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Belichick: Toward the end in NE, Welker dropped passes in a way he never had before.
Hahaha, just wait 'til Welker isn't a receiver for Manning any longer and see who Welker talks about. Peyton is the consummate crybaby.
JAG is someone that you never really hear much about. Someone that could be replaced by another JAG. Moss topped 1000 yds in 2005 with Oakland and was injured in 2006.
Larry Fitz has put up stupid numbers in AZ even with Kolb and Skelton throwing to him. Wasn't til last year with AZ playing musical chairs with 3rd string QBs that his numbers really suffered.
As for Welker doing well with Kurt Warner, that's hard to say as short range passes working the middle of the field wasn't Warner's game. He was a down field passer as well as hitting backs flaring out of the backfield.
Is that sort of like the big apology BB owes Welker for trading and signing for him; an undrafted 5’9 185 pound wide receiver that never had over 700 yards in any season before, and then building an offense and a scheme that utilizes his talents unlike any other offense in the NFL could?
Insert words into people’s mouths much? Who the heck said anything about Welker owing us an apology? The statement was Belichick got on him in a way unlike before; well my statement suggests that it could have been reasonable criticism seeing that Welker was dropping passes unlike before. Where in the world you pulled a request for an apology out of that is beyond me, I’m assuming you were just trolling looking for something to banter about and your moose froze up around my post so you just went with it..
:trolls:
And they were big drops in big games.Yes I appreciate and respect what he did as a Patriot, but I'm glad he's gone. Because I think he made us predictable and one diemensional at times. Delighted we are developing a crop of kids, that offer a deep threat and can strecth the field. Been long overdue imo.
Ivan's normally a solid poster, but he completely loses his mind the second Welker comes up. Definitely not a troll, this particular topic just sets him off in a weird way. Hard to explain, but it's just one of those things,
Moss' last full season prior to entering Oakland was in 2003 where he caught 111 passes for 1,632 yards and 17 TD's. His first year in Oakland, he caught 60 passes for 1,005 yards and 8 TD's. Not a bad season by any stretch of the imagination, but my point about Moss's numbers dipping is proven correct. The next year, he played two less games and had 42 rec. for 553 yards and 3 TD's. By your definition, Moss was a JAG.
Larry Fitzgerald is a freak of nature, but his numbers still dipped in Arizona when he went from Warner throwing him the ball to Derek Anderson and Kevin Kolb throwing him the ball, particularly in the touchdown department. For other examples, Calvin Johnson's numbers didn't reach the heights that they have been the last couple of seasons until Stafford came along and remained healthy. Andre Johnson didn't reach the heights that he's been reaching until Schaub came along and stayed healthy. Terrell Owens' numbers dipped from 2007 to 2008 when Romo got injured and the Cowboys were tossing Brad Johnson out there as a starting QB, then again from 2008-2009 when he was traded to Buffalo with Edwards and Fitzpatrick throwing him the football.
These are all recent examples, but it's not exactly rocket science to see that most WR's numbers dip when playing with lesser quarterbacks. That doesn't make them JAGS. Further, your definition of JAG is lacking. Michael Jenkins and Jermaine Cunningham are JAGS. A guy that has 672 receptions for 7,459 yards and 37 TD's over a 5 year period, and 96 receptions for 1,121 yards and 1 TD in his first two years in the league before that isn't a JAG.
My reply was in response to the teams that you brought up. Out of them all, I think Arizona would have been the best fit as far as productivity goes.
My reply was in response to the teams that you brought up. Out of them all, I think Arizona would have been the best fit as far as productivity goes.
A quick illustration. You just said that Michael Jenkins is a JAG. His stats over his first 3 years weren't that different than Welker's. Welker was 96 receptions for 1,121 yards, Jenkins was 82 for 1063. Not that much of a difference.
Again, Welker didn't become a "star" until he was part of the Pat's offense and had Brady throwing the ball to him.
I'll wager that his stats in Denver will be noticeably down this year as well. And you won't be able to say it's due to having a substandard QB throwing to him.
Coincidentally, Amendola will have his best season, with a big jump in both number of receptions, as well as total yards.
EDIT:
BTW, your last statement illustrates my point as well:
As much as some disagreed with me, it seemed pretty reasonable to me that this wasn't "just" over a very small amount of money. There seemed to certainly be a chance that there were some behind the scenes issues between the two, even if it was deemed small or insubstantial compared to most issues.
You'd have to think that if it were just about the money alone, NE would have upped their offer 1 million dollars making it a 2/11 deal with 8.5 million guaranteed in year one--which was actually more than DEN gave him. That certainly would have been enough to keep him here.
Sadly, Belichick did not see reason to up the offer a measly 1 million dollars, and to me that points to more than just money being involved.
The "Welker didn't do enough crowd" aren't nearly as critical of Assante Samuel for missing an easy SB pick and Rodney for not knocking the ball off Tyree's helmet. Using the fanbot Welker logic those players didn't step up either...yet it's rarely mentioned.
“When I came over here, I was kind of brainwashed,” Jennings told Paul Allen and Ben Leber of KFAN radio. “There’s no ‘kind of’ to it. Being over in Green Bay, you’re brainwashed to think anyone in the division is tiers below. And so coming over here I meet the people within the organization and I’m like, ‘Wow, these are really great people.’
‘It’s like everything that you know in Green Bay is like the best, the best, the best, the best, the best,” Jennings said. “And it’s like total brainwashing. And I think you don’t open your eyes to see what other teams have to offer unless you are in that position.”
“For me there?” Schilens said. “Really, when it came down to it, I kind of felt like they were looking for scapegoats and besides everyone except for, you know, maybe the quarterback position, and it was what it was. When free agency didn’t start off right away, I just kind of understood what it was and part of the business.”
Asked about Sanchez and whether he can win back fans, Schilens said, “Nothing good to say, so I’m not going to say nothing.”
I don't disagree with your point that WR's put up better numbers with better quarterbacks. What I disagree with is your definition of a JAG. It just doesn't fit with the original Parcells model.
Fair enough. In my book, JAG isn't really an insult and they rate above camp bodies. A JAG is a guy that's "solid", but you would trade away without worry because he can be replaced fairly easily. What's between a JAG and a "star" player ?
I think that if Welker had stayed in Miami, almost no one would know his name. Similarly, if he went to most other teams in the NFL, even teams with good QBs, he would be basically be anonymous. I definitely think he wouldn't have hit 100 receptions /1000 yds in any season.
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