Jacksonville Jaguars Fan Forums

Full Version: Trevor Lawrence: Franchise QB (TL Discussion, Merged Threads)
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
(12-21-2022, 08:00 PM)Bullseye Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-21-2022, 10:24 AM)carp8dm Wrote: [ -> ]Bros...  Ya'll are crazy... 


If you have been a fan long enough to have to defend Gabbert, Bortles, Foles, and Minshew, you eventually have no concept of what real QB talent even looks like anymore.  And then here comes the Prince that was Promised.  (Ignoring the Meyer Meltdown) We come into 2022 and he's looking good.  But woah, here comes the witching month of October and it results in ROCK BOTTOM for Trevor's career.
(emphasis added)

Per Bill Walsh, most NFL coaches don't know how to identify or develop QBs properly.  If that's true, then I am in good company when it comes to the QB position, even though it would insult those coaches to group me with them.

To that end, the highlighted statement above begs inquiry.

The 2000s have been dominated by two coaches:  Bill Belichick and Andy Reid.

Both are first ballot Hall of Fame coaches without question.

They have dominated the NFL during this time because thay have had QBs who, along with Belichick and Reid, are virtually guaranteed enshrinement into Canton once their football careers are over.

My question is these two Hall of Fame Caliber coaches had two of the all time great QBs under their control as rookies,  but neither Belichick nor Reid started Brady or Mahomes for most, if not all of their rookie seasons.

Why not?

Why would two coaches who are two of the best ever at their positions keep superior QB talents in the bench the first year in their QBs careers?

Did they have less of an interest in playing Hall of fame talent at the QB position?  Did they NOT want to maximize the winning ib 2000 and 2017, respectively?

Were they somehow punishing Brady and Mahomes?

Were they followiling some sort of externally imposed mandate regarding the playing of superior talent?

"Thrill me with your acumen."

Now before you or anyone else go there, I am the first to say I am nowhere NEAR the same galaxy as Belichick or Reid in terms of football knowledge and I make no assertion otherwise.

But I'm curious how defenses of young QBs in Leftwich, Gabbert and Bortles who wound up being not so successful negates the reality of the overwhelming majority of Hall of Fame QBs from the 1970s on the league has seen.

I hate that I always seem to come into these conversations late!  I'm not ignoring the discussion, I promise!  But I don't know when I'm being replied to, so it takes me a while before I find these types of responses.

So first of all, I'm not more analytically gifted than any other poster here. We're just all giving out opinions on a topic that we have extreme familiarity with, but not extreme expertise.  The expertise only comes by being within the circle, which none of us are.  However, I reject the idea that a die hard fan (which I think it's safe to say we all are) cannot understand/comprehend the concepts of what happens within the meeting rooms, and locker rooms, and practice fields of our favorite teams.  Sure some poster's insights are more attuned to reality than others, but the same could be said about coaches around the NFL.  If Urban Meyer can be on the spectrum of coaching in the NFL (along with Jeff Saturday), that means that anything is possible in terms of the spectrum within a fan base and their analysis of how to lead and drive a team to success.  Just a long way of saying, every opinion within the community has merit enough to be considered and then it's up to that community to determine whether that said opinion has credibility or not.  No opinion should be pushed away on the basis that "you're not a coach/player/in the NFL".  Those types of baseless logical fallacies are lazy and should be shunned.  Take the opinion and argue for or against on it's merits.  

When considering your assertion that the 2 most prominent Head Coaches over the past 20 years (since 2000 and beyond) are And Reid and Belicheck, I first want to consider recency bias.  I think consideration should be made for John Harbaugh, Tom Coughlin (who I have harshly criticized as a Jaguar Front Office cancer), Ron Rivera, and Pete Carroll.  I think there are other Head Coaches could be added to this list, but let's just assume these are the top HC's over the last 20 years.  (I'm excluding Pederson intentially, because of potential emotional bias, but Pederson did a hell of a job with 2 less than HOF QBs).

