APB wrote: ↑01 Jan 2022 09:05
I like your overall thoughts on refraining from making early judgments on Love but I gotta disagree with your assertion of the 3yr timeline thing.
The Packers had every intention of moving on from TBLS thus making Love the direct backup to Rodgers. To me, that says they felt he was at a progression level commensurate to that of stepping in when called upon to competently run the offense. I don’t think the Packers had to suddenly ramp up Love’s training regimen when Rodgers made his dissatisfaction publicly known. I think the Packers simply misjudged how far along Love was based upon practice snaps and the KC game was probably a wake up call to them.
I wonder why you would assert such things with a sense of certainty; "had every intention of moving on from TBLS"? Why do you think you know that? Do you mean at the time of the draft pick? Or by the time the whole offseason program had been canceled by COVID? You first assume that they wanted to move on from TBLS and make Love the backup. