Other than last season, I'd like to see stats on that before conceding that point. We would need to compare drops from each QB over the given time period. Even if Bradford's receivers have dropped 20% more balls per season than Bridgewater's, the number across 158 more passes is statistically insignificant. I mean, we're maybe talking about 5-10 more dropped passes by Bradford's receivers than Teddy's. In the grand scheme of things, that's minuscule.SP1966 wrote:There is more to completion percentage than throwing an accurate pass. The receiver on the other end has to catch it, and Bradford's receivers have been among the worst in terms of drops.
quote][Play calling and defense also play into it as a poorly coached team, which describes all team Bradford has played for will put his QB in position of having to come from behind often which favors the defense and makes it harder on a QB.[/quote]
Excuse me? Playing from behind allows a QB in this situation more opportunities to rack up passing attempts and "free" yards with defenses often playing "soft" in the 4th quarter to prevent the big play. How often did we see Blake Bortles last season rack up monster fantasy points in the 4th quarter directly related to this?
Teddy has consistently played behind the worst pass-blocking line in the league.dead_poet wrote:Bradford hasn't played behind a quality line in his six years
Kyle Rudolph 2015: 49 receptions; 495 yards; 5 TDshasn't had the benefit of the running game that Teddy did last year and hasn't played with a receiver/tight end of the quality that Diggs/Rudolph provided Teddy.
Zach Ertz 2015: 75 receptions; 853 yards; 2 TDs
Stefon Diggs 2015: 52 receptions; 720 yards; 4 TDs (not active for the first three weeks)
Jordan Matthews 2015: 85 receptions; 997 yards; 8 TDs
Next.
I disagree. He'd be forced to throw more and, from what we've seen, he's a more accurate QB. Chances are his stats over that same time period would've been on par or better. But we'll never know, obviously.Put Teddy on those Rams teams, combined with having to learn a new offensive system each season and there is NO WAY IN HELL he runs away with anything.
I'm not convinced at their respective third seasons that arm strength was the only difference.dead_poet wrote:All else being equal the big arm is the difference maker.
I disagree. And it's also the responsibility of the offensive coordinator to play to the strengths of his offense. Teddy was at a severe disadvantage last season with Norv calling some of the highest percentage of 5 and 7-step dropbacks with our league-worst pass-blocking line.Yeppers! I'm not here to bash Teddy as I had high hopes for him, but IMO situation + talent = success. Teddy has talent but he's no a good fit for Norv's offense(read siutation) and Bradford absolutely is!
One could argue Sam's performances to date have been very "game manager" like in many ways. I will agree, again, that Bradford (today) is probably a better QB than Teddy is (today, excluding the injury). QBs take time to develop and Bradford wasn't at his current level in his second year either. I refuse to give up on Teddy when I think his ceiling is higher than what his 2015 showed.I hope Teddy comes back and has a great career, but I'd rather watch a guy like Bradford play the next 5 years than watch a game manager.