conclusions: 343-544, 63.1%, 3,754 yards, 24 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 6.9 Y/A, 87.4 passer rating, 51 sacks, 8.6% sacked per dropback --third best season in Bears history (yards) and 5th in TDs.
conclusions: 343-544, 63.1%, 3,754 yards, 24 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 6.9 Y/A, 87.4 passer rating, 51 sacks, 8.6% sacked per dropback --third best season in Bears history (yards) and 5th in TDs.
I liked that article. At least the writer had a believable methodology. While nobody know how this will play out with Caleb's first Bears season (and the writer admits this), I could see something like that. Stroud went 9-6 during his rookie season. But he is an aberration for rookie QB's. Stroud's rookie-season stat line is amazing. He ranked in the top 10 in almost every major passing stat category. But I could see Caleb getting 8 or 9 wins too.
conclusions: 343-544, 63.1%, 3,754 yards, 24 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, 6.9 Y/A, 87.4 passer rating, 51 sacks, 8.6% sacked per dropback --third best season in Bears history (yards) and 5th in TDs.
I liked that article. At least the writer had a believable methodology. While nobody know how this will play out with Caleb's first Bears season (and the writer admits this), I could see something like that. Stroud went 9-6 during his rookie season. But he is an aberration for rookie QB's. Stroud's rookie-season stat line is amazing. He ranked in the top 10 in almost every major passing stat category. But I could see Caleb getting 8 or 9 wins too.
I like the work he did here, and definitely like that he liked Williams (assuming we take him). but for coming up with his own QB test methodology earns him an honorary MSU degree
Post by dachuckster on Mar 30, 2024 13:27:39 GMT -6
I just saw a really interesting YT videoon Caleb. It is the guy who does all the Swift Sports stuff along with Adam Mason talking about Caleb Williams, his performance on the 2022 and 2023 seasons and other QBs in the draft.
I was really surprised by their discussion about how the USC coaching may have been the biggest reason in the fall off on CW's performance from year to year. That discussion is about 14:00 through 19:00 in the video.
I just saw a really interesting YT videoon Caleb. It is the guy who does all the Swift Sports stuff along with Adam Mason talking about Caleb Williams, his performance on the 2022 and 2023 seasons and other QBs in the draft.
I was really surprised by their discussion about how the USC coaching may have been the biggest reason in the fall off on CW's performance from year to year. That discussion is about 14:00 through 19:00 in the video.
The play calling is SUCH a huge part in the success of the QB and the team.
The draft can't come soon enough. These articles are so bad. Spencer Rattler... his draft profile has him evaluated as "an average backup or special teams player" LINK He has just "led" football powerhouse South Carolina to a 5-7 season:
Struggles to consistently process efficient reads and opportunities. Eyes float to and stay with primary receiver even against tight coverage. Lacks NFL drive velocity, and deep balls have no late life on them. Leaves too many in-breaking throws on receiver's back hip. Creates too much commotion for his receivers between the hashes. Muscle and accuracy on move throws are below average. Defaults into back-leg throws when pressure begins to mount.
The draft can't come soon enough. These articles are so bad. Spencer Rattler... his draft profile has him evaluated as "an average backup or special teams player" LINK He has just "led" football powerhouse South Carolina to a 5-7 season:
Struggles to consistently process efficient reads and opportunities. Eyes float to and stay with primary receiver even against tight coverage. Lacks NFL drive velocity, and deep balls have no late life on them. Leaves too many in-breaking throws on receiver's back hip. Creates too much commotion for his receivers between the hashes. Muscle and accuracy on move throws are below average. Defaults into back-leg throws when pressure begins to mount.
Well, why the hell isn't he already on the team then?
The draft can't come soon enough. These articles are so bad. Spencer Rattler... his draft profile has him evaluated as "an average backup or special teams player" LINK He has just "led" football powerhouse South Carolina to a 5-7 season:
Struggles to consistently process efficient reads and opportunities. Eyes float to and stay with primary receiver even against tight coverage. Lacks NFL drive velocity, and deep balls have no late life on them. Leaves too many in-breaking throws on receiver's back hip. Creates too much commotion for his receivers between the hashes. Muscle and accuracy on move throws are below average. Defaults into back-leg throws when pressure begins to mount.
Well, why the hell isn't he already on the team then?
That rascal, Poles is gonna draft him at #1. I just feel it in my bones. I suspect that the entire scouting department will be focusing on YouTube podcasts and uncover these "hidden gems" that no other NFL team will notice.
I just saw a really interesting YT videoon Caleb. It is the guy who does all the Swift Sports stuff along with Adam Mason talking about Caleb Williams, his performance on the 2022 and 2023 seasons and other QBs in the draft.
I was really surprised by their discussion about how the USC coaching may have been the biggest reason in the fall off on CW's performance from year to year. That discussion is about 14:00 through 19:00 in the video.
The play calling is SUCH a huge part in the success of the QB and the team.
Later on in that same video they end up talking about Harbaugh as a play caller and why his coaching/play calling is instrumental in why JJ MCarthy's stock is rising now.