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Why Asante Samuel Was the Best Cornerback in the National Football League in 2010 - Philadelphia Eagles : Philadelphia Eagles
Even at his advanced age, Samuel is still a quality cornerback. He allowed only two touchdowns last season, intercepted three passed and deflected six others. Quarterbacks had a cumulative QB rating of 52.4 against him in 2011
Asante Samuel Trade Rumors: Denver Broncos Interested In Asante Samuel, According To Report - SB Nation Philly
So yeah he was there best corner. They are not willing to pay 3 high priced CBs it's not the production.
He's also the All-time leader in INT TDs in the playoffs and fifth all time in postseason INTs
who was not scrabble
Why Asante Samuel Was the Best Cornerback in the National Football League in 2010 - Philadelphia Eagles : Philadelphia Eagles
Even at his advanced age, Samuel is still a quality cornerback. He allowed only two touchdowns last season, intercepted three passed and deflected six others. Quarterbacks had a cumulative QB rating of 52.4 against him in 2011
Asante Samuel Trade Rumors: Denver Broncos Interested In Asante Samuel, According To Report - SB Nation Philly
So yeah he was there best corner. They are not willing to pay 3 high priced CBs it's not the production.
He's also the All-time leader in INT TDs in the playoffs and fifth all time in postseason INTs
Several notes in response to your post:
--Samuel coming on a 'reduced' contract that is due to pay him 10+ this year, and 11 1/2 next year doesn't mean too much, does it? What do you expect his 'reduced' rate to be? Maybe 8 1/2---9 million per? That's about the absolute BEST case you're going to get from Asante, and that wouldn't put him close to being in Belichick's price range.
--Forget about the incorrectly perceived 'cheapness' of the deal. The only thing 'cheap' is the asking draft pick compensation. That doesn't mean anything. It's his salary that is way too high.
--Although I will agree that Samuel would have been better than anyone else that we had in the secondary last year (recently had this debate with Deus), it should also be noted that Belichick prefers players who work hard on every play, buy into the scheme, and of course...tackle. Freelancing isn't looked at with much approval here. There are many secondary players who may not have the raw talent that Samuel has in certain situations, but it is safe to say that all of them make up for some of that by providing other positive attributes. 'Raw' talent in certain situations does not mean everything.
--Belichick does not tend to overpay at certain situations, and CB is certainly one of them. He has done a good job (finally) of drafting cheap players who are young, talented, and work hard at what they do. Most of all, they all provide great value right now with cheap pacts. The Leigh Bodden deal is about the best you're going to get from Belichick, at least until McCourty is due. Belichick will likely allow Arrington to walk next year, rather than pay him the 6 or so million per that he will get from someone else, and he led the NFL in INT's last year...That should tell you something.
--Samuel certainly was not their best CB last year, although that is a debate that could go both ways, and one that I can respect your stance on. There were many stats that pointed to Samuel's downfall last year such as his having only 3 INT's, and only 10 passes defended (Sterling Moore had 10 passes defended in only 6 games, while Samuel had that in an entire season). However, I also saw a stat that pointed to one of his positives, which was holding opposing QB's to only 48% completion rate (Arrington in comparion, allowed a 54% completion rate). There's also the fact that Samuel does not like to tackle and shies away from contact like a turtle going back into his shell.
--His attitude doesn't exactly point to the team, rather to himself. That does not bode too well for a potential NEP prospect.
How was his drop worse than Welker's this year??
That said, I oppose bringing him back, for reasons other posters have stated.
Please tell me you aren't pimping Pro Footballl Focus as legitimate.
So yoiur argument is he was their best corner, but they decided the best one is the one to literally give away so you can keep 2 others that aren't as good?
He's also the oldest of the 3 as if you didn't know that and Nnamdi for all the people who think he was better was a worst tackler had the same amount of INts and only half of Samuel paltry 10 pass defensed (meaning 5 for the kids at home) despite being targeted more and Rogers-Cromartie had 0 Ints and 6 PD and also was a worst tackler so how were they better because i watched alot of the self proclaimed dream team last year. So do you trade away the older more easy to move Contract (22 million over 2 years or 38 million over 3 years) as I was saying he was there best corner and if you can get him on the cheap you do it.
