The College Coaches Banning NFL Scouts Debate

August 19, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

It is plain to see that the NFL is creating quite a mess for college football programs these days. NCAA investigations into schools like Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina – for allegations of improper contact – reveal that the problem of outside interference on college campuses is both very broad and very real.

Alabama head Nick Saban is taking matters into his own hands. He is currently refusing to allow NFL scouts to even attend practices. Other coaches like Notre Dame’s Brian Kelly don’t view scouts as the problem. Kelly has stated that the Irish won’t ban scouts, but will instead attempt to address the situation by better educating student athletes about the issue.

It seems logical that colleges would take steps to keep agents out. But scouts? These guys are not the ones offering cars and houses under the table to amateur athletes. They are the ones with clipboards and stopwatches sweating in the stands trying to earn a living by discovering the next big thing. Scouts help make college dreams of NFL success possible. Are these guys really to blame as well?

Loyal Homer believes scouts do share blame. He will argue that programs are well within their right to ban NFL scouts to preserve their programs. Bleacher Fan, on the other hand, believes scouts should be left to do their job.

One argument will prevail while the other will be shut out faster than a scout with a roll of hundreds at a Crimson Tide practice. Who has the right idea?

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The College Coaches Banning Scouts Debate… Solving a Non-Problem

August 19, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Loyal Homer.

Why do people go to college?

The answer is simple. They go to college to prepare for their future careers. A kid who wants to become a doctor will go to the absolute best medical school that they are able to attend. Likewise, those seeking a career in law will pursue the best law schools, those who wish to be executives in corporate America will pursue the best business programs, and so on.

Students approach college in this manner because it puts them in the best possible position for success AFTER college. Where you go to school can have an influence on the prospective employers that will take notice of you. For example, the top producer from the Wharton School of Business will in all likelihood have garnered more interest from potential future employers than would the top performing student from The University of Phoenix Online.

That doesn’t mean the top performing student from The University of Phoenix is any less equipped for success in the “real world,” but Wharton has a much more prestigious name. It has a reputation as turning out the very best and the brightest. As such, those prospective employers who are interested in hiring the elite graduates from business school tend to keep closer tabs on the students at Wharton. They will want establish early relationships with those students, and get to know them through networking opportunities.

How do colleges facilitate that relationship? Through internships, guest presenters, and work-study programs. Those are just a few of the ways that corporate America can tie itself more closely with the future workforce that will be coming out of college in the years to come.

So if every college, regardless of career path, offers that benefit to its students, why on earth should athletics be excluded?

I completely understand the need to protect student athletes from unscrupulous agents. But the notion that banning professional scouts from practice does anything to combat the problem is like putting a cast on your arm because you broke your leg. The logic is completely flawed.

If a student is attending college in hopes of parlaying that experience into a professional career, shouldn’t they be afforded the exact same benefits that a med student, or a law student receives? By allowing professional scouts in the college environment student athletes are given a unique opportunity to showcase their skills for the very people they are HOPING will hire them once their time in college is done.

That is an ENTIRELY different relationship for an athlete than when they are in contact with a professional agent who has no ties to any prospective future employer. More importantly, the relationship between professional scouts and colleges is one that is healthy, and benefits a lot of people.

Realistically, professional sports internships aren’t an option for these kids. Where a business student can establish a relationship with a professional organization WHILE still attending classes, rules are put in place that prohibit athletes from that opportunity. A college quarterback is not allowed to go practice with the New England Patriots, or dress for a game, or work out at their facilities.

This is not a situation where athletes are being provided with special treatment either, since every college student has access to professionals while they are in college, regardless of the career they are pursuing. Allowing professional scouts into colleges is the same as granting student athletes the exposure to professional America that every single other college student also receives.

And guess what – this practice is good for the universities, too!

Just like the Wharton School of Business has established a reputation as turning out the best potential executives for corporate America, certain universities have developed a reputation as turning out the best potential professional athletes.

Ohio State and Texas are two schools known for their football pedigree. Duke and North Carolina are basketball schools. Each university has established a reputation as giving students the greatest opportunity for future success.

That reputation has grown as the result of an ongoing cycle. Pro scouts flock to those programs because they know they will get to see the top athletes. As a result, the universities get to tout that reputation and higher caliber athletes will want to play for those programs because they will then get the increased exposure they so crave.

