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Interesting analysis here -
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really good film but he has Peyton Manning level expectations of how the NFL game works for a fifth round rookie quarterback. Kurt Warner gave really good analysis by saying that he is scanning the field, but he is just late. Once he gets more reps and experience, he hopefully will get the ball out faster.Interesting analysis here -xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
Same goes for Josh DobbsHe’s a 5th round rookie QB on a team with an entirely new staff implementing entirely new systems. Thinking that he was ever going to start week 1 unless forced by injuries was ridiculous.
I think the reaction here is a little too extreme. If you picked 8 passing plays from most any QB‘s game, you could find quite a few mistakes. That is not to say there weren’t some egregious errors made. For comparison I’d love to see a similar analysis of one of Murray’s game. I bet I could find quite a few plays to criticize. I can recall Murray getting clocked by a free rusher. Of course it would also be fun to do this to one of J T’s games out a what was a seriously failing NFL career. How about doing this with a Dobbs game? In 3 seasons he’s never completed 60% of his passes. It’s quite a bit easier to criticize on film than to play the game. Tune is a rookie. The list of starting rookies that didn’t make a bunch of mistakes is incredibly small. I want Tune to start not because he’s ready to win, but because he’s shown enough to think he might one day win. If this team had a playoff shot I wouldn’t start Tune (or Dobbs). This team has nothing to lose. The only thought should be would it set back Tune? A QB can learn from watching, but if that was the plan they should have kept McCoy. Really what the film showed was you could confuse a rookie, like with the arm flapping. What you should watch for is if he faces the same defensive alignment, does Tune properly respond? BTW, if you watch the film closely there are 2 free rushers and the back picks up one. Tune should have seen it. He didn’t, but J T called it wrong. Mistakes are easy to find watching film. If his point is Tune’s not ready to win, he’s right. If his point is Tune doesn’t have a future, he’s just guessing based on a very small sample.
Agree, way too harsh and way too easy to select a few plays that you know you can criticize and pick apart. I think the footwork can be corrected if given the right coaching and the lateness on some throws are probably a bit a trying to be too risk adverse and a little lack of confidence at this point.I think the reaction here is a little too extreme. If you picked 8 passing plays from most any QB‘s game, you could find quite a few mistakes. That is not to say there weren’t some egregious errors made. For comparison I’d love to see a similar analysis of one of Murray’s game. I bet I could find quite a few plays to criticize. I can recall Murray getting clocked by a free rusher. Of course it would also be fun to do this to one of J T’s games out a what was a seriously failing NFL career. How about doing this with a Dobbs game? In 3 seasons he’s never completed 60% of his passes. It’s quite a bit easier to criticize on film than to play the game. Tune is a rookie. The list of starting rookies that didn’t make a bunch of mistakes is incredibly small. I want Tune to start not because he’s ready to win, but because he’s shown enough to think he might one day win. If this team had a playoff shot I wouldn’t start Tune (or Dobbs). This team has nothing to lose. The only thought should be would it set back Tune? A QB can learn from watching, but if that was the plan they should have kept McCoy. Really what the film showed was you could confuse a rookie, like with the arm flapping. What you should watch for is if he faces the same defensive alignment, does Tune properly respond? BTW, if you watch the film closely there are 2 free rushers and the back picks up one. Tune should have seen it. He didn’t, but J T called it wrong. Mistakes are easy to find watching film. If his point is Tune’s not ready to win, he’s right. If his point is Tune doesn’t have a future, he’s just guessing based on a very small sample.