When you look at a wider scoped list, like the one I've included, it breaks down to Head Coaches that had all time great HOF QBs and then there's a smaller group that aren't quite as successful but had lesser QBs to work with.  

John Harbaugh, to me is the a coach this needs to be placed in All Time great coaching.  Of course, Harbaugh has only won 1 SB, but he fought toe to toe with Belicheck and Brady in Brady's prime and always gave that Patriot squad a hard time.  (Conversely, I leave out Tony Dungy, because I think the team was lead mostly by Petyon Manning and Dungy only won 1 SB and never could do anything beyond that without Manning).

I give extra credit to Harbaugh becuase he took lesser QBs and has created franchise QB level success in both of them.  We all know how bad Flaco is.  But Harbaugh coached him up to amazing levels, to the point that he was a Patroit killer and a SB champion.  Then, when it was obvious that Flacco was no longer the man, Harbaugh completely changed his entire offensive philosophy to accommodate Lamar Jackson.  I'm not a big Lamar Jackson fan.  I think he's less than Michael Vick.  But more than Vince Young.  Lamar Jackson is over hyped.  And yet, here is Harbaugh squeezing out all the talent he possibly can from that guy.  It's amazing.  He's a better HC than Belechick, in my opinion based on this alone.

Speaking of Michael Vick.  Vick was basically hung out to dry, and rightfully so, based on off field activities.  People thought his career was done.  He was propped up by Andy Reid.  Andy Reid has the gift of making playoff caliber QBs out of players that the NFL threw into the dumpster.  Vick, And Garcia, Wentz, Foles.  Now, Reid had great success with Donovan McNabb, but McNabb will never be seen as an all time great QB.  And yet Andy Reid has always created not just playoff teams.  But teams that always were dangerous in the playoffs.  Andy Reid even found success with Alex Smith.  Not only that, Reid recognized Mahommes as a potential great and drafted him in the 2nd round (Not the 6th round, like the Belichick did with Brady - the 2nd round!).  Reid has been a great coach for decades with talent that has been less than HOF.  I argue that the only HOF QB Reid has had is Mahommes.  McNabb may squeak into the HOF, but nobody considers McNabb a top 20 all top QB...  This, in my opinion, is significant.  

You can't say the same thing for Belechick...  He's been great as the Patiorts HC, but only when he lucked into Brady.  And by lucked into Brady, I mean that Belechick was riding with a sub HOF QB in one Drew Bledsoe.  Belechick couldn't be successful with Bledsoe.  Taking a flyer on a 6th round Brady makes a good story.  But it's not like Belichick really believed Brady was anything but a back up (I don't care about any of the revisionist history of Belichick seeing something in Brady during training camp.  That's all nonsense to cover his butt, in my opinion.  But you know who did get to a Super Bowl with Bledsoe?  Pete Carrol!

All this to say, again, that there are HC's that recognize talent and can get the most out of that talent.  And other HCs, that while are great, have their success directly tied to an all time great QB.


OK, I have just spouted so much Bull [BLEEP] nonsense that I think I should probably stop here.  I could continue on, but I have a feeling I've already reached the TL;DR level of bloviation!  

I've just responded to the first part of your response.  I could go on to the next sectioon, but I'd rather stop here and let you determine whether you'd like to continue this conversation or just...  You know...  Ignore all my nonsense.
Where's that crow eating thread? I said right after the draft that I'd have taken Fields over Lawrence. Fields is going to be good eventually but it's more than obvious that Lawrence was the right pick.
(12-22-2022, 07:30 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]Where's that crow eating thread? I said right after the draft that I'd have taken Fields over Lawrence. Fields is going to be good eventually but it's more than obvious that Lawrence was the right pick.

Ouch!  Not me.  I did think Fields was the 2nd best QB in that draft though and thought he had a good chance to be one of the next young star QBs right along with Lawrence.  I haven't seen him play, but he's apparently starting to put it together too.
(12-22-2022, 07:50 PM)scottyg Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-22-2022, 07:30 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]Where's that crow eating thread? I said right after the draft that I'd have taken Fields over Lawrence. Fields is going to be good eventually but it's more than obvious that Lawrence was the right pick.

