Spoofin
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Look, 2 plus 2 equals 4 not 3.
^^^ Spot on!
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Look, 2 plus 2 equals 4 not 3.
I guess that's why Wisconsin split time for Russell Wilson when he came in as a transfer. The other guy had time in the system. No rational coach plays the less talented player, or are we now arguing with ourselves? Look, 2 plus 2 equals 4 not 3.
Allen's system looked pretty QB friendly.
What is 4 + 4? Thanks in advance.
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I'll make this short and simple. Green was a Sr with 3 years as a starter under his belt. Jonke was a Jr and hadn't started. The prior Sr starter at Allen was a big-time recruit and went to TAMU or similar.
Jonke played the majority of the snaps down the stretch. It's all available on the computers.
You don't think a 4-star recruit, with 3 yrs experience under his built shouldn't be able to carry his team through the playoffs rather than a Jr guy who will be playing at Brown and received zero offers to non-Ivys? The experience angle might hold water in September, but not in October/November.
We have numerous people that say the better, more experienced player starts. Well, Green was more experienced, played and practiced sparingly all season and faded when the chips were down. What does that tell you? He wasn't a good fir for their offense? No, Jonke is a dual threat as well.
If I got this right, you are writing Green off because someone non-Ivys didn't offer outplayed him when he was 17? Seems logical. Stick to math - you got that down.
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I would be absolutely shocked if either Smith or Brooks left early. They're good college backs, but way too small to be NFL studs, and would be essentially throwing away college eligibility by leaving early. They'd be drafted 6th or 7th round, if at all. I could see either or both moving up into maybe 4th round territory if they stayed through their senior year. David Cobb was a far more productive college back than both, outweighs both by 20-25 lbs., and still was only drafted in the 5th round.
I'm simply pointing the fact that seemingly the majority of the posters here say the best player plays, except for x, y, and z....if it fits the narrative. If a player doesn't play it's because he was beat out.
Surely Green sat because he wasn't familiar with the players, or the coach favors the local kid, or he wasn't a fit for the system, or, or, or.
How many of our other recruits sat on the bench the majority of their senior seasons?
Not sure where you are going with this. Green had multiple P5 offers to play QB. When is the last time we had a QB that you could say that about? He was an excellent recruit for us.
Yeah, dpo is way off on this one. Smith has over 1700 yards rushing and 17 TDs after 2 seasons of action. Cobb had 65 yards. If Smith has 2 more seasons similar to this one, he might catch Thompson as the all-time leading rusher.
Love the interesting argument going on about Green amongst some pretty knowledgeable posters....
Understand that his stock is reduced in the eyes of some since he may've been outplayed a bit at the end of his Sr. season in TX.
Anyone have the insight as to what part of his game relegated him to a close #2 down there?
I've heard that there may be issues with his arm motion/passing delivery. If it is that, certainly it can be worked on. If anyone knows his game in better detail, I am curious.
I'll make this short and simple. Green was a Sr with 3 years as a starter under his belt. Jonke was a Jr and hadn't started. The prior Sr starter at Allen was a big-time recruit and went to TAMU or similar.
Jonke played the majority of the snaps down the stretch. It's all available on the computers.
You don't think a 4-star recruit, with 3 yrs experience under his built shouldn't be able to carry his team through the playoffs rather than a Jr guy who will be playing at Brown and received zero offers to non-Ivys? The experience angle might hold water in September, but not in October/November.
We have numerous people that say the better, more experienced player starts. Well, Green was more experienced, played and practiced all season and his coach leaned on Jonke when the chips were down. What does that tell you? He wasn't a good for their offense? No, Jonke is a dual threat as well.
I hope Green works out but I find that a red flag. Prove me wrong Seth.
I'm simply pointing the fact that seemingly the majority of the posters here say the best player plays, except for x, y, and z....if it fits the narrative. If a player doesn't play it's because he was beat out.
Surely Green sat because he wasn't familiar with the players, or the coach favors the local kid, or he wasn't a fit for the system, or, or, or.
How many of our other recruits sat on the bench the majority of their senior seasons?