Scouts make the programs look better, and the programs make the scouts look better. It is a win-win relationship, and the only thing that would happen by banning scouts from having access to college athletes would be to negatively impact everyone involved.

The programs would lose much of their recruiting capability, which in turn would hurt the chances of sustainable success.

Professional sports teams, and their fans, would suffer because the teams would lose much of the insight that is gained from scouting athletes while they are still in college. While it’s possible to gauge a wide receiver’s speed, or a tight end’s blocking skills, simply by watching them play, it is not possible to gauge intangible qualities that are just as vital at the next level.

How does the athlete interact with his teammates? Is he a leader or a motivator? What is his work ethic like? Does he adapt and adjust well when given new techniques to practice? All of those things require much closer access to the coaches and the program than simply sitting in the bleachers on game day.

Finally, the athletes would suffer because they would have less of an opportunity to differentiate themselves from their peers, ultimately impacting their chances at obtaining top-level salaries.

The current system that provides professional scouts with access to colleges is beneficial to everyone involved, and I see no reason to change that formula for success.

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The College Coaches Banning NFL Scouts Debate… Beat It, Scouts!

August 19, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Bleacher Fan.

Whatever happened to the days on innocence in college football? Don’t laugh! It really was a reality not all that long ago. Just ask your dad and his friends. Obviously, it’d be too simplistic to put all of the blame on agents. But they do deserve much of the blame. You know who else deserve some of the blame? Scouts! Coaches have every right to ban those scouts from their practices. He’s trying to protect his program.

Nick Saban has been the face of the “Ban The Scouts” campaign and he has been very outspoken about it. He promised last month at SEC Media Days in his discussion about “pimps” that he may take action against scouts. True to his word he has done just that. They are no longer welcome at Crimson Tide practice until further notice. He has since softened a little bit, saying scouts could return to practice on August 25th at a pre-determined time. It’s unfortunate that it came to that, but who can blame the coaches?

Having anyone associated with their players, even innocent bystanders such as scouts, opens up a Pandora’s box of potential issues. I’m well aware of the fact that scouts are there to do their jobs, take notes, and click their stopwatches. But I’m of the opinion that they could be distractions, even if they have noble intentions.

Suppose the players notice that scouts from the NFL are in attendance. Would that make them practice any different? Would they press more? Would they tense up? Would it limit the chances of an effective practice? These are all questions that college coaches really don’t have to answer. If I’m a coach and I see a scout watching practice, you know what I tell the scout? I say, “Don’t take this personally, but if you want to know what kind of player he is, we’ve got a game every Saturday in the Fall. I’ll be glad to talk to you in the Spring at the scouting combine. In the meantime, there’s the interstate right over there. It’ll lead you right out of town.”

Fair or not, one bad seed has ruined the whole apple, where the bad seed is the agents. Agents are professionals, scouts are professionals, and that’s what worries coaches like Nick Saban. It’s a classic case of “guilt by association.” Saban said it correctly, “Agents are screwing
it up.” Look at it from the point of view from a coach. Maybe these scouts have relationships with the agents. These coaches don’t know these scouts personally. Why should they be trusted? If you give an inch, the next thing you know, your players will be taking their talents to South Beach to an agent-hosted party.

It’s a sad state of affairs. I respect that scouts have a job to do. But in light of the rash of agents hovering around players, coaches have no choice but to protect the amateur eligibility of the student-athletes. That’s the nature of the beast that is college football.

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The Jets versus Darrelle Revis Debate Verdict

August 18, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Babe Ruthless and Bleacher Fan.

As I stated in the intro, it seems as if this is a yearly battle with at least one marquee player or one rookie. This year, it’s Darrelle Revis’ time to be on the hot seat or put the Jets on the hot seat, depending on how you look at it. The only thing the two sides have really agreed on to this point is to keep all contract talks confidential.

No one is really questioning the fact that Darrelle Revis is underpaid. I know it. Revis knows it. Rex Ryan knows it. Woody Johnson knows it. He’s a guy who wants to be paid like the best, and as Babe Ruthless indicated, it’s hard to blame him for that. Though, I did throw my hands up in the air when I read over the weekend that he turned down a pretty lucrative contract. The bottom line is that Revis wants a big payday; much like Rod Tidwell did in Jerry Maguire. He wants someone – specifically Jets ownership – to “show him the money.”