Ouch!  Not me.  I did think Fields was the 2nd best QB in that draft though and thought he had a good chance to be one of the next young star QBs right along with Lawrence.  I haven't seen him play, but he's apparently starting to put it together too.

He *could* eventually become the good version of Russell Wilson, there's some potential there but he's got a long way to go yet.
(12-22-2022, 07:30 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]Where's that crow eating thread? I said right after the draft that I'd have taken Fields over Lawrence. Fields is going to be good eventually but it's more than obvious that Lawrence was the right pick.
In the board mock draft, I took Fields with the 2nd pick and was laughed at…..
(12-22-2022, 07:50 PM)scottyg Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-22-2022, 07:30 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]Where's that crow eating thread? I said right after the draft that I'd have taken Fields over Lawrence. Fields is going to be good eventually but it's more than obvious that Lawrence was the right pick.

Ouch!  Not me.  I did think Fields was the 2nd best QB in that draft though and thought he had a good chance to be one of the next young star QBs right along with Lawrence.  I haven't seen him play, but he's apparently starting to put it together too.

Yes and No. He literally has no one else to help on offense. The Bears OL has consistently been the worst pass blocking line all season watching them. Their WR's don't get open, especially after Mooney's injury. They were good at run blocking early, but has gotten more inconsistent over the season.

They just completely changed their offense to utilize his running skills and tighter alignments with quick throws to manufacture some offense. But they still need an injection of talent on offense to see if he can run an actual pro passing offense.

Fields definitely has command of the current offense and a leader mentality though. He some of his flashier pass plays are great, but just way too infrequent because of Bears offensive talent limitations.

But this year was always a wash year for them to get bad contracts off the books. Plus with a top pick, they can trade down to team looking for a QB and get more draft assets.

(12-22-2022, 08:39 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-22-2022, 07:50 PM)scottyg Wrote: [ -> ]Ouch!  Not me.  I did think Fields was the 2nd best QB in that draft though and thought he had a good chance to be one of the next young star QBs right along with Lawrence.  I haven't seen him play, but he's apparently starting to put it together too.

He *could* eventually become the good version of Russell Wilson, there's some potential there but he's got a long way to go yet.

He can be better than Wilson. Fields is nearly as big as Lawrence, so he doesn't have the height limitations of Wilson. He also has a better arm. 

He ran an actual offense on schedule and will utilized the middle of the field at OSU. I think he can do that some extent against NFL defenses if he gets more help. Whether he can do it consistently enough to be Pro-Bowl level is too soon to say.
(12-23-2022, 12:47 AM)rpr52121 Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-22-2022, 07:50 PM)scottyg Wrote: [ -> ]Ouch!  Not me.  I did think Fields was the 2nd best QB in that draft though and thought he had a good chance to be one of the next young star QBs right along with Lawrence.  I haven't seen him play, but he's apparently starting to put it together too.

Yes and No. He literally has no one else to help on offense. The Bears OL has consistently been the worst pass blocking line all season watching them. Their WR's don't get open, especially after Mooney's injury. They were good at run blocking early, but has gotten more inconsistent over the season.

They just completely changed their offense to utilize his running skills and tighter alignments with quick throws to manufacture some offense. But they still need an injection of talent on offense to see if he can run an actual pro passing offense.

Fields definitely has command of the current offense and a leader mentality though. He some of his flashier pass plays are great, but just way too infrequent because of Bears offensive talent limitations.

But this year was always a wash year for them to get bad contracts off the books. Plus with a top pick, they can trade down to team looking for a QB and get more draft assets.

(12-22-2022, 08:39 PM)MarleyJag Wrote: [ -> ]He *could* eventually become the good version of Russell Wilson, there's some potential there but he's got a long way to go yet.

He can be better than Wilson. Fields is nearly as big as Lawrence, so he doesn't have the height limitations of Wilson. He also has a better arm. 

