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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.No schtick. But of course you stick to “I am wrong 101” by attacking the arguer because you can’t attack the argument.LOL! I get you schtick is being the board contrarian, but nothing I said was untrue.
I was never down on Maye and even when people were trashing him last year and in the preseason, I always preached patience. I was never wrong about Maye and I don't have to claim anything. Young players develop. Some fast. Some slow. Some very little. People don't talk about a year two jump in production for QBs because it doesn't exist.
Maye came into the league raw. It isn't deniable. Maybe not as raw as Josh Allen was, but far more so than Jayden Daniels.
And stats don't mean anything. Look at the throws he is making in the last two weeks compared to what was doing in week 1 and 2. He is now making throws that only a very small handful other QBs in the league can make. He wasn't making those throws in week 1 or 2. If cannot see the massive development over this season, you ain't looking.
You can’t see the great mental and conceptual part of a qb until you see it.I'll be 100% honest: I saw the potential, but I never imagined that he would be this good this fast. The physical tools are elite among the elite and now the other stuff is starting to come. This kid could be something very, very special.
I think we're safe there.BTW, Bedard said it first so I don’t want to take credit for it, Maye is starting to look to me like a young Aaron Rodgers more and more than a young Josh Allen. Hopefully he can be Rodgers 2.0 without the baggage and choking in the playoffs.
No schtick. But of course you stick to “I am wrong 101” by attacking the arguer because you can’t attack the argument.
You don’t “come into the league raw” and by 6 games into your second season have a higher completion percentage AND yards per attempt than Tom Brady ever had in a season. You ding do that with “mechanic issues@.
Stats don’t mean anything. Great argument.
He exactly made those throws in week 1 and 2. You seem to be confused that he is taking what the defense is giving and playing a different game each week based upon game plan and scheme. He is making every throw he decides to make. He did it week 1 and every week since. He has been the model of consistency.
You created a belief and it has been proven wrong so you moved the goalposts to “he changed”
Again move the goal posts. As I said every player develops.Ok you win. Maye came into the league exactly like this. He hasn't grown a bit since day one. We reached his ceiling. He is the same guy he was last year. He is the exact same guy week one of this season as today. The guy is incapable of improving.
Which is wrong. Which you know because you proceeded to move the goalposts and change your argument.Nah! It was accurate. Last year, his footwork was awful at times. He would bail pocket too easily a lot. His mechanics were awful at times. He had zero pocket presence at times (hence why he turned over the ball far more than he is now).
The guy came into the league raw. He was a work in progress. It is not a knock on him. It is a credit to him how much he has progressed in such a short period of time.
Again move the goal posts. As I said every player develops.
No one disputes that.
You didn’t say that, you said this:
Which is wrong. Which you know because you proceeded to move the goalposts and change your argument.
Of course you did. You moved it from he was raw to disagreeing means “he can’t improve and has hit his ceiling”.Andy, when you use these buzz phrases like "move the goalpost" you might want to know what the phrase actually means. In no way did I move the goalpost. Not even remotely. My point has always been the same. He came into the league raw, he had some significant issues last year and and in the preseason and at times early in this season to work on and he has improved significantly. I have not moved this stance one iota.
Again, this tribute to Maye, not a knock. This is Brady like. Brady was always improving his game. Even later in his career you could see significant growth from him him from one year to the next and he was significantly different QB in 2014 than he was in 2004 (relatively, not that he went from a pocket passer to a mobile QB, but that his awareness, throwing motion, his ability to read defenses, etc. were far more advanced over that decade). We seeing much of that trait from Maye.
Of course you did. You moved it from he was raw to disagreeing means “he can’t improve and has hit his ceiling”.
And your point is wrong.
You believed something when he was drafted. You watched him play in front of the worst OL and with the worst WRs in the NFL with pathetic coaching and blamed things on him being “raw” to support your preconceived notion.
Let’s just do this. What is more likely. If he had last years coaching staff, weapons and OL he would look as good as he is now or if last year he had this years weapons, OL and cus hung he would look a lot like this year and the things you are blaming in him won’t have been there.
Let's say I'm traveling from Pittsfield to Cape Cod, and if I get to Northampton by noon, I'm right on time. Then let's say noon arrives, and I find I have gotten all the way to Worcester. Maybe Worcester is not exactly the ideal place to be (!), but I am ahead of schedule.
So Drake's in Worcester. Fortunately, for his sake and ours, he's still driving east.
See this is exactly my point. You had a preconceived misconception and you won’t let go of it. Despite all of the evidence to the contrary.I was being sarcastic.
He had crap around him and he was raw and needed to be developed. These aren't mutually exclusive. Both can be true.
Go back and look at all scouting reports. They the same thing. He was raw coming in. He limited starts in college career. And he played on an offense with a crap offensive line which made him play with a less disciplined style. He was the #3 pick because off the chart physical skills and his high ceiling and not as much as his college production. That is why the Bears ridiculed his reel film and removed him from the first round on their draft board all together. There was a lot of bad, bad play on his films to remove him.
Interesting and tellingly you refused to answer my question. Why?I was being sarcastic.
He had crap around him and he was raw and needed to be developed. These aren't mutually exclusive. Both can be true.
Go back and look at all scouting reports. They the same thing. He was raw coming in. He limited starts in college career. And he played on an offense with a crap offensive line which made him play with a less disciplined style. He was the #3 pick because off the chart physical skills and his high ceiling and not as much as his college production. That is why the Bears ridiculed his reel film and removed him from the first round on their draft board all together. There was a lot of bad, bad play on his films to remove him.
Funny you mention that.Drake Maye makes 3rd & longs feel like the Tush Push lol.
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