Funkytown wrote:It's not that it doesn't sink in, it's just not enough to change my mind. As someone said, most people in the NFL work hard and put in extra work from time to time. So? Maybe Ponder did that, but I expected more, especially since he was struggling so much. And these few quotes are what you showed me the last time. If his work ethic is so great, you'd hear about it constantly--not just a few quotes from people who were likely asked specifically about Ponder's progression and such.
You'd hear about it constantly from whom? The people who work with him (like his offensive coordinator and teammates) are the people in the best position to observe his work habits and you're choosing to dismiss what they said.
What are they supposed to say? You really think they are going to call out their quarterback even if they feel like he could do more? I highly doubt that.
By that logic, there's no reason to believe what we're hearing about Bridgewater either. What are his new coach, old coach, teammates, GM,
supposed to say?
Just generally speaking, I was never impressed with Ponder's work ethic.
It seems like you've just chosen a position and chosen to ignore testimony to the contrary. You keep talking about players but it was Bill Musgrave, Ponder's offensive coordinator, who explicitly stated that Ponder was "fully invested", was at the facility to work "early in the morning and late at night", etc. Who would know better than his coach?
Here's more evidence:
Coach Frazier attributes much of Christian's improvement over the past few weeks to his renewed work ethic and extra film study that he has put in, both with quarterbacks coach Craig Johnson and offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave.
From that moment on, Ponder attacked his craft with a rekindled passion and fervor. He started with decision making. "I can't force things that aren't there," he said. Then he moved on to building a better rapport with his receivers. Extra passes before practices, extra passes after. On the field early before the games and conversing on the sidelines during. All these things led Christian to better get in-sync with his receiving corps.
Read more:
http://www.kfan.com/onair/vikings-blog- ... z32N7ZIfi5
To me, it seems pretty obvious that Bridgewater's work ethic is on another level.
You're obviously choosing to believe reports about his work ethic because you
want to believe them and choosing to ignore virtually the same information about Ponder because, apparently, you don't want to believe it or haven't heard enough members of the media talking about it, as if they would be in a better position to know than the people he works with every day. Heck, when the media talks about a player's work ethic, who do you think they get that information from in the first place?
You might as well just do this:
