brees situation but he was hurt almost all of 2021. He played really well at times the year prior. An in-division trade between rivals would never happen I know, but in a vacuum I’d much rather have Baker for $18M than Trubisky for $8M. 

I think I’d also take Baker at $18M over Wentz/Jimmy G at $28M. Will be interesting to see how things shake out for Mayfield. He has a lot riding on this upcoming season, wherever he is. 
Reply

#30
Quote: @Hawkvike25 said:
@supafreak84 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@greediron said:
@minny65 said:
@Hawkvike25 said:
@minny65 said:
@JustinTime18™ said:
Wait. Drafting a QB #1 overall didn't solve all of the Browns issues?

GTFO.
So instead, they "might" try and get the 12th pick of the 2017 draft - Watson.  Supposedly we dabbled with some interest and a ton of teams with and without a QB are/should be interested in Watson.  He would be an upgrade for about 25+ teams.  

Some Irony if the Browns pursue Watson:

"The Texans traded up to select Watson with the Browns #12 pick in the 2017 draft.  The Browns got Texans 1st round pick for 2018, which ended up being #1 and selected Mayfield:
"The Texans traded up in the draft to select Clemson’s Deshaun Watson with pick No. 12.
Houston dealt with the Browns to select Watson as their next franchise quarterback, after dealing Brock Osweiler to Cleveland earlier this year.
The Browns acquired pick No. 25 (selected Jabrill Peppers) and Houston’s 2018 first-rounder in the deal (ended up being #1 Mayfield). 




Be careful about saying he's an upgrade for that many teams as his career record is only 28-25, and 1-2 in the playoffs. As we know, this board uses record as it's main determining factor for QB's
Not me, but I think I see 1 or 2 posters using W/L as a big part of an argument to move away from Kirk.  All stats can be very deceiving and twisted for an argument.  There are QB's whose stats (including wins) benefitted from having great surround - Aikman, Bradshaw come to mind quickly.  Thier are also QB's who put up poor stats but still won (Dilfer mostly comes to mind and to a smaller degree Phil Simms).  Warren Moon comes to mind if you want to look at pure stats that were very good but was never really a winner.  I personally go by a combination of many things and a lot of watching NFL for 45+ years.

I have come to the conclusion that Kirk is not the answer for us or any team for a march to a SB.  
In the modern era I think you have to include their cap hit as well.  Kirk is too much like Bradford.  Great stats, gets paid but not good enough when it counts.
Except for this year when Kirk was quite literally clutch in all aspects. Completion percentage was 7% higher when the final margin was 7 points or less, and 7% higher during NFC opponents. His highest passer rating was when it was 3rd down or longer. Overtime he was 10/13 with a TD. The stats go on and on about how clutch he was this past year. 

Want to know what wasn't clutch? The running game. 3.1 YPC in OT and 3.5 YPC in the 4th quarter last year.

Want to know why we faced so many crappy third downs (outside of numerous penalties)? 3.3 YPC when we faced 2nd and 7-9...that isn't because Dalvin sucks (Mattison 1.8 YPC in those situations). Also, Mattison was pathetic on downs not named 1st last year and averaged 3.2 YPC or less on plays where we faced less than 10 yards to gain.

Stats like these are why I dont give a shit about W/L. Stats like this confirm what we watched, which was a bad OL and constant bad play calling.

The problem with Cousins and why he is not a great QB is he simply cannot make a play when the play breaks down around him. Zimmer knew it and stated it! Kirk is very good in a manufactured offense when the script goes as called. When it doesn't..he sucks, and will simply take a sack or chuck it into the stands. It's why Mahomes, Allen, Wilson, Jackson, and those guys are considered top tier at the position and Cousins is more middle of the pack. Our 3rd down conversion rate was garbage last year and we had "3 and outs" more then almost any team in the league. Team game, yes, but Cousins shares a big chunk of that blame. It's why every pundit and talk show host believes having Cousins as our QB is a mark against us and not for us, especially when we continue to pay him like an elite quarterback and hamstring our cap. I like Cousins as a person, but understand he is limited as a quarterback. 
He definitely has his faults and he's not elite...but I think what I posted above answers the why did we have so many 3 and outs. Our running game put us in so many awful 3rd down positions, especially long ones. For example, Vikes had 72 plays of 3rd and 10+...the league average was 58. Number of Vikings plays with 3rd and 1-3 was 57...the league average was 63.

League average YPC on 2nd and 7-9, also known as the down of get to a manageable 3rd down, was 4.7. Vikes was 3.3. Overall, we ran the ball on 2nd down more than the league average and the production was well below, not to mention we also led the league in runs stopped at the line of scrimmage. Does Cousins deserve some blame for the Three and Outs? Sure, nobody is exempt...but to say he needs to share a big chunk of that blame is downright false. Terrible OL and predictable play calling is the reason for the 3 and outs

I say he shares a big chunk of the blame because he's the quarterback, touches the ball on every play, and is the highest paid player on the team by far. But that's fair breakdown. Stats can be whatever you want them to be. I just think in today's NFL your quarterback has to be able to improvise and make a couple big plays a game when things break down. Cousins can't do that and needs every facet of the offense to work for him to make those plays. That's the big difference 
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