He's also the oldest of the 3 as if you didn't know that and Nnamdi for all the people who think he was better was a worst tackler had the same amount of INts and only half of Samuel paltry 10 pass defensed (meaning 5 for the kids at home) despite being targeted more and Rogers-Cromartie had 0 Ints and 6 PD and also was a worst tackler so how were they better because i watched alot of the self proclaimed dream team last year. So do you trade away the older more easy to move Contract (22 million over 2 years or 38 million over 3 years) as I was saying he was there best corner and if you can get him on the cheap you do it.
It appears we weren't watching the same player. It appears the Eagles saw the one I did, and given that no one is trading a 5th round pick for him, it seems the other 31 clubs did too.
I think Nnamdi is much better as a more physical man to man cover CB, and by some rumors that is the direction the Eagles are trying to move towards.
I think a lot of people should agree that "if you could get him on the cheap, you'd do it." That is a very true and fair statement for you to make in my opinion. Bill Belichick may not agree, but we'll only be able to speculate since he'd never tell us.
Samuel honestly believes that he's one of the top few CB's in the game, and acts and demands that everyone should agree with him. He will be expecting to get paid like a top 5 CB still, there's really no douting that.
I think we all could go back and forth all night proving Samuel's strengths and weaknesses in different ways (and we'd both be right on some levels), but at the end of the day it seems as though our coach feels that his weaknesses and price simply outweigh the prospect of adding him to the team.
Ever hear Correlation does not imply causation? No one wants that contract and tell me which DB on the eagles was better than samuel since going simply by stats the other 2 were worse and going by the eyeball test they were also. Once again with you being a GM do you get rid of the older guy with a bad contract or the guy that was the crown jewel of Free Agency after one year (that by every metric was worse than Samuel) or the 26 year old that only cost 1 million? I'm waiting on your answer.
In fairness it wasn't worse at all.
I honestly believe that BOTH of the plays/drops in question were harder to catch than they appeared from a fan's standpoint. Samuel had to try and track the ball while watching for the sideline, and wasn't able to snag the ball.
The Welker drop was not necessarily any easier. He had to twist his body around while trying to also track and grab the ball at the same time. It certainly wasn't a 'drop' in my mind, despite what the media tried to make it out to be.
Sometimes you get the bounces, and sometimes you don't.
In fairness it wasn't worse at all.
I honestly believe that BOTH of the plays/drops in question were harder to catch than they appeared from a fan's standpoint. Samuel had to try and track the ball while watching for the sideline, and wasn't able to snag the ball.
The Welker drop was not necessarily any easier. He had to twist his body around while trying to also track and grab the ball at the same time. It certainly wasn't a 'drop' in my mind, despite what the media tried to make it out to be.
Sometimes you get the bounces, and sometimes you don't.
Pro Football Focus stats are as useful and a 5 year olds opinion written in crayon.
I have already explained to you that my eye test says it wasn't even close.
If the Eagles felt the way you want to believe they do about Samuel, they wouldn't have signed Aso to put themselves in this position. Him failing to live up to his massive contract caused them to give another one out. Now they are giving him away. If he were their best corner, they would keep him, they wouldn't give him away for nothing.
Exaggerate muchSo let me get this straight so leading the league 2 years in a row in INTs and being graded the best corner even over Revis by Every advanced metric site not just Football Focus
Smart or not, they are making the decision to give him away. They are certainly qualified to make that decision.means that the Eagles are smart to replace him
Is your argument that you are more qualified than the Eagle coaching staff and front office to evaluate him?did you see them last year they signed every free agent available and the still sucked.
That sounds like sour grapes.Asante is assumed to be on the down side of his career despite being only a few months older than Aso but the eagles are willing to do whatever is necessarily to appease him since they just gave him 60 million.
And just because the other teams pass on himdoesn't make it right isn't a million different examples where 31 teams has passed on a guy only for him to be a stellar player not saying he will be in the future but that's a terrible reason to pass on a guy.
There is no possible reality that says Asante Samuel was the Eagles best corner last year. Of course the fact that they wish to give him away kind of proves that.
There are plenty of things that say as much. This is why they're trading him, because the scheme they currently have doesn't allow their other CBs to play to their best. They ran a zone scheme in 2011 instead of man, which was great for a free lancing Asante, but not good for DRC or Asomugha.
