Overvaluing A QB Prospect

Last week Junior Oklahoma QB Landry Jones said he received a high 1st round grade from the NFL Draft Advisory Board. This would have made sense before last season in which he came in receiving a consensus top 5 selection in this year’s draft but, after he lost his number one option Ryan Broyles he struggled the rest of the season. Jones made evaluators double take, leaving some to think was his success an aberration or his true form a marginally successful quarterback at the collegiate level. Maybe it’s a little of both but why would an inconsistent quarterback be valued so greatly? The easy answer is supply and demand.

In the last year’s draft many people raised eyebrows at the selections of some quarterbacks in the top 15 picks. Blaine Gabbert at 10, Jake Locker at 18, and especially Christian Ponder at 12, were all thought to be over drafted. The three were thought to be at best middle to late 1st round picks. With an emphasis to win now and not build for the future and with that being pressed onto a GM or coach they are projecting onto a quarterback who they want them to become. With names like Ryan Tannehill and Brandon Weeden being pushed into the discussion of the 1st round and a bottom feeding team like the Bills will reach and set back their franchise.

Just as I was writing this the Washington Redskins traded one 2nd round pick, two 1st’s and swapped 1st round picks with the St. Louis Rams to most likely select highly praised prospect Robert Griffin III. When a true legit face of your franchise is there you must do everything possible to get them and not watch someone else take them because if you don’t do it everyone will get fired anyway. With there only being so many out there the emphasis turns to drafting them and hiding them behind a great run game and defense (Sanchez, Flacco, Dalton) while putting them in position to succeed while masking their weaknesses and that only works so long until a new management comes in and starts everything over again.

  1. ESPN’s influence in sports today is heavy and cumbersome. Moves are often made at their suggestion or urging and I don’t think it has to do with just good Intel. The price of the trade up for RGIII was powered completely by ESPN. The “pressure” of the Howard free agency situation was powered by ESPN. The current heat hatred was pretty much orchestrated by them, with Lebrons eyes set so immaturely on helping out the boys club in lieu of himself. After hearing ESPN cry about the inflated nature of the combine, the beast that they created, it’s obvious that not only do we need some other voices to trim the fat that keeps ESPN going 24/7, I think this trade is also proof that some teams are lazy and let the heads at ESPN do the research and they sign the checks. I think ALL of those names mentioned are good QBs and could make it happen with the same thing that most QBs need…HELP. Jags, Vikings, and Tenn are all more than one player away from being good with Tenn being the best of the 3. If the Browns land Blackman or T-Rich, and finish out the draft filling needs, they have no reason to not improve to at least 6 to 8 wins. At that point, Is Colt a better QB than they thought last year, or is he living up to his potential that ESPN touted the year he was drafted?  The real answer is a good draft and good weapons makes any QB look great…the sexy ESPN pic is the “coming of age of McCoy” and mark my words, if they have any success next year, we’ll see a E:60 on The Real McCoy.

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