Great content in this episode with an inside look into K1's recovery. I cannot wait to see him take the field next year. I think the pundits are going to be proven wrong. He seems highly motivated and more mature.
Great content in this episode with an inside look into K1's recovery. I cannot wait to see him take the field next year. I think the pundits are going to be proven wrong. He seems highly motivated and more mature.
Chris… you’ve been a Cardinals fan wayyyyy too long to make such a silly statement!The best part about the bottom is you can only go up
Link?
Of course it’s an image piece…that’s pretty obvious. Someone has finally gotten through to him, that his aloofness has been one of the biggest reasons he has an image problem. Allowing the cameras in starts to make him more relatable. He said all the right things…just needs to keep on the path and back it up.Take 1:
a cynic would call last nights Flight Plan an effort to rehabilitate (pardon the pun) Kylers image
by the end of last year, his image was that of a petulant loner who didnt like his teammates and was indifferent to putting in the mental work to be a QB.
This offseason the org has made it a point to address that -- including the various teammates talking about their relationship with Kyler.
Also interesting in how he has enthusiastically endorsed the new staff and FO-- in contrast to reports last year on how he didnt get along with Kliff.
I dont think its fiction --- but it is marketing.
I think it’s a combination of both your takes. About the wrist, I took it to mean his throwing hand…otherwise why really mention it, since a non throwing injury shouldn’t really impact his game, right? It would also explain some of his deep ball issues last year…that part of his game fell off a cliff.Take 2:
An optimist would say that Kyler was humbled by last year and has taken the criticism to heart and is taking the change in staff and FO to make a fresh start.
It doesnt hurt that he clearly knows that he has the last 9 games or so of next year to make his case that he is the guy -- and has seen his friend Baker Mayfield go from "the guy" to journeyman awfully quickly.
It is also clear he didnt think much of the prior coaching staff and front office.
finally: he talked about hurting his wrist in camp. Would really like to know if that was the wrist on his throwing arm. Still no explanation on how a QB goes from highly accurate on deep balls for his whole career to the worst.
Hmmm.. All that stuff is great but it's still going to come down to how hard he works and how bad he wants it.
And, we're going to learn a lot more about his mental toughness and leadership this year because it's going to be a struggle on offense, especially with the patchwork offensive line.
Unfortunately, after last year, there are some questions that need to be answered. If he really and truly wants to be great, I'm 1000% confident there's no stopping him, and he'll do his part to get us a championship.
But as it does so often in life, it's going to come down to how much heart he has. Hopefully the money hasn't spoiled him.
I'm as big a Kyler skeptic as there is, but this is utter nonsense. It's a built-in excuse to blame the player (which I know you won't do in this situation, even if you're saying it now) exclusively for underperformance.
I've said this many times before, but I believe that Kyler is an extremely hard worker. I just think that he's consistently worked on the wrong things. He loves being in the gym, and he hates to lose. But those aren't the sole determinants of success.
I don't know what the "it" is that is about and going to come down to, but "it" won't be more than 7 wins in 2023 even if Kyler comes back 100% healthy and participates fully in training camp (he won't).
Good, talented players land in terrible situations all the time and fail to reach their potential. Thomas Jones' time here is an excellent example.
I'm saying (perhaps ineloquently in my initial post, if so please forgive me) there's a strong correlation between success and effort level/work ethic.
And so, if he is willing to "put in the work" to be an MVP, then he'll be an MVP.