He ran an actual offense on schedule and will utilized the middle of the field at OSU. I think he can do that some extent against NFL defenses if he gets more help. Whether he can do it consistently enough to be Pro-Bowl level is too soon to say.

Fields has the physical tools to be sure.

Does he have the coching to develop him and the surrounding talent to enable him to thrive eventually?

That remains to be seen.

Fortunately, these are questions we can answer in the affirmative when it comes to our QB.

Thank you Jets!
(12-22-2022, 10:46 AM)carp8dm Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-21-2022, 08:00 PM)Bullseye Wrote: [ -> ](emphasis added)

Per Bill Walsh, most NFL coaches don't know how to identify or develop QBs properly.  If that's true, then I am in good company when it comes to the QB position, even though it would insult those coaches to group me with them.

To that end, the highlighted statement above begs inquiry.

The 2000s have been dominated by two coaches:  Bill Belichick and Andy Reid.

Both are first ballot Hall of Fame coaches without question.

They have dominated the NFL during this time because thay have had QBs who, along with Belichick and Reid, are virtually guaranteed enshrinement into Canton once their football careers are over.

My question is these two Hall of Fame Caliber coaches had two of the all time great QBs under their control as rookies,  but neither Belichick nor Reid started Brady or Mahomes for most, if not all of their rookie seasons.

Why not?

Why would two coaches who are two of the best ever at their positions keep superior QB talents in the bench the first year in their QBs careers?

Did they have less of an interest in playing Hall of fame talent at the QB position?  Did they NOT want to maximize the winning ib 2000 and 2017, respectively?

Were they somehow punishing Brady and Mahomes?

Were they followiling some sort of externally imposed mandate regarding the playing of superior talent?

"Thrill me with your acumen."

Now before you or anyone else go there, I am the first to say I am nowhere NEAR the same galaxy as Belichick or Reid in terms of football knowledge and I make no assertion otherwise.

But I'm curious how defenses of young QBs in Leftwich, Gabbert and Bortles who wound up being not so successful negates the reality of the overwhelming majority of Hall of Fame QBs from the 1970s on the league has seen.

I hate that I always seem to come into these conversations late!  I'm not ignoring the discussion, I promise!  But I don't know when I'm being replied to, so it takes me a while before I find these types of responses.

So first of all, I'm not more analytically gifted than any other poster here. We're just all giving out opinions on a topic that we have extreme familiarity with, but not extreme expertise.  The expertise only comes by being within the circle, which none of us are.  However, I reject the idea that a die hard fan (which I think it's safe to say we all are) cannot understand/comprehend the concepts of what happens within the meeting rooms, and locker rooms, and practice fields of our favorite teams.  Sure some poster's insights are more attuned to reality than others, but the same could be said about coaches around the NFL.  If Urban Meyer can be on the spectrum of coaching in the NFL (along with Jeff Saturday), that means that anything is possible in terms of the spectrum within a fan base and their analysis of how to lead and drive a team to success.  Just a long way of saying, every opinion within the community has merit enough to be considered and then it's up to that community to determine whether that said opinion has credibility or not.  No opinion should be pushed away on the basis that "you're not a coach/player/in the NFL".  Those types of baseless logical fallacies are lazy and should be shunned.  Take the opinion and argue for or against on it's merits.  

When considering your assertion that the 2 most prominent Head Coaches over the past 20 years (since 2000 and beyond) are And Reid and Belicheck, I first want to consider recency bias.  I think consideration should be made for John Harbaugh, Tom Coughlin (who I have harshly criticized as a Jaguar Front Office cancer), Ron Rivera, and Pete Carroll.  I think there are other Head Coaches could be added to this list, but let's just assume these are the top HC's over the last 20 years.  (I'm excluding Pederson intentially, because of potential emotional bias, but Pederson did a hell of a job with 2 less than HOF QBs).

When you look at a wider scoped list, like the one I've included, it breaks down to Head Coaches that had all time great HOF QBs and then there's a smaller group that aren't quite as successful but had lesser QBs to work with.  

