I'm not arguing anything about Welker. I'm talking about Edelman.
Well, you are implying the major difference is Welker had the opportunity.
I've never suggested that Edelman can be what Welker is.
You are calling him a 'key' to the decision, that would mean replacing on some level, would it not?
No. Are you smoking crack? You asked why we should think that Edelman would suddenly be a productive receiver if he hasn't been through his first four seasons, and my response was simply one of opportunity.
First, if he were good enough he would have had that opportunity. You are supporting giving a bigger opportunity to a guy who wasn't good enough, based upon competition to earn one. Some players who have played in front of him we not good.
Secondly, he had that opportunity this year, and ended up with 21 receptoins for 235 yards. We spent most of the season with only 3 WRs. If you eliminate Welker, and bump up Edelman you now have a guy at #2 who caught 21 passes as #3 when there wasn't even a #4 on the roster, after catching 11 passes in the 2 prior years COMBINED. He has had opportunity, that is not a reasonable excuse.
If he was a full-time starter and was healthy, yes, he would be productive in this offense. He wouldn't put up Welker's stats, but he'd be productive. IF he stayed healthy, that is.
Ocho Cinco would have been 'productive' what is the point? He is not a good WR. There are 100 better ones in the league and probably 20 more in the draft.
Out of all of the available WRs if we are losing Welker why in the world would we take a guy who's best argument is maybe he can play if you gift him some playing time?
The offense has changed numerous times in the BB/TB era, and it's always been highly productive. I'm not concerned that suddenly they wouldn't be able to move the ball or score.
Seriously? You are going to tell me that any change we make is fine because we've been through changes and still won some games? We have had possibly the best offense in NFL history over a 3-6 year stretch, and the scheme revolves around Welkers role. Why would you WILLINGLY change that?
Well that is Welkers role, so I don't understand how Edelman is 'key' to Welker, because he cannot take his role.
I would agree. I don't necessarily agree that Edelman is a jag, but ok.
Guys who cannot earn a starting job in 4 seasons in the league are essential the definition of jag. Do you think Edelman is one of the top 50 WRs in the NFL? Top 100? See, thats what a jag is.
I don't "love" Edelman. Perhaps you should go back and re-read my posts on this subject. I have suggested that IF the Pats think he can be effective in Welker's role (I never said he would come close to duplicating his actual statistical production),
How can he be effective in the role of the go to guy if he wouldn't even come close to his production? What 'role' do you think Welker has? It is the focal point of the passing game and the most productive receiver on the team. Your description absolutely says Edelman can't fill that role at all.
at a fraction of the cost, then maybe they would prefer to go with Edelman and take the $$ saved from not re-signing Welker and go get a different WR or upgrade the defense or whatever.
This is a totally different discussion.
If you want to discuss whether moving away from Welker because of his cost, sacrificing offense, changing the structure and design of the offense and trying to find a way to become more of a defensive team makes sense, that is a different discussion and it has nothing to do with Edleman.
It would involve replacing Welker with an outside receiver, throwing the ball down the field more, using the backs as receivers, accepting a less dynanmic offense and hoping the defense improves.
Edelman has nothing to do with that.