Pckfn23 wrote: ↑05 Aug 2021 11:50
Where they have played is very much scheme-based and not necessarily player/body-type based. Your point though contradicts your previous position that neither have the speed to play outside. Tall possession/slower receivers generally do play outside more as they generally don't have the agility/shiftiness to play slot.
You are changing up what you said Funchess is. You said Funchess was a strength and body player and Lazard was a right place, right time player. The goalposts are moving.
The goalposts are and always have been that they have many similarities and are competing for the same role.
My point that neither have the traits to be high-quality #2 WRs tracks witht he fact that neither have had particularly productive careers. My points that Lazard has played in the slot more than Funchess in their careers was to counter the notion that one is One Thing and the other is ANother Thing. They are both marginal starting receivers whose role on this team would be to play outside in heavier packages where MVS is not on the field or inside as the big slot when MVS is on the field. Outside, they are more valuable as possession and blocking receivers. Inside, they are both more of a big slot target, which generally (not always) means shorter routes, middle of the field, high-traffic scenarios.
The comparison and the c=goalposts have always been the same--not that they are identical--but that they have some similar strengths (height, strength, blocking, contested catches) and some similar weaknesses (quickness, pure hands, speed--though admittedly Funchess is slower) and that they are competing for what likely is one role, one roster spot for us.
It's true that Funchess had more in common with Allison than he does with Lazard. It may be true that EQ has more in common with Lazard than Lazard does with Funchess (EQ being the fastest of our 6'5" receivers, but also the least refined, and least productive). But when I'm looking at who is going to play what roles for this team, I see these three guys competing for one role, despite some differences in their games. They are similar ENOUGH and their role on the team, should they make it, would be similar ENOUGH that I see them in direct competition with each other.
The nod toward Lazard comes from familiarity (both with Rodgers and the offense and to the fans) and recency (as Funchess had the injury and COVID opt-out). If we were comparing Funchess coming off of his 2018 season and Lazard coming off of his 2020 season, you'd see that statistically, numerically, productively, measurably, these guys look awfully similar; only Funchess had a bit of a breakout in 2019, more so than Lazard has assembled just yet.
The fact that Lazard is a RFA, not an URFA after this season is something I overlooked. The fact that they were both in final years was another reason I found them similar. The ease of retaining Lazard on a tender is a pretty nice tiebreaker if you're forward-looking.
The only reason you feel the goalposts are moving is because you're forcing so much conversation over a rather broad assessment that seems fairly uncontroversial, that you now are seeing small details that leave room for disagreement or contradiction; that, to me, is why I call it splitting hairs.