Thanks I’ll work on that.Your reading comprehension needs to improve badly man.
Thanks I’ll work on that.Your reading comprehension needs to improve badly man.
I believe he got receivers together in the offseason this year.Just out of curiosity, not trolling, have there been any accounts of Murray being a good leader? I've heard great talent, great athlete, etc. but don't remember much on being an inspiring leader. He seems to care much more this year and putting in more work but he's probably going to be known more for having a study clause placed in his contract and more interested in video games.
First impressions are hard to change and probably not many leaders have had to have clauses put in their contract to try and make their job a higher priority.
Sure they do. If the team is trying to upgrade the talent. Some great leaders aren’t that physically talented. By all accounts colt mccoy was considered a terrific leader but an underwhelming tools guy.I don’t think good leaders get released from a team they just won a Super Bowl with.
He did his own mini-camp in LA and used space at UCLA. There is a YouTube video of it.I believe he got receivers together in the offseason this year.
Sure they do not. I never said good leaders had to be physically talented. Where did you even get that from? I have pretty much regurgitated that a person that is bad at their job isn’t a leader because they cannot be trusted in the first place. Doesn’t matter what “tools” they have.Sure they do. If the team is trying to upgrade the talent. Some great leaders aren’t that physically talented. By all accounts colt mccoy was considered a terrific leader but an underwhelming tools guy.
Seems some of you guys can’t understand this concept.
You clearly don’t understand leadership. Shame.Dude was such a good leader that he played on 5 different teams and did something that has never done before which was being dropped from a team directly after winning a Super Bowl(in which he literally didn’t do much at all).
Horrific example.
This shows me that you really really don’t understand leadership. It’s not just that you don’t seem to recognize who a leader is, but it seems you don’t understand what traits make up leadership.This conversation has dragged enough.
Point being:
It’s possible to be a good player while being a bad leader Hell, you see it all the time in the NBA.
There’s no such thing as a bad player being a good leader because that bad player is never taken seriously to begin with.
I doubt anyone would give a damn about Kyler’s leadership qualities if he was/is a still a bad QB.
Agreed. I am literally saying he wasn’t a great QB. But he was a good leader. I don’t think that team wins if dilfer was both a bad QB and a terrible leader.Without one of the greatest defenses in NFL history, that Dilfer led team would’ve won 3 games. In the middle of that season, the Ravens went like 4 games without scoring a touchdown & they still won those games.
I think there's a middle ground that you're flying over. It seems to me that @DVontel is saying it's really hard for, like, Zach Pascal to be a credible leader on an NFL team. He's hung around the NFL for a minute, for sure, but he's also a bottom-of-the-roster player.This shows me that you really really don’t understand leadership. It’s not just that you don’t seem to recognize who a leader is, but it seems you don’t understand what traits make up leadership.
I’ve seen this look on some ultra talented athletes. They’re better players than the leaders on their team. They “don’t take the leader seriously,” as you state. They end up being unable to lead the team themselves due to their arrogance and they undermine the actual leadership of the team. They cause conflict and they typically end up being cancers on their own teams. These are your typical prima donnas that most people can’t stand.
Lol. For the last 12 years he’s averaged 6 or fewer points. He was literally the definition of a guy who couldn’t play at a high level but was an incredible leader. Anyone playing with him during that span didn’t know the player that averaged under 10pts/game and 8 Rebs during his first 8 seasons (which also were pedestrian by nba standards). For the last 11 seasons he averaged under 3pts/game.Udonis Haslem wasn’t a bad player.
I do believe Ouchie is one of the more intelligent fellas on here, that’s why it is so befuddling the point continues to fly over his head.I think there's a middle ground that you're flying over. It seems to me that @DVontel is saying it's really hard for, like, Zach Pascal to be a credible leader on an NFL team. He's hung around the NFL for a minute, for sure, but he's also a bottom-of-the-roster player.
James Conner was an injury case for much of his career, but was a credible leader because he played well on the field, even if he's not an All-Pro talent. Kyler Murray is an all-pro talent, but can't or won't figure out how to connect with his teammates in a genuine way that isn't coordinated by an event manager.
