Sarcasm is so unappreciated on the interwebs.
Nonetheless, the point was that the system is flawed. Oldfan's system weights running ability far to much over the QBs primary job: throwing the football. If the system attached weights to some of the criteria that would give more importance to throwing and less to running then it would be a much more effective system to gauge physical talent for QBs.
Also, I dont know where you are getting the idea that I factored mental prowess into Tebow's ranking.
"Oh, you hate your job? Why didn't you say so? There's a support group for that. It's called EVERYBODY, and they meet at the bar." ~ George Carlin
This has been covered ad nuaseum in the thread. OF admitted that there might be a way to put more weight on the throwing aspects for a QB because as you point out a RB can score off the charts in the runnig aspects and still come up with a decent score (double digit anyway).
I def see your point and it's well made.
OF has proclaimed several head-scratchers on ES, so I'll add this to the list that has me laughing:
1- Norv Turner is a better head coach than Mike Shanahan
2- Jim Zorn's 2008 offense was top-10 (according to his subjective rankings)
3- Tom Brady is overrated.![]()
Being a Redskins fan prepares you for life.
Vinny Cerrato believes he gave Jim Zorn a roster that can make the playoffs. A playoff kicker doesn't miss that kick. A playoff safety doesn't bite multiple times by a double move in the same game.Originally Posted by suze109
Oh, my apologies. I didn't realize you were just talkig about pass pro. Thought you were discussing the whole process.
On that note, another variable would have to be number of rushers. A line will perform better against three rushers than against four, and do on. So we would have to break it down by number of rushers also.
Expanding even further, we would have to either count any RBs or TEs who stay in and block in pass pro, or try to isolate their contributions and ignore them - example: a defense rushes six, and the play calls for a RB to stay in and block. The OL allows a free rusher, but the RB picks him up, which allows the QB to get to his drop in the ideal time. Do you count that block by the RB or remove him and grade it as a hurry/sack?
Last edited by Hitman21ST; November-20th-2012 at 10:08 AM.
OLB Coach for the 3x State Champs: 2001, 2002, 2008 Atlantic Shores Seahawks2012 Final Record: 2-9
I didn't say you did. I was making the point that Brady's mental prowess and pocket passer ability make him better than Tebow. I can't measure that he's smarter than Tebow, though, so it's pure opinion on my end. But because the system doesn't take that into consideration, it's impossible to predict his mental impact on the system, therefore, it comes down to physical fit.
And although you grade Tebow out higher than OF did Brady, OF's passing grades were higher for Brady than yours for Tebow. Which still makes Brady a better fit in the Patriot offense.
Earlier in this thread, I thought the first poster to raise this objection had a valid point. After further review, I realized that I have four passing categories and two mobility categories. That means that the weight of the scoring is 4-2. pass-run. Two-thirds to passing, one-third to running/play extension. If anything, that ratio short changes the athlete QBs.
Currently, RG3's runs alone are one-third of his pass attempts.
Last edited by Oldfan; November-20th-2012 at 10:09 AM.
Then shouldn't that ratio fit ? 2-1 seems pretty fair, because if it were closer to even, that would unfairly give athletic QBs an advantage. If you lend equal weight, then his running ability is disproportionately graded because you're lessening the importance of passing ability.
---------- Post added November-20th-2012 at 11:18 AM ----------
Time is affected by number of pass rushers though. A three man rush isn't going to be able to get to the QB as quick as a four or five man.
OLB Coach for the 3x State Champs: 2001, 2002, 2008 Atlantic Shores Seahawks2012 Final Record: 2-9
OLB Coach for the 3x State Champs: 2001, 2002, 2008 Atlantic Shores Seahawks2012 Final Record: 2-9
It makes no difference whether you consider one category of your system as technically a 'passing' or 'running' category because the final scores are still disproportionately in favor of running QBs. Running is overvalued no matter how much you make excuses that it's not. If you truly want to make this a system that values passing over running then you need to add more passing categories or remove/combine the extending plays and run threat category. It's arithmetic, not semantics.
"Oh, you hate your job? Why didn't you say so? There's a support group for that. It's called EVERYBODY, and they meet at the bar." ~ George Carlin
Or just separate them and add them if your team values running. Although I'd argue that "extending the play" isn't a running category. So it's really 5:1 ratio of pass to run.
But I think it's as simple as removing the "run threat" category for a system that doesn't value it. *shrug*
Appreciate it. To clarify, my issue wasn't with the grade he gave out, but rather with his thought process behind the grade.
If he came out and said he developed a new system of math, and in it 2+2=5, I would ask for an explanation into his process before I came out and accepted it. That's the same principle I'm working with here. It sounds good, but I'm confused about his grading criteria since his grades give Brady and Skelton the same grade in that category.
I'm digressing though. The arm/leg ratio fits the system
OLB Coach for the 3x State Champs: 2001, 2002, 2008 Atlantic Shores Seahawks2012 Final Record: 2-9
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