John Harbaugh, to me is the a coach this needs to be placed in All Time great coaching.  Of course, Harbaugh has only won 1 SB, but he fought toe to toe with Belicheck and Brady in Brady's prime and always gave that Patriot squad a hard time.  (Conversely, I leave out Tony Dungy, because I think the team was lead mostly by Petyon Manning and Dungy only won 1 SB and never could do anything beyond that without Manning).

I give extra credit to Harbaugh becuase he took lesser QBs and has created franchise QB level success in both of them.  We all know how bad Flaco is.  But Harbaugh coached him up to amazing levels, to the point that he was a Patroit killer and a SB champion.  Then, when it was obvious that Flacco was no longer the man, Harbaugh completely changed his entire offensive philosophy to accommodate Lamar Jackson.  I'm not a big Lamar Jackson fan.  I think he's less than Michael Vick.  But more than Vince Young.  Lamar Jackson is over hyped.  And yet, here is Harbaugh squeezing out all the talent he possibly can from that guy.  It's amazing.  He's a better HC than Belechick, in my opinion based on this alone.

Speaking of Michael Vick.  Vick was basically hung out to dry, and rightfully so, based on off field activities.  People thought his career was done.  He was propped up by Andy Reid.  Andy Reid has the gift of making playoff caliber QBs out of players that the NFL threw into the dumpster.  Vick, And Garcia, Wentz, Foles.  Now, Reid had great success with Donovan McNabb, but McNabb will never be seen as an all time great QB.  And yet Andy Reid has always created not just playoff teams.  But teams that always were dangerous in the playoffs.  Andy Reid even found success with Alex Smith.  Not only that, Reid recognized Mahommes as a potential great and drafted him in the 2nd round (Not the 6th round, like the Belichick did with Brady - the 2nd round!).  Reid has been a great coach for decades with talent that has been less than HOF.  I argue that the only HOF QB Reid has had is Mahommes.  McNabb may squeak into the HOF, but nobody considers McNabb a top 20 all top QB...  This, in my opinion, is significant.  

You can't say the same thing for Belechick...  He's been great as the Patiorts HC, but only when he lucked into Brady.  And by lucked into Brady, I mean that Belechick was riding with a sub HOF QB in one Drew Bledsoe.  Belechick couldn't be successful with Bledsoe.  Taking a flyer on a 6th round Brady makes a good story.  But it's not like Belichick really believed Brady was anything but a back up (I don't care about any of the revisionist history of Belichick seeing something in Brady during training camp.  That's all nonsense to cover his butt, in my opinion.  But you know who did get to a Super Bowl with Bledsoe?  Pete Carrol!

All this to say, again, that there are HC's that recognize talent and can get the most out of that talent.  And other HCs, that while are great, have their success directly tied to an all time great QB.


OK, I have just spouted so much Bull [BLEEP] nonsense that I think I should probably stop here.  I could continue on, but I have a feeling I've already reached the TL;DR level of bloviation!  

I've just responded to the first part of your response.  I could go on to the next sectioon, but I'd rather stop here and let you determine whether you'd like to continue this conversation or just...  You know...  Ignore all my nonsense.

I know it was a different era when the passing game was not as important as it is today, but when you're talking about great head coaches, you have to give credit to Joe Gibbs, who won 3 Super Bowls with 3 different not-so-stellar QBs.  Joe Theisman, Doug Williams, and Mark Rypien.  

I'm not trying to negate your point, I'm just throwing out a little interesting trivia about a really great head coach.
I woke up smiling again that we have Trevor.
(12-23-2022, 06:57 AM)The Real Marty Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-22-2022, 10:46 AM)carp8dm Wrote: [ -> ]I hate that I always seem to come into these conversations late!  I'm not ignoring the discussion, I promise!  But I don't know when I'm being replied to, so it takes me a while before I find these types of responses.

