hornetfb85
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2011
- Messages
- 2,577
- Reaction score
- 5,696
Registered Members experience this forum ad and noise-free.
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.Perfect spot but what will san francisco give us in return.
The #2 pick and a 2nd rounder next year.
Edit: I have no idea
Sure, teams would know Pats need to trade Garoppolo if they keep him another year.
That doesn't mean they will let him go cheap to another team if they think he will solve their QB problems.
So there is 1 and he is one of the greatest of all time. As I said there can't be too many.
....and Roger Staubach threw under 100 passes a year in 3 of his first 4 seasons and he kinda had an OK career
True, but even immediate past is not always prologue. He's 40 and could be injured or in significant decline by next year. Or he could bang out another great year or three. It's impossible to tell and I only give him the benefit of the doubt because he's Tom Brady.
It's mind boggling.
"He could be the next Steve Young" - He got one Super Bowl which happen to be the last 49er SB trophy.
"He could be the next Aaron Rodgers" - One Super Bowl in 8 years. Great googly moogly.
Or we could keep Brady until he's done because I know he knows how to win a Super Bowl.
There are dozens of QBs who did nothing of substance or rode the bench early in their careers but went on to be very good players later on.Good point! I forgot about that!
Brett Favre rode the Pine and had an OK career. But Jimmy G will not be the Pats QB of the future.
2 years is not 3And it's a rather obvious one. Tony Romo hardly played at all for his first two years. He was 25 when he got his first start. Matt Cassel, who was played beyond his ability for a few years, hardly played in his 4 years of college and first 3 years in NE. I think using number of passes thrown in recent years as a predictive method is flawed.
Steve McNair didn't play at all his first two yearsThere are dozens of QBs who did nothing of substance or rode the bench early in their careers but went on to be very good players later on.
Steve Young and Rich Gannon are others that come to mind
He can do that, I will most likely stop following football if he does. Anyone who just wants to root for the laundry is welcome to do that, that's not me and never has been. Belichick has the responsibility to do what he thinks is best for the team, I'm not bound by that, I'm a fan and I've never seen any player in any sport do more for their team than Brady has. Brady has routinely set aside millions and millions of dollars to give the Patriots the leeway to build championship teams, no one does that, he's special and as long as he's playing really good football I want him in NE. And while you can mock those of us who feel that way you are also talking about getting rid of the GOAT for a player who couldn't make it through two games, and that's idiotic imo.
Steve McNair didn't play at all his first two years
Q: Is Brady better than Jimmy G. next season? A: Yes.
Q: Is Brady better than Jimmy G. two years from now? A: Yes.
Q: Is Brady better than Jimmy G. three or more years from now? A: Maybe.
Investing in Jimmy G. as a potential starter is a fool's errand with how Brady is playing. Barring injury *fingers crossed*, Brady will be easily better than his understudy for the next two seasons. In a third season, Brady's body may begin to feel the effects of father time more acutely. With his regimen and body, who can honestly say how long he can keep this up. The point is that Jimmy won't be a better investment than Brady for at least three seasons. If we keep Jimmy for more than this upcoming year, we have to pay him 15-20 million per season in my estimation. That means losing a ton of players. If Brady isn't one of them, then we saddled our team with two quarterbacks and no Super Bowl prospects. That isn't sensible.
I suspect this "we're not looking for a trade" is code for we'll keep Jimmy all the way up to the trade deadline to deal to a team who lost a quarterback. And hopefully we squeeze them dry like a lemon. And with Jimmy's frame and tendency towards injury, I think they'll have a lemon of their own to deal with. I like a lot of what he brings to the table, but I can't help but see a Tony Romo type of player whenever Jimmy has the ball: agile and competitive, but made of glass. Maybe I'm wrong, but I'd rather keep Brady as long as possible -- even into decline -- to close out his and Bill's legacy. At that point, run the team into the ground, hire a new front office, ship everyone decent away for picks, and get a new, hungry head coach with a potential high draft pick the next season. The run can't continue forever, but let's enjoy it while it lasts: Brady is a proven winner and might get another ring; Jimmy G. is a complete unknown and not worth destroying this team's cap space over.
Just listened to a podcast where Florio from PFT believes Schefter is working with the Pats in trying to drive up the asking price for Jimmy G.
To me personally from the Pats prospective in all this it never made sense saying no matter what he wasn't going to be traded.
| 270 | 19K |
| 411 | 29K |
| 57 | 4K |
| 24 | 5K |
| 179 | 8K |
From our archive - this week all-time:
April 5 - April 20 (Through 26yrs)











