BF004 wrote: ↑28 Apr 2020 15:03
So that entirely defeats the whole purpose of that push for a SB run with a QB on a rookie contract strategy if his first year starting is already on a 5th year option. I wouldn't even be shocked if Aaron would still want to play that season.
Who ever told you that was our plan? We never pushed for a championship with Rodgers on a rookie contract.
The problem with the "championship while the QB is cheap" model is that it requires you to draft the correct rookie and to risk it all to see if it plans out. We can point out that the push worked for Russel Wilson and for Patrick Mahomes.
But look at the other teams in our conference that we consider "contenders." Dallas hasn't gotten anywhere on Dak's contract, and even that one was a rare 4th round find. The 49ers have Garapolo signed to a big deal. The Saints have Brees and Hill and Winston and last year had Bridgewater signed. The Rams the previous year had already given Goff a raise (though his first year under the extension was still low). The Falcons went to the Super Bowl with Matt Ryan's big contract. The Bucs are loading up with Tom Brady (and were decidedly not a contender with Winston's rookie deal). The Seahawks have the highest paid QB.
Here are the teams that started a QB on his rookie contract last year (though the ones with starting contracts that got benched or injured defeat the purpose) :
Browns - Mayfield
Bills - Allen
Jets - Darnold
Ravens - Jackson
Texans - Watson
Jaguars - Minshew (though not the plan and Foles was on their cap)
Chiefs - Mahomes
Broncos - Lock (though not the plan and Flacco was on their cap)
Cowboys - Dak
Redskins - Haskins (though not the plan and Alex Smith was on their cap)
Bears - Trubisky
Panthers - Kyle Allen (though not the plan and Cam was on their cap)
Cardinals - Kyler Murray
Out of that group, we have the Chiefs winning the Super Bowl, the Bills, Texans, and Ravens making the playoffs, and 9 also-rans wishing they had a better QB. The goal is to have consistent high-level QB play. If you want to start a QB in his 2nd/3rd years, the odds are awfully high that he won't be good enough to take advantage of that low-dollar value.
No one ever said we're trying to play with a rookie contract QB. The fans figured that's the best thing to do because they look at the success stories and ignore the boatloads of failures. The model for success is great QB play, not cheap QB play. If you happen to get lucky enough to combine them, you're in great shape. But don't ignore that's a risky strategy.
We've gone back-to-back Hall of Famers in Green Bay, and won a Super Bowl with each of them. Maybe the rest of the league sould be taking their cues from how we do things, and not the other way around.