I never said it wasn't a red flag for Green, how many times do I have to say that?
I simply said that it's incredibly common for a coach to play a less "talented" player. Extremely common. You said "No rational coach" plays a less talented player. That was an idiotic comment. Atrocious.
Smith would have to average well over 1300 yards rushing the next two seasons to even catch Thompson. Not happening with Brooks with him. Maybe by himself.
Or as I said, many times, Janke might have been a BETTER player at the time. I'm not saying he wasn't.
I am saying, that Green is the better prospect.
Janke was a really good HS QB who very well could have been a better player during the 2015 season for Allen HS. However, that doesn't mean he was more talented than Green. He is not.
I'm simply pointing the fact that seemingly the majority of the posters here say the best player plays, except for x, y, and z....if it fits the narrative. If a player doesn't play it's because he was beat out.
Surely Green sat because he wasn't familiar with the players, or the coach favors the local kid, or he wasn't a fit for the system, or, or, or.
How many of our other recruits sat on the bench the majority of their senior seasons?
I highly doubt that. What exactly are you basing your assertion on anyways?Either JJ or FC will be leaving. Worst case, both transfer.
Seth Green split time all the way through. It's fine to articulate your opinion without lying and making absurd comments throughout. Pump the breaks on the hyperbole, it really takes away from whatever point you're trying to make.
Bob, there's much more to playing QB than being tall and having a good arm. If he were better at making good decisions, reading defenses, and protecting the ball he'd have been the starter. Stop lying to yourself.
Wow. You aren't really this dense. I know you aren't.
I never said that Janke wasn't the better player at that time, probably for the exact reasons that you mentioned. You literally quoted a post of mine where I was saying that yes, Janke could very well have been the better player or similar level of player because they SPLIT time.
I said that Green was and still is the more talented player. He is a better prospect.
For example, Lavine was considerably more talented player than guys like Robbie Hummel. However, Hummel was probably better than Lavine during Lavine's rookie season (Lavine was historically bad). However, Lavine was a considerably better prospect, because of his physical tools.
Take a look at the game summaries, drive charts and get back to me Bob. I've done my research. Green was not the starter down the stretch. He played, but it was 75/25.
What point are you trying to make? You insinuate Johannesson does not have the requisite talent, yet you're defending Green. It really makes no sense.
I don't follow basketball. That's probably why I know more about Green.
Your logic makes no sense because of what I've already laid out: Green was more experienced in terms of starts/gameplay, Sr vs Jr, physically mature vs 6-0 (listed) 180 Jonke. Green did not play the majority of snaps, particularly in the playoff run which is telling. So where does that leave us? Was he a discipline case? No, he was playing. Was he inexperienced? No. Was he better at doing things that QBs need to do? Seems like apparently not definitively.
Mind you this is in high school where the pool of talent is FAR more dispersed than in college and particularly in the pros. Tom Brady didn't play much and emerged as a better pro but his college teammates were also pro-level talent. The gap between a 4 star recruit and Jonke ought to have been vast. He should have been a slam dunk starter.
I don't follow basketball. That's probably why I know more about Green.
Your logic makes no sense because of what I've already laid out: Green was more experienced in terms of starts/gameplay, Sr vs Jr, physically mature vs 6-0 (listed) 180 Jonke. Green did not play the majority of snaps, particularly in the playoff run which is telling. So where does that leave us? Was he a discipline case? No, he was playing. Was he inexperienced? No. Was he better at doing things that QBs need to do? Seems like apparently not definitively.
Mind you this is in high school where the pool of talent is FAR more dispersed than in college and particularly in the pros. Tom Brady didn't play much and emerged as a better pro but his college teammates were also pro-level talent. The gap between a 4 star recruit and Jonke ought to have been vast. He should have been a slam dunk starter.
Breaking down box scores on TX football from Mn.
From box scores realize they won games by an average of over 30 points last year. Maybe that's why the Junior played more. They are 12-0 this year and winning games by 28.
Looks like a great way to evaluate who is better.
Who played and better in the title game they lost?
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