IrishViking wrote:I get the interest Jim, But that is why we have coaches. Because we cant have 3 million jim's coaching from the sidelines.
I'm not trying to coach, just wishing we had more information and I'd say what I'm asking is why we have
reporters, not coaches. They're supposed to ask the questions that answer our questions. Unfortunately, I get the impression there's something akin to a moratorium on discussing details related this subject. After all, a first round draft pick has been sitting on the bench all year while the offense struggled and there's been barely a whisper about it from the press.
For me its as Simple as; I trust Zimmer and Patterson isn't on the field, therefore, he shouldn't be on the field.
There is some stuff you will never be privy to unless you come up with 300 million to invest in the Vikings.
I'm workin' on it... meanwhile, I'm curious by nature.
fiestavike wrote:Thanks, I appreciate the clarification.
I enjoyed your summation. I'm not personally interested in delving too far into the unknown aspects. I'm more of less content to agree with Zimmer that "At the end of the day, it's really up to him" whether thats mental and/or physical.
It sounds like Seamus feels similarly. I just don't have that level of confidence in Zimmer's judgment yet, especially when it comes to offense because another aspect of the team I'm unclear about it is just how much autonomy Turner has been given with that unit.
It indicates motivation as the underlying problem in my view.
That's one way to interpret it but I don't think it's the only way. For example, ""At the end of the day, it's really up to him" could just as easily mean it's up to Patterson to achieve whatever standard has been set for him. It may have nothing to do with his motivation or effort to achieve that standard, just results.
As far as what it indicates that a talented player is kept off the field, I view it as a huge positive about the standards of the coaching staff and the respect they have for their players and their team who are there grinding away in the classroom AND on the practice field. To me trying to milk Patterson's athleticism for a big play here or there without holding him to the same standards is taking the quick buck at the expense of the culture required to build a championship team.
Yes, you've said that before and it strikes me as a perspective rooted in confidence in the head coach's judgment (and an assumed lack of effort on Patterson's part). Keeping a talented player off the field can just as easily be indicative of poor judgment or mismanagement.