They have a longer financial investment in Asomugha, it makes complete sense that they would want to get rid of a guy that doesn't fit a scheme they're switching to.
Exaggerate much
By all means please link all of these sites that rank Samuel 'the best corner by EVERY advanced metric'.
If we are going to reduce the argument to # of Ints = quality of play by a corner, we might just as well use the Pro Football Focus drivel.
Smart or not, they are making the decision to give him away. They are certainly qualified to make that decision.
Is your argument that you are more qualified than the Eagle coaching staff and front office to evaluate him?
That sounds like sour grapes.
My argument: You are overrating him, as proven by 31 teams unwilling to give up a 5th round pick (or maybe nothing at all for him) and the 32nd pleading to give him away for a 5th.
Your argument: You aren't overating him because there have been 2nd round picks who turned into good players.
Yeah, I think the facts speak for themselves.
In 2010, Asante Samuel tied for the NFL lead with seven interceptions, despite missing five starts due to injuries.
He victimized Peyton Manning for two interceptions, including the game-winner, and victimized Eli Manning for two interceptions, including the game-winner.
He also defensed 14 passes, forced and recovered a fumble, and picked up 22 tackles.
He earned his fourth consecutive Pro Bowl selection, and his third as a member of the Eagles.
But was Asante Samuel really that good in 2010? Or did his stats just appear to be great because he had a bunch of interceptions, most of which came in a two-game period?
According to Pro Football Focus, Asante Samuel was targeted just 41 times in 2010, an average of about four per game. He allowed 19 completions, meaning opposing quarterbacks completed 46.3% of passes thrown in his direction.
Those completions traveled 141 yards, just 7.42 yards per catch and only 3.44 yards per pass attempt. He allowed two touchdowns and intercepted seven passes.
And Asante Samuel allowed a passer rating of 31.7. That’s unbelievable. He was significantly above average in all four criteria used to judge passer rating: completion percentage, yards per attempt, touchdown percentage, and interception percentage.
By comparison, Oakland Raiders star cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha posted the following statistics:
13-33, 205 yards, 0 TD, 0 INT, 60.8 passer rating
And New York Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis allowed:
19-56, 340 yards, 4 TD, 0 INT, 79.5 passer rating
Samuel dominated both Asomugha and Revis in yards per catch, interceptions, and most importantly, passer rating.
You can make the argument that teams constantly picked on opposing cornerbacks Dimitri Patterson and Ellis Hobbs because Samuel was such a shutdown corner, and that’s definitely true.
However, the numbers don’t lie. Samuel intercepted over 15 percent of all of the passes thrown to him. An interception is the best play for a defense to make, and Asante provided it seven times, including twice to win the game.
Asomugha was targeted almost as many times as Samuel. Revis was thrown at more times than Samuel. Neither picked off an interception. Not one.
Football Outsiders analyzed cornerbacks in 2010 for their performance in three different categories: yards per pass, yards after the catch, and success rate. Success rate is defined as the percentage of passes that don’t get 45 percent of the yardage needed on first down, 60 percent of yards on second down, or 100 percent of yards on third down.
Samuel topped the NFL in success rate at a dazzling 78 percent. Revis ranked second at 70 percent, while Asomugha failed to crack the top ten.
Samuel also finished first in the NFL in yards per pass, allowing just 141 passing yards all season. That’s a paltry 3.44 yards per pass.
His 31.7 passer rating allowed is miles ahead of the other three cornerbacks for the Eagles: Dimitri Patterson (93.0), Ellis Hobbs (102.2), and Joselio Hanson (104.1).
It was the best in the National Football League in 2010.
Samuel has been criticized for his all-or-nothing style of play as a cornerback but in 2010, he was simply incredible. He was a total shutdown cornerback. And he was a playmaker.
He was the most valuable member of the Philadelphia Eagles’ defense, and the best cornerback in the NFL in the 2010 season.
I usually respect your opinions, but making the excuse that its hard to catch the ball because you have to track it and watch the sideline is a load of baloney. Excusing Welker because he had to turn when Brady threw away from trouble, as he has done for all of Welkers 5 years here is wacky too. If a WR gets 2 hands on the ball, he must catch it, not use an excuse that he turned to the other shoulder.
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