First, you’re failing to recognize there is a spectrum of capability. It’s not as simple a binary “good/bad” scenario as you want to dumb it down to be.Sure they do not. I never said good leaders had to be physically talented. Where did you even get that from? I have pretty much regurgitated that a person that is bad at their job isn’t a leader because they cannot be trusted in the first place. Doesn’t matter what “tools” they have.
You know what’s funny? Thanks to you and @Krangodnzr for bringing it up, but Kyler going out of his way to work on team chemistry with his teammates and holding a camp in UCLA is something I think people would say is something a “good leaders” would do. This was probably on his dime, too. However, guess what? Nobody cares he did that because he’s bad at his job.
It’s not a realistic concept to real people. Ouchie, whatever your job history, I cannot imagine you taking your counterparts seriously who you know were bad at their job. Nobody here realistically does.
I think using an outlier like Trent Dilfer just always distorts the conversation. I think the better and more interesting example is Nick Foles.I do believe Ouchie is one of the more intelligent fellas on here, that’s why it is so befuddling the point continues to fly over his head.
No, I get what you’re saying. You have to still be a minimally talented player to be an alpha leader. To be the top leader. You’re correct that pascal can’t be THE alpha leader on the team. But a team typically has multiple leaders. And if you don’t think gannon brings in a guy like a pascal, or a colt mccoy, in at least part to be a leader I think you’re missing the value of some players. Haslem was brought up before and he’s an excellent example. He wasn’t kept around to be the alpha leader of the heat. But he was 100% kept around to be a leader on the team.I think there's a middle ground that you're flying over. It seems to me that @DVontel is saying it's really hard for, like, Zach Pascal to be a credible leader on an NFL team. He's hung around the NFL for a minute, for sure, but he's also a bottom-of-the-roster player.
James Conner was an injury case for much of his career, but was a credible leader because he played well on the field, even if he's not an All-Pro talent. Kyler Murray is an all-pro talent, but can't or won't figure out how to connect with his teammates in a genuine way that isn't coordinated by an event manager.
That seems to be a good example as well. And I think it makes dilfer not so much an outlier. Those two seem cast out of the same cloth. If we don’t use the super bowl as the sole indicator I’m sure we could find more examples.I think using an outlier like Trent Dilfer just always distorts the conversation. I think the better and more interesting example is Nick Foles.
I think we're talking about two different types of leadership, or something that feels like leadership, but isn't.And if you don’t think gannon brings in a guy like a pascal, or a colt mccoy, in at least part to be a leader I think you’re missing the value of some players.
Less talented ≠ bad at his/her job.less talented QB
It’s more than lead by example, though. Those guys take active roles in teaching typically. And they lift up players who are having a tough time. Or they point out nuances that help the team win.I think we're talking about two different types of leadership, or something that feels like leadership, but isn't.
Pascal serves as an example of how to be a pro -- how to make it in the NFL. That's critical for a young team when few guys are even going to play for long, but you want to show how bottom-of-the-roster players are expected to comport themselves in team meetings, sideline behaviors, etc.
Colt McCoy wasn't even good enough to be one of those leaders for Gannon.
Again you’re making it binary. It isn’t. I think this board has proven over and over than kyler isn’t bad at his job. He’s mediocre. He’s inconsistent. But he’s also a seemingly poor leader. And I say “seemingly” because we really aren’t privy to what happens the full game in the huddle, on the sidelines or at practice or in the facility.Less talented ≠ bad at his/her job.
I don’t know your life, but I bet that “less talented QB” was not a bad/awful QB. Correct me if I’m wrong? I doubt I am unless your Head Coach did not know what he was doing.
This can apply to the real world as well. I’m willing to bet nobody here has worked with subordinates that were leaders but awful in quality at the product they’re putting out. Do you want to know why? Because they would have never been in that position in the first place.
Kyler’s “in-game leadership” is lacking because the product he has displayed on the field is lacking. You don’t rally the troops by being awful at your job. How are the troops supposed to rally around that?
It’s literally as simple if you’re good at your job, people will follow and get in line. Doesn’t matter about who is more talented or less talented. It matters about what type of quality you display on a consistent bases. If you’re bad at your job, nobody will follow. This should be Life 101.
