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I think he's under contract through '18 and the current GM and HC are dead men walking. Will be interesting to see what '18 brings.Watch him be on the Broncos next year.
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.I think he's under contract through '18 and the current GM and HC are dead men walking. Will be interesting to see what '18 brings.Watch him be on the Broncos next year.
Remember, you can't spell "elite" without "Eli".
I think he's under contract through '18 and the current GM and HC are dead men walking. Will be interesting to see what '18 brings.
I think Caserio and McDaniels are best friends going back to their college days. I'm not sure who landed with the Pats first, but I'm pretty sure whoever did, helped get the other into the fold.I can see and understand McDaniels going but am praying that Caserio stays here. Not sure what would be the motivation for Caserio to go would be but maybe starting from scratch and building it up would be. Fingers crossed.
No, I think 2 SBs, plus the Manning name, plus the job location will get him in.
And I think it's an interesting debate as to whether or not the 2 SB wins should be enough to bring up an otherwise mediocre career to HOF level.
Anyone with a name like that is just begging me to hate them. I’ll spell it out here.
1. I hate the giants
2. I hate New York
3. I hate anyone named manning
4. I hate new york
5. I hate any man named Elisha
No, they aren't undervaluing his career. It comes down to the question, do two good playoff runs heave what is otherwise a very mediocre career into the HOF? Tony Romo and Philip Rivers have numbers that are way superior to Manning's in the regular season. And it's not like Manning's numbers in the playoffs are eye-popping despite his two SB runs. He's got a completion percentage of 60.5% and a QB rating of 87.4 in 12 playoff games.I think we are undervaluing his career because we are so deeply disappointed that he made those plays - and let's not keep pretending otherwise - and proved that in the crucible of fire, when the great separate themselves from the could'a would'a should'as, he made those plays.
I think we are undervaluing his career because we are so deeply disappointed that he made those plays - and let's not keep pretending otherwise
If 2 superbowl wins and a mediocre/good regular season career gets you into the HOF, then make way for David Givens and Dion Branch.
Eli Manning was a good but not great QB who was part of a team that made it to 2 superbowls and won. He was NEVER the key factor (other than happening to be playing the QB position) on either of those teams. IMHO, other than the great throw he made to Maningham (who made a great catch) in the 2011 Superbowl, Manning did nothing in either of those 2 superbowl games to distinguish himself as a GREAT player.
Maybe they need to change the name of that Canton Museum into the Hall of Great Individual Stats. Because that is the only way Eli Manning should get into the HOF. BTW- I have always liked Eli a LOT better than his brother. He has had a very good NFL career and was a very good QB. Just not close to being a GREAT one. (sorta like Kurt Warner.)
BTW- its the lack of stats that is going to keep Richard Seymour out of the HOF for a long while. Like a guy like Vince, he played in a defense for his prime years, that didn't ask their DL to create "stats". Despite the fact that Seymour was a dominant DLman at several positions during his prime years with the Pats (2001-7), I think he's going to have to be happy with his 3 rings instead of one Gold Jacket.
Edit: I didn't know about Eli's benching until AFTER I wrote this post.
I don't agree with you, and I'm not pretending otherwise.
Eli was drafted in 2004, so essentially his entire career has been played with the new (anti-Ty Law) passing rules. Despite that, his career completion percentage is just 59.8% as of now, and his career QB rating is just 83.8. Just starting from there, we can see his HOF credentials, absent his two SB runs, are deficient. Then, you can add the following:
- In 14 NFL seasons, he's only gotten his team to the playoffs 5 times (he won't be making it this year).
- In his 5 playoff runs, he's either won the SB (2) or been one-and-done (3) (nothing wrong with the 2 SB wins, obviously, but being winless outside of that isn't impressive).
- His career interception percentage is just 52nd, despite being in this QB friendly era.
- His career yards per pass completion is just 134th.
- His career yards per pass attempt is just 82nd.
- Career winning percentage of %52.
- Realistically, his only impressive stats are the durability related stats. Those aren't bad stats to have, but they reflect time spent, not necessarily time spent as quality.
Or, since you brought up Flacco, to compare:
- Career completion percentage of 61.7%.
- Career QB rating is 83.8.
- 10 seasons, 6 trips to the playoffs, with #7 possible this year.
- In his 6 playoff runs, he's won the SB once, and has never gone one-and-done. He's 10-5 in the playoffs, which compares evenly with Eli's 8-4 record, despite the one fewer SB run.
- His career interception percentage is 16th.
- His career yards per pass completion is just 174th.
- His career yards per pass attempt is just 122nd.
- Career winning percentage of 60% (89-60).
In short, they're pretty much on the same level, though Manning's played longer. I'd give Manning the slight edge right now, if you took away the 3 SB winning runs from the pair of them, but the difference really isn't significant.
110 wins
4300 completions
50k yards
334 TDs
2 SB MVPs
****bag Qb rating.
last name of Manning
NY Giants
Hes a lock.
I think we are undervaluing his career because we are so deeply disappointed that he made those plays - and let's not keep pretending otherwise - and proved that in the crucible of fire, when the great separate themselves from the could'a would'a should'as, he made those plays.
The interesting comparison is to who we all KNOW is a pretender who won a Super Bowl and Eli, so we can differentiate between the two. I speak, of course, of Jump Ball Joe, who sold his soul to the devil for four playoff games in 2012.
They're remarkably similar statistically given that JBJ's played 3/4 of Eli's games. They throw a similar amount with a similar completion percentage, QB rating, game-winning drives... Where they differ is in TDs, interceptions and yards. Eli throws much more of all three of those statistically. He's a high risk/high reward guy, but most importantly, his rewards have tended to come at the most important times. You just can't take that away. Put the ball in his hands with the game on the line, he wins. Jump Ball Joe? Without Mephistopheles, he plays like a wino.
Anyone with a name like that is just begging me to hate them. I’ll spell it out here.
1. I hate the giants
2. I hate New York
3. I hate anyone named manning
4. I hate new york
Or "bile."
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