There’s no question that the Jets are a much better team with Revis starting in the secondary. The Jets obviously are going for the championship, and they stand a much better chance of advancing with Revis in uniform, especially going up twice a year against the likes of Randy Moss and Brandon Marshall. That’s all well and good… but…

Does he really have any contractual leverage? The answer is no, and that’s why Bleacher Fan wins this debate.

It’d be one thing if Revis was entering the fourth year of a four year, $24M deal. He can fall back on the old “sign me or lose me” saying that Bleacher Fan mentioned. Maybe if Revis and his agents held out for a better deal in 2007 he wouldn’t be in this position of making just $1M this season.

What real benefit does Revis gain by holding out? Yes, he might hold his stance and eventually get his way. But at what cost? How long is he going to be out? Is he going to be in good football shape? If he misses any regular season games, will the Jets be too far behind the Patriots and Dolphins to make a run at the AFC East title? What if he’s really stubborn and sits out the entire season? He’ll still have plenty of cash to pay his satellite bill to watch the Jets on TV, but that’s not where he belongs and not where he wants to be. Sitting out any significant time also diminishes any potential legacy he likely wants to build. He should take a page out of Anquan Boldin’s book by coming to camp and letting the situation play out as it is. Boldin openly campaigned for a new deal. While he never got one Arizona, he eventually got one after a trade to Baltimore.

Injuries are certainly always a factor when considering contracts. But Revis is no different than the other players in the league in that regard. That’s why I didn’t necessarily buy into Babe’s argument. The bottom line is that Revis doesn’t have enough leverage. He’s played THREE seasons. He’s not a six or seven year veteran. In three years, Revis will be 28. Anyone want to guess how old Nnamdi Asomugha was when he signed his record deal last year? He was 27 when he signed the deal, but 28 when he took the field after signing the contract. Play out your contract, Darrelle. Your time will come.

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The Jets versus Darrelle Revis Debate

August 17, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Babe Ruthless and Bleacher Fan.

It seems as if there is at least one major holdout for one reason or another every season. This season is no different as there is a rather high profile holdout happening in New York in a standoff between Darrelle Revis and the New York Jets .

With each passing day it’s becoming more and more possible that Revis’ holdout will reach the first part of the regular season, and possibly longer. This is obviously not a needed distraction as the Jets enter the season with Super Bowl aspirations.

Revis, who has elevated himself into arguably the league’s top cornerback the past two seasons, is in the middle of the rookie contract he signed prior to the 2007 season. But he feels he wants more. Does he have a strong case? Or do the Jets have the stronger case?

Who has the stronger case, Darrelle Revis or the New York Jets?

Babe Ruthless will argue that Darrelle Revis has a stronger case while Bleacher Fan will argue in favor of the New York Jets.

The winner will not receive a new contract, as you will be stuck with the contract you agreed to when you came on board TSD. But the winner will get another victory added to their total. That must be worth something.

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The Jets versus Darrelle Revis Debate… The Jets Should Take Off Without Revis

August 17, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Babe Ruthless.

I completely understand Darrelle Revis’ frustration.

Last season he was the top cornerback in the league. He was named to the 2010 AFC Pro Bowl squad, and he was instrumental in helping the New York Jets reach the AFC Championship Game. And after outperforming his comparatively meager rookie contract, he wants more money.

It makes sense that he is looking to Nnamdi Asomugha’s record-setting contract as a benchmark. As the best DB in the league (last season), shouldn’t he be paid as the best?

It also makes sense that he would expect his team to reward his phenomenal performance in 2009 with a restructured deal, especially when you consider that the Jets are one of those teams with legitimate Super Bowl aspirations.

There is just one thing missing, or Revis would have his new contract. Revis has no leverage.

If, perhaps, his contract were expiring this season and the Jets were faced with a “Sign me or lose me” scenario, or if the Jets were in a situation where they were reliant upon Revis as the sole talent on an otherwise depleted roster, he would have better leverage. Unfortunately for Revis, neither scenario is true.

Right now, the only person who suffers if Darrelle Revis doesn’t accept a deal is Darrelle Revis (just ask Joey Galloway about holding out when you have no leverage… you lose!).