I don’t believe Winston is a good leader.Despite a few of you guys saying otherwise, I do genuinely believe it’s because Kyler is not a “rah rah” guy. Jameis Winston is also very bad at his job, but since he does a lot of the “rah rah”, you have a few people here say he’s a good leader.
A sexual assaulter being a good leader to someone is also asinine, but that’s another story for another day.
It's not just this, though. Fitz wasn't a rah-rah guy and people credited him with being a leader. It's because Kyler is a bit of an introvert, yeah, but really I think it's his attitude when things go wrong. We've all worked with top performers who aren't resilient in the face of adversity. Kyler shows up his teammates on the field when things go wrong. The camera can't find him pointing fingers if he's not doing it when he thinks a wideout ran the wrong route on third down.Despite a few of you guys saying otherwise, I do genuinely believe it’s because Kyler is not a “rah rah” guy. Jameis Winston is also very bad at his job, but since he does a lot of the “rah rah”, you have a few people here say he’s a good leader.
A sexual assaulter being a good leader to someone is also asinine, but that’s another story for another day.
Yes! I agree with you here. Lifting up players having a tough time especially resonates with me. They understand that if you're not a first-round draft pick, you have to do all the little things to stick around, and that includes being part of the team, contributing in the meeting rooms, coming prepared, etc., etc.It’s more than lead by example, though. Those guys take active roles in teaching typically. And they lift up players who are having a tough time. Or they point out nuances that help the team win.
And yeah, as I said before, you can’t zero ability. I mean, I’ve been a leader most of my life. But I wouldn’t make a professional football team based solely on my advanced leadership skills and my half a year of pre-injury division iii football. Once a player is done they’re typically out of a job (mccoy), unless your udonis haslem.
I don't believe that Winston is a good leader in being part of the program. I believe that Winston is good at getting people to follow him. He had the entire Saints offense mutiny against the head coach last year!I don’t believe Winston is a good leader.
And I KNOW leadership is SO MUCH more than rah rah. If anyone thinks it’s about being a cheerleader they don’t understand leadership. Do you have to be a cheerleader sometime? Yeah, a good leader should know when it’s useful. But it’s just a tool in the toolkit.
Wow, no. Not at all! This does not in the least encapsulate leadership. Not in the NFL nor in life. The number of people that are good at their job but can't get a single person to follow them is legion. The number of people not at the apex of their job or just okay at their job but with excellent leadership skills is also legion.Less talented ≠ bad at his/her job.
I don’t know your life, but I bet that “less talented QB” was not a bad/awful QB. Correct me if I’m wrong? I doubt I am unless your Head Coach did not know what he was doing.
This can apply to the real world as well. I’m willing to bet nobody here has worked with subordinates that were leaders but awful in quality at the product they’re putting out. Do you want to know why? Because they would have never been in that position in the first place.
Kyler’s “in-game leadership” is lacking because the product he has displayed on the field is lacking. You don’t rally the troops by being awful at your job. How are the troops supposed to rally around that?
It’s literally as simple if you’re good at your job, people will follow and get in line. Doesn’t matter about who is more talented or less talented. It matters about what type of quality you display on a consistent bases. If you’re bad at your job, nobody will follow. This should be Life 101.
Agree with all thisIt's not just this, though. Fitz wasn't a rah-rah guy and people credited him with being a leader. It's because Kyler is a bit of an introvert, yeah, but really I think it's his attitude when things go wrong. We've all worked with top performers who aren't resilient in the face of adversity. Kyler shows up his teammates on the field when things go wrong. The camera can't find him pointing fingers if he's not doing it when he thinks a wideout ran the wrong route on third down.
Yes! I agree with you here. Lifting up players having a tough time especially resonates with me. They understand that if you're not a first-round draft pick, you have to do all the little things to stick around, and that includes being part of the team, contributing in the meeting rooms, coming prepared, etc., etc.
That's important -- maybe even essential -- when you're trying to instill and maintain a winning culture. I'm not sure Kliff really understood that, or didn't have the will to impress it upon Keim, and so a lot of these "little things" are/were missed.
I think the problem for Gannon is that the folks you bring into the building, especially the young people, have to see it work sooner or later and convert to wins, or they'll fall into bad habits or start looking for other ways to compete.