So first of all, I'm not more analytically gifted than any other poster here. We're just all giving out opinions on a topic that we have extreme familiarity with, but not extreme expertise.  The expertise only comes by being within the circle, which none of us are.  However, I reject the idea that a die hard fan (which I think it's safe to say we all are) cannot understand/comprehend the concepts of what happens within the meeting rooms, and locker rooms, and practice fields of our favorite teams.  Sure some poster's insights are more attuned to reality than others, but the same could be said about coaches around the NFL.  If Urban Meyer can be on the spectrum of coaching in the NFL (along with Jeff Saturday), that means that anything is possible in terms of the spectrum within a fan base and their analysis of how to lead and drive a team to success.  Just a long way of saying, every opinion within the community has merit enough to be considered and then it's up to that community to determine whether that said opinion has credibility or not.  No opinion should be pushed away on the basis that "you're not a coach/player/in the NFL".  Those types of baseless logical fallacies are lazy and should be shunned.  Take the opinion and argue for or against on it's merits.  

When considering your assertion that the 2 most prominent Head Coaches over the past 20 years (since 2000 and beyond) are And Reid and Belicheck, I first want to consider recency bias.  I think consideration should be made for John Harbaugh, Tom Coughlin (who I have harshly criticized as a Jaguar Front Office cancer), Ron Rivera, and Pete Carroll.  I think there are other Head Coaches could be added to this list, but let's just assume these are the top HC's over the last 20 years.  (I'm excluding Pederson intentially, because of potential emotional bias, but Pederson did a hell of a job with 2 less than HOF QBs).

When you look at a wider scoped list, like the one I've included, it breaks down to Head Coaches that had all time great HOF QBs and then there's a smaller group that aren't quite as successful but had lesser QBs to work with.  

John Harbaugh, to me is the a coach this needs to be placed in All Time great coaching.  Of course, Harbaugh has only won 1 SB, but he fought toe to toe with Belicheck and Brady in Brady's prime and always gave that Patriot squad a hard time.  (Conversely, I leave out Tony Dungy, because I think the team was lead mostly by Petyon Manning and Dungy only won 1 SB and never could do anything beyond that without Manning).

I give extra credit to Harbaugh becuase he took lesser QBs and has created franchise QB level success in both of them.  We all know how bad Flaco is.  But Harbaugh coached him up to amazing levels, to the point that he was a Patroit killer and a SB champion.  Then, when it was obvious that Flacco was no longer the man, Harbaugh completely changed his entire offensive philosophy to accommodate Lamar Jackson.  I'm not a big Lamar Jackson fan.  I think he's less than Michael Vick.  But more than Vince Young.  Lamar Jackson is over hyped.  And yet, here is Harbaugh squeezing out all the talent he possibly can from that guy.  It's amazing.  He's a better HC than Belechick, in my opinion based on this alone.

Speaking of Michael Vick.  Vick was basically hung out to dry, and rightfully so, based on off field activities.  People thought his career was done.  He was propped up by Andy Reid.  Andy Reid has the gift of making playoff caliber QBs out of players that the NFL threw into the dumpster.  Vick, And Garcia, Wentz, Foles.  Now, Reid had great success with Donovan McNabb, but McNabb will never be seen as an all time great QB.  And yet Andy Reid has always created not just playoff teams.  But teams that always were dangerous in the playoffs.  Andy Reid even found success with Alex Smith.  Not only that, Reid recognized Mahommes as a potential great and drafted him in the 2nd round (Not the 6th round, like the Belichick did with Brady - the 2nd round!).  Reid has been a great coach for decades with talent that has been less than HOF.  I argue that the only HOF QB Reid has had is Mahommes.  McNabb may squeak into the HOF, but nobody considers McNabb a top 20 all top QB...  This, in my opinion, is significant.  

You can't say the same thing for Belechick...  He's been great as the Patiorts HC, but only when he lucked into Brady.  And by lucked into Brady, I mean that Belechick was riding with a sub HOF QB in one Drew Bledsoe.  Belechick couldn't be successful with Bledsoe.  Taking a flyer on a 6th round Brady makes a good story.  But it's not like Belichick really believed Brady was anything but a back up (I don't care about any of the revisionist history of Belichick seeing something in Brady during training camp.  That's all nonsense to cover his butt, in my opinion.  But you know who did get to a Super Bowl with Bledsoe?  Pete Carrol!