Yes, the Jets would be without their top defensive player (arguably their best player overall), but they have somewhat mitigated that already by bringing in Antonio Cromartie, who has demonstrated his own propensity for game-changing plays in the secondary. And while Revis may be the brightest star on the Jets’ roster, he is hardly the only star. Along with Cromartie, the Jets also have Pro Bowler Shaun Ellis, former Pro Bowler Bart Scott, and just for the heck of it, they signed former NFL Defensive MVP Jason Taylor.

This is a defensive squad that would surely benefit from Revis’ remarkable talent, but it hardly would suffer without it. That reality diminishes the “need” factor, and Revis loses much of his bargaining power.

And here is something else to consider – This isn’t the first time that Revis has pulled this stunt. As much as I want to acknowledge Revis’ accomplishments, and to recognize that he has outperformed his contract, a part of me also has to recognize that this contract (which he is now holding out from because he does not feel it fairly compensates him) is the very same one he held out to obtain just three years ago.

As an unproven, unsigned draftee in 2007, Revis held out for a full month during his rookie season because he was adamant about getting this six-year, $36M contract that all of a sudden is unfair.

A contract, whether you are happy with the terms of it today or not, is a legal agreement that requires compliance from ALL parties involved. Revis is completely within his rights to ask the Jets for a renegotiation, but the Jets are also within their rights to deny it. The onus in this situation falls upon Revis to simply step up and accept reality.

Just imagine if the shoe was on the other foot. What if Revis had UNDERperformed, and the Jets insisted on restructuring his contract because he was being unfairly compensated based on his play in a negative manner. And when Revis disagreed with those terms, the Jets just refused to let him into their facility? Revis would be crying that the actions of the Jets were unfair, and demanding that they honor the part of the contract they signed.

In no way am I advocating that Revis should be indebted to the Jets, or that he does not deserve an opportunity to maximize his personal position in the game. But after the lesson that LeBron James has taught us all recently, no team should invest too much in one single player, ESPECIALLY after that player has already demonstrated a complete lack of regard for the organization.

Revis is just the latest in a long line of “Me First” players with no regard for how their actions will impact those around them. He doesn’t care if the team loses without him. In fact, he likely HOPES they lose without him so that he can gain some of that leverage that he so desperately lacks today.

Likewise, he doesn’t care that his team would be financially crippled if they coughed up the dough he is demanding, just so long as he gets his cut. He also doesn’t care that he already selfishly held out once just to get this contract he felt he deserved. Now he wants more. And, according to Darrelle Revis, what Darrelle Revis wants is what should be the most important thing on the Jets to-do list.

Whether he likes it or not, though, it is the New York Jets who hold all the cards. No matter how Revis tries to spin it otherwis he needs the Jets more than they need him. He has timed this power play at the worst possible time (he still has three years left on his contract, and the Jets just shelled out a lot of money to bring in some other top-tier players), and he plays for a team that could benefit from his play, but does not NEED it.

Holding out at this point in his contract will cost him precious playing time, as well as the money he has already once held out for. Instead of being portrayed as the downtrodden and abused victim of the NFL machine, he comes across as a selfish prima donna. I (for one) am looking forward to a Revis-free New York Jets season.

The only person who suffers from Darrelle Revis’ holdout is Darrelle Revis.

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The Jets versus Darrelle Revis Debate… The Shutting Down of a Shutdown Corner

August 17, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Bleacher Fan.

The last thing Americans want to hear about in the middle of the current economic crisis is a celebrity demanding more money, but that is not stopping Jets’ cornerback Darrelle Revis from trying to negotiate a new contract with the team. The reasons why such a seemingly self-centered move provokes disgust are obvious. He is a grown man that makes a seven-figure salary to play a game for a living, and makes a public spectacle of demanding more money. It is exceedingly easy to slander Revis’ name.

But is it right?

This season, Revis is entering the fourth year of his six-year rookie contract. Despite becoming arguably the most dominant cornerback in the NFL, he is not being compensated like it. Revis’ contributions to the vaunted Jets defense helped carry the team to a deep playoff run last year, but in 2010 he figures to make just $1M. While that is certainly an exorbitant amount of money to the average person, it really does not accurately reflect Revis’ value to his team. He feels that he contributes far more than his pay reflects—a theme many can relate to—and he is actually going to do something about it.

