Hey Devante Parker pre draft haters.....

Discussion in 'Miami Dolphins Forum' started by magicap, May 26, 2015.

  1. ckparrothead

    ckparrothead Draft Forum Moderator Luxury Box

    79,599
    159,162
    113
    Dec 1, 2007
    That narrative may have been media driven. I had heard for a long time that Scott McCloughan preferred Alex Smith and it came out later that Mike Nolan (head coach at the time) was really turned off by Rodgers' interviews.

    Which is one of the points of evidence that leads me to question how much importance we should put on "intangibles". Ultimately what matters most is whether a guy can play or not.
     
    CashInFist likes this.
  2. CashInFist

    CashInFist Well-Known Member

    10,069
    2,624
    113
    Nov 30, 2007
    West Virginia
    I remember hearing that Rodgers was very abrasive in his interviews, as well. But I agree...can he BALL??
     
  3. ckparrothead

    ckparrothead Draft Forum Moderator Luxury Box

    79,599
    159,162
    113
    Dec 1, 2007
    I should amend that and say what matters is whether a guy can play or not and whether or not he's committed to being the best and working for it. I agree with evaluating intangibles to the extent that they cover those aspects of a player: commitment and work ethic. But I question when you start to ding a guy because you felt he was "abrasive".

    Here is another great example of when I think the process goes too far:

    http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/49ers-Shrink-Takes-Stafford-Off-Draft-Board-.html

    Mike Singletary and the 49ers took Matt Stafford off their draft board because they had him do a session with their team psychologist and Stafford refused to talk about his parents' divorce.

    Yeah. That happened. Good luck coaching...well, whatever the hell it is you're coaching nowadays, Mike Singletary.
     
    CashInFist and Fin D like this.
  4. byroan

    byroan Giggity Staff Member Administrator Luxury Box

    28,944
    49,385
    113
    Nov 25, 2007
    NC
    But did anyone go to his birthday party?
     
    Brasfin and CashInFist like this.
  5. CashInFist

    CashInFist Well-Known Member

    10,069
    2,624
    113
    Nov 30, 2007
    West Virginia
    I looked for a Peter Brady birthday party YouTube video to post, but couldn't find one. :lol:
     
  6. Pandarilla

    Pandarilla Purist Emeritus

    14,282
    5,005
    113
    Sep 10, 2009
    Boone, NC
    I pushed hard for Gurley, but not over Parker.

    There's some Michael Irvin toughness to him, mixed with Lynn Swann-like grace.

    He gonna be better than Chambers.

    I don't know, I've never seen a dude like this, though...
     
  7. djphinfan

    djphinfan Season Ticket Holder Club Member

    117,252
    74,925
    113
    Dec 20, 2007
    yeah he's better than chambers, bigger, better...I think he's pretty close to aj green.
     
  8. Clark Kent

    Clark Kent Fighter of the Nightman

    8,560
    4,133
    113
    May 9, 2008
    My memory is a bit different. I remember Alex Smith and Rodgers being neck and neck until their pro days. I remember stories about Alex Smith getting a round of applause from all the attendees, which apparently, was unheard of. Then came the hyperbole about the best pro day ever (which seemingly occurs every year now). From that point on, Alex Smith was pretty certain to go #1 overall. Then, that put us in a position for Rodgers, who had a good pro day, but not a great one. And it raised questions. As the draft drew closer, Aaron Rodgers stock was seemingly falling.

    1). Rumored attitude issues during interviews. In truth, Rodgers doesn't really hide his... swagger.

    2). Robotic throwing motion and some mechanics issues that some believed limited his ability to make every throw. Related to his pro day results. Jeff Tedford really did goof up his throwing motion, so this was true IMO. It took Rodgers awhile to rebuild his mechanics in GB.

    3). Jeff Tedford had produced two mega busts in Smith and Harrington, and there was concern Rodgers was next in line. In truth, neither Smith or Harrington were very well prepared for the NFL, so this one may have merit. The #2 overall pick doesn't usually sit three years and learn, as Rodgers did behind Favre.
     
  9. Fin D

    Fin D Sigh

    72,252
    43,684
    113
    Nov 27, 2007
    Yeah, really the Teford thing was #1 of what everyone was talking about. "Rodgers is great, BUT he's a Tedford product........"
     
  10. rafael

    rafael Well-Known Member

    27,364
    31,261
    113
    Apr 6, 2008
    It was for me. So much of evaluation is translating what the prospect did in college to the pros and he was difficult to do that with. Everything seemed so robotic to me. That's what all the Tedford products looked like. Looking at him now, Rodgers seems so natural, but that's not what he was coming out. I really believe that if he'd been drafted by Miami and forced to play immediately that he would have failed here. I think he benefited greatly from that time on the bench where he had time to let things become second nature with being dissected by the fans and media every week.
     