All this to say, again, that there are HC's that recognize talent and can get the most out of that talent.  And other HCs, that while are great, have their success directly tied to an all time great QB.


OK, I have just spouted so much Bull [BLEEP] nonsense that I think I should probably stop here.  I could continue on, but I have a feeling I've already reached the TL;DR level of bloviation!  

I've just responded to the first part of your response.  I could go on to the next sectioon, but I'd rather stop here and let you determine whether you'd like to continue this conversation or just...  You know...  Ignore all my nonsense.

I know it was a different era when the passing game was not as important as it is today, but when you're talking about great head coaches, you have to give credit to Joe Gibbs, who won 3 Super Bowls with 3 different not-so-stellar QBs.  Joe Theisman, Doug Williams, and Mark Rypien.  

I'm not trying to negate your point, I'm just throwing out a little interesting trivia about a really great head coach.

No doubt!  Joe Gibbs is always forgotten about but he did great things with multiple QBs.  I just kept it to the 2000s, per Bullseye's discussion.
Love just hearing Lawrence talk after the game. Guy is a true leader and seems to genuinely love being a Jag. We are very lucky and have a bright future with him.

Just so happy.
You know what put a smile on my face? The fact that Lawrence threw at Sauce Garnder multiple times and beat him on most of his throws.

We made thier "Pro Bowl" players look like scrubs, and I'm all about it! Yesterday just showed how ignorant the rest of the league is when it comes to the talent we have on our roster.
For all you impatient clowns (and I mean that as kind-heartedly as possible) that said he "doesn't have it between the ears." And there are a bunch of you, I looked it up.

https://twitter.com/MattHamilton25/statu...O0PL0nofbA
Lawrence is processing the field lightning fast at this point
"I don't do rankings for popularity.  I do them because I want to be a GM one day."  
Chris Simms before the 2021 NFL draft.  

https://www.totalprosports.com/ncaa/chri...l-tickets/

Chris Simms Says Zach Wilson Has More Talent Than Trevor Lawrence, Jags Taking Him To ‘Sell Tickets’

“I like Trevor Lawrence,” Simms said. “But the thing that jumped out to me more, there was more missed throws and inaccurate throws on the film than I thought I was going to see. Not to say that there are still not a lot of damn good ones, but I think that to me was the difference.

[Here's an interesting question.  Is Chris Simms "ChrisJagBoy?"]  

“My big thing is, go with Zach Wilson. If you really want me to go make that sell or pitch, I would go, ‘Zach Wilson can run any offense. He is ready right now and I think he has less questions about his game than a Trevor Lawrence.’ That is where I would really sell you.

“I think his high-end talent is greater than Trevor Lawrence.”

And now...

Chris Simms dying on the hill of Jets QB Zach Wilson’s stardom

"An NFL prognosticator often loses credibility when he refuses to admit that he was wrong, as NBC's Chris Simms is doing now.

"It’s one thing to just move on without admitting that you were wrong, but to double and triple down with increasing desperation as the player fails shows a certain level of ego. This is true in all areas of life, not just in sports media."
Chris Simms trying to hook up with Zach Wilson’s Mom, got it down bad
I too think Wilson has all the tools. But unfortunately he lacks the biggest tool, the mental game. He is clearly incredibly immature and not mentally ready to play in the NFL.
I’m a season ticket holder and a huge Jags homer. I am not sure if my fandom could have survived Urban + Zach Wilson coming through this franchise.
(12-24-2022, 02:59 PM)TownCenterJag Wrote: [ -> ]I’m a season ticket holder and a huge Jags homer. I am not sure if my fandom could have survived Urban + Zach Wilson coming through this franchise.

Gawd, can you imagine the havoc now after a season of Meyer and then the following season enduring Wilson spiral into the ground? That would be such classic Jaguars luck.

Then again, would Doug be able to get more out of Wilson than what we’re seeing now?