Can you really blame him for that? Is there fault in trying to do what is best for yourself and your family?

It may not sit well with society’s work ethic and the public’s sense of commitment, but at the end of the day Revis is just trying to get the best deal he can. While I don’t expect anyone to be sympathetic to the amount of money he is asking for, his position is one with which many can relate—he is more valuable than his salary reflects. He is one of the best defenders in the NFL, and he simply wants to be paid like it.

People have blamed everyone from Revis himself to Al Davis (who last year paid Nnamdi Asomugha $45.3 million), but I really think it is the Jets who are to blame. They gave into Revis’ rookie holdout demands, and now that he has proven he is even better they want him to stick to a deal he has clearly out grown. It won’t work. The Jets are going to have to come up with the cash or deal with Revis sitting out, something he seems more than prepared to do. No one is forcing New York to give him a new deal but the lack of Revis’ talent on the field each Sunday really has them between a rock and a hard place. Heck, even Mr. Jet Joe Namath sides with the kid. Revis has to have a point if this makes sense to everyone but the Jets.

Darrelle Revis knows that no matter how valuable you might seem to a team now, in the NFL things can change in an instant. This concept was made all too real for Revis when he watched just such a scenario play out over the past season and offseason with his friend and former teammate Leon Washington. Over the past four years, the former Jets running back had consistently contributed to the New York offense by serving in a variety of roles. Last season, Washington broke camp as the primary backup to Thomas Jones, but also proved valuable returning kicks, catching passes, and serving as a change-of-pace back for New York. With the departure of aging veteran Thomas Jones to free agency imminent, it appeared that Washington and sophomore Shonn Green would lead Gang Green’s ground attack for the foreseeable future, but all that came to a screeching halt with an inopportune injury.

During a week seven matchup with the Oakland Raiders, Washington suffered a nasty compound fracture to his fibula, and just like that his value shattered as quickly as his bone. The season ending injury sidelined Washington during the final year of his contract, essentially robbing him of any leverage he had on the free agent market. Adding insult to injury is the fact that Washington tried unsuccessfully to negotiate a long term deal before the 2009 season. So while recovering from a major injury without a long term deal, Washington tested free agency and found very little interest. He came crawling, or more appropriately limping back to the Jets, with a one year, $1.75M deal, which didn’t last long. The Jets turned right around and made a draft-day deal with the Seahawks for Washington. In just a short amount of time Washington went from being a fan favorite on the rise in New York to being traded for a seventh-round pick and being buried on the depth chart of a weak team.

The memory of how quickly Washington’s value dropped surely weighs heavily on Revis’ mind. While Revis might be the most valuable defensive player on the Jets, he is always just one play away from irrelevance. As a professional football player Revis has a limited time to make all the money he can. Any given Sunday could be his last, and the even sadder truth is any given down could leave him with an injury that ends his career or leaves him paralyzed. He has to earn all the money he can now. If that means he has to make opportunities for himself with unpopular actions then so be it. But before you judge him, ask yourself if you would do any different if it were your livelihood and family’s future at stake? I think an honest person would admit that although Revis’ actions maybe selfish, they are also understandable.

Revis deserves the money for the product he puts on the field week in and week out. Nobody is forcing the Jets to pay him more, but in the end it is going to be awfully hard to explain to the New York fans why they didn’t come up with the extra green, should the decision cost them the playoffs.

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The 2010 NFL QB with the Most To Prove Debate… Bradford Faces Uncommon Pressure, Stigma

August 16, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Optimist Prime and Loyal Homer.

Of course veterans, potential draft washouts, and backups have a lot to prove as the NFL pre-season enters week two. These are the prototypical personalities and stories that most sports blogs and Web sites devote pixels to.

But those are easy, with all due respect to my colleagues, who both make interesting arguments.

The tough argument to make is how a brand spankin’ new rookie has the most to prove out of any of the usual suspects. Yet, with $50M of guaranteed money, rookie Sam Bradford has now become the highest paid quarterback in the league. In fact, his six year, $78M deal is huge, especially considering it can grow to as much as $86M with incentives. The deal could be worth as much as $14M more than the deal Matthew Stafford made as last year’s number one overall pick in the draft.