    Fin D, Pandarilla and Clark Kent like this.
  11. djphinfan

    djphinfan Season Ticket Holder Club Member

    117,252
    74,925
    113
    Dec 20, 2007
    damn your good rafs.
     
  12. VanDolPhan

    VanDolPhan Club member Club Member

    13,172
    9,150
    113
    Nov 26, 2007
    Hamilton, Ontario Canada
    Yup he was very very lucky to not have to go to a sucky team forced to play him early. Wouldn't have worked out.
     
  13. CashInFist

    CashInFist Well-Known Member

    10,069
    2,624
    113
    Nov 30, 2007
    West Virginia
    I disagree. He ABSOLUTELY benefited from sitting behind Brett Favre for 3 years. But, he had/has that attitude like all the great ones do. He doesn't know how to fail...


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     
  14. Clark Kent

    Clark Kent Fighter of the Nightman

    8,560
    4,133
    113
    May 9, 2008
    I've heard the same said about a lot of players. Tim Tebow, Mr. Intangibles comes to mind immediately. Steve Young was a failure until Bill Walsh untapped his potential in his WCO. The list could go on and on. Green Bay was the perfect spot for Rodgers. And Mike McCarthy deserves a lot of credit for rebuilding Rodgers from a mechanical standpoint. Not to mention he's played with a lot of talent in Green Bay from the beginning. A lot of favorable things broke his way, and that can't be ignored. Let's say Rodgers is traded to Oakland in 2007. Does Aaron Rodgers still succeed as the Raiders organization continues to define ineptitude? Hard to say. Same could be said for a lot of players throughout NFL history. Serendipity is a variable that does exist, IMO.
     
    Fin D likes this.
  15. CashInFist

    CashInFist Well-Known Member

    10,069
    2,624
    113
    Nov 30, 2007
    West Virginia
    I never liked Tim Tebow. I even got into a mild argument at work with one of my co-workers about it before he was drafted. I've never been wrong about a QB in the draft. I'm not great at evaluating every position, but QB is my strong suit.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     
  16. jdang307

    jdang307 Season Ticket Holder Club Member

    39,159
    21,798
    113
    Nov 29, 2007
    San Diego
    Why is a guy like Aaron Rodgers lucky to go to a system and sit, meanwhile Tanny started right away and improved. What made Rodgers likely to fail if he started right away, and Tanny someone who benefits from starting right away.

    2005 is a team that had Chris Chambers, Marty Booker, Randy McMichael, Ricky Williams and Wes Welker. Is that worse than having Hartline your #1 WR? Is Tanny a better talent coming out than Rodgers?
     
    CashInFist likes this.
  17. CashInFist

    CashInFist Well-Known Member

    10,069
    2,624
    113
    Nov 30, 2007
    West Virginia
    Are we starting the Rodgers vs Tannehill argument all over again? LOL
     
  18. Fin D

    Fin D Sigh

    72,252
    43,684
    113
    Nov 27, 2007
    Tannehill came in to the EXACT same system he played in college. But he too would have benefitted sitting a few years behind a HoF QB.
     
    resnor likes this.
  19. jdang307

    jdang307 Season Ticket Holder Club Member

    39,159
    21,798
    113
    Nov 29, 2007
    San Diego
    Yes it's the exact system but we already said he only started 18 games even in College, and now it's NFL quality defenders. I'm not saying Tanny was put in the wrong situation, I'm questioning why do we assume Rodgers would have turned into Joey Harrington if forced to start right away. If we're going to wipe 3 years away when comparing, is 3 years sitting on the bench behind a HOF QB better than 3 years of running it against live bullets? I would think the latter is always going to be beneficial unless the player in question is mentally weak. And we know Rodgers isn't that.

    If Derek Carr improves this year we'll know that hypothesis is BS because I don't think there has been a worse situation in the history of the NFL than the one he was placed in last year. That team was terrible with terrible coaching decisions to boot. He had decent blocking but they kept the best runner on the bench and they just got rid of their #1 WR that's how bad that team was.
     
  20. Pauly

    Pauly Season Ticket Holder

    3,721
    3,782
    113
    Nov 29, 2007
    Intangibles (noun) A way to say that a player is superior (or inferior) to his actual level of production based on something you are unable to describe, quantify or show any correlation to reality. Used by sportswriters to sound objective when they're really making stuff up on the fly.
     
  21. jdang307

    jdang307 Season Ticket Holder Club Member

    39,159
    21,798
    113
    Nov 29, 2007
    San Diego
    Disagree. Do sportswriters use it to explain stuff they don't get? Yes. Does it exist? Sure does. Intangibles or lack thereof is Ryan Leaf.
     

Share This Page