Rookies always have a lot of pressure, but nothing like the pressure felt by the one shaking Roger Goodell’s hand, holding a number one jersey. Those guys must be brilliant from the first snap in training camp through the last snap in a surprisingly productive season. Fans must be happy, or they will boo. Coaches must be happy because it can be tempting to teach a rookie the proper clipboard holding technique.

Every bad throw – even in training camp – gets scrutinized. Every mishandled snap calls a player’s draft status into question. The pressure does not alleviate as the season progresses, either. Short of winning a Super Bowl as a rookie, there is very little that number one overall draft picks can do to win the adoring favor of hometown fans. As interceptions and losses pile up, seats empty out. Sure, other players and coaches sometimes get fingers pointed at them. But it is also the time when the general manager’s job security comes into to question. And, in the name of American trickledown economics, the GM automatically calls the coach’s ability into question. A poorly performing number one overall pick has consequences. Those consequences are felt throughout the entire organization.

Plus, Bradford already enters the NFL will plenty of criticism for a number one overall, highly successful, Heisman Trophy winning quarterback. Bradford must prove early on in his professional career that he is not worthy of the “system quarterback” label that has been assigned to him. In college Bradford would get the play call for the sideline, and then endure the demeaning process of calling an initial cadence, looking back to the sidelines for a potential audible, and then executing on what the coaches communicated.

Smart fans know that it takes talent to execute on those coaching directives as well as Bradford has done. Smart fans also know, however, that number one quarterbacks are team leader – rookie or not. Therefore, any type of process that undermines their authority – such as gaping at the sidelines after a dummy cadence in hopes of coaching direction – does not exactly instill faith in the folks on the team that are supposed to be following him.

Bradford, now not only has to prove his ability to compete at the professional level, he must also prove he can lead. The dual talents a quarterback must have are exactly why the position is so difficult to do well. Leadership will likely grow because, after all, Bradford HAS to tell the other players what to do. But talent could be trickier. Bradford has to prove to his teammates that he is good when it counts – when the designed play breaks down and everyone must adjust. Whether he likes it or not, the stigma of being a doer instead of a thinker is following him because of the system he played in while in college and the reduced field time he saw as an injured player last season.

I have faith in Bradford. While I am not a Rams fan, I am a Sports Geek. Bradford seem to have tremendous ability that certainly warranted a number one pick. But, is he better than Peyton Manning. Is he better than Tom Brady? Those may sound like bizarre questions, but they are valid since Bradford is now getting paid more money than those two marquee, established, legend-in-the-making quarterbacks.

Bradford feels pressure to perform for another important reason. The Rams sucked last season. Bad. At first glance it seems like tossing more than 12 touchdowns – the combined output from the trio of quarterbacks that graced the once boastful turf in St. Louis – will be enough to warrant a Bradford statue at the entrance to Bradford Lane in the newly renamed Bradford, Missouri. But, if Bradford is unable to make an impact on the team that is significantly better than what the team’s quarterback accomplished last season, he will be booed right to the bench.

Between the huge bucks Bradford is making, the “like-it-or-not” stigma, and the massive rookie pressure, Sam Bradford has more to prove in the 2010 season than any other quarterback in the league. If he fails, he’s the next Ryan Leaf.

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The 2010 NFL QB with the Most To Prove Debate… Alex Smith Must Prove He Is A Winner

August 16, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Optimist Prime and Sports Geek.

After a full slate of NFL preseason games this past weekend, it is pretty obvious that the NFL season is quickly approaching! Isn’t that exciting? It is going to a great football season and a great fall here at TSD! We kicked off our NFL debates a couple of weeks ago, and we are continuing that trend today.

Which quarterback has the most to prove to players, coaches, fans, or in this case to Loyal Homer? A couple immediately came to mind, but there is one guy who stands out when considering that question – Alex Smith.

Most of you know Alex Smith’s background as a quarterback. He parlayed an outstanding season at Utah in Urban Meyer’s offense to become the first overall draft pick in the 2005 NFL Draft. Since then, it has been a disappointing career for the most part. He is certainly not a bust of Ryan Leaf proportions, but when you have thrown more interceptions than touchdowns, it is hard to say you are a “proven” quarterback in the league.

Injuries and seemingly a new offensive coordinator every year have arguably prevented Smith’s growth, but that is not to say he hasn’t been given a fair shot to succeed, given that he has battled journeymen like Shaun Hill and J.T. O’Sullivan for playing time. This year, however, the floor is completely his.

The San Francisco 49ers appear to be a trendy pick to win the NFC West, especially with the Arizona Cardinals taking a step or two back now Matt Leinart (rather than Kurt Warner) is under center. Whether or not the 49ers reach that goal of winning the division depends LARGELY on the play of Smith at quarterback.

Smith does have his share of supporters, who are adamant that he is the guy to take the 49ers to the next level. They point to the fact that tight end Vernon Davis is an up and coming star at the tight end position, and that he and Smith started to develop quite the rapport last season, which is certainly true. Smith played well during the last part of the 2009 season, and he ended up throwing 18 touchdowns and completed a career high 60.5% of his passes. He also had his first ever 300-yard passing game.

But for the first time since 2007, Smith enters the season as “The Guy”, as there is no position battle in training camp. He is firmly entrenched as the starter, with backup David Carr posing no serious threat to him. He has got to be able to produce on the field, though.

Head coach Mike Singletary is a perfectionist and had publicly said that he wants winners on his team (Right Vernon Davis?), and so Smith needs to keep building on the success he had during the latter part of last season. Otherwise, he is going to have the coaches, players, fans, and Loyal Homer on his case!


The 2010 NFL QB with the Most To Prove Debate… Defining Donovan McNabb’s Legacy

August 16, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Sports Geek.

This is a make or break season for Donovan McNabb. That sounds like a crazy thing to say about a guy whose team has made the playoffs eight of the last ten years and has won a playoff game in seven of those eight seasons. It is not crazy when you realize that McNabb will not be donning the familiar green #5 of the Philadelphia Eagles this season. Instead, he will wear #5 for their hated division rival, the Washington Redskins. It seems curious to rank such a successful player as the NFL quarterback with the most to prove, but from my vantage point as Optimist Prime, I think he is the perfect case study.

In all my years of watching football, I am not sure that I can think of a more polarizing quarterback than McNabb. Even though he has a 10-8 career playoff record, has been to five conference championship games, and one Super Bowl, the general football fan reaction to McNabb’s name is “That is the guy who choked in the Super Bowl” or “That is the guy who can’t win the big one.” Unfortunately, that is a reputation that stays with you until you do win the big one, even though your game may not have changed from before your big win to afterwards. The rap in Philly was always that Westbrook was the real weapon, or that McNabb just rode the coattails of the swarming, blitzing defense. Although the QB position in the NFL generally receives far too much of the credit and blame for a team’s success or failure, McNabb’s Philadelphia situation was more like receiving most of the blame for failure and just a dash of credit for success.

In an interesting contrast, while the general fan reaction is less positive on McNabb, the general media impression of him is quite positive. Tune into an ESPN season preview show and the commentators will generally laud his leadership qualities, his improvisation in the pocket, and his mental fortitude to play through a difficult fan situation in Philadelphia. Read a McNabb column written anywhere other than Philadelphia and you will generally read compliments regarding his graceful handling of the T.O. situation or various personnel move rumors over the years.

In my mind, this contrast between public opinion and media opinion is what makes this season so critical for McNabb’s legacy in the National Football League (in case Ron Jaworski is reading this, I want to make sure I sound out National Football League for the remainder of this post). McNabb’s move to the Skins is arguably the most high profile move of the offseason, and the national media spotlight will be on him. Combining national attention with a Washington fan base that is desperate for winning football after spending the last several months counting days between Strasburg starts and watching the Capitals flame out in the first round of the playoffs, the pressure on him may not have that biting Philly edge, but it will be intense.

The line between saint and sinner for McNabb this year is quite small. He turns 34 in November, and if he posts a couple of mediocre seasons in Washington I think the best case memory that football fans will have of him is that he was football’s Karl Malone. His worst case is that they will ignore his 32,873 career yards and 2.16-to-1 touchdown to interception ratio, and label him a choker who needed a championship defense to be successful.

However, if he has a season where he throws for 3,500 yards and leads the Skins to a playoff berth, he will be lauded locally and praised nationally. The Redskins are not expected to light the league on fire this year. Their success – and the national impression of McNabb – rides on his right arm this season. I cannot think of a quarterback with a greater chance to clarify his legacy in 2010 than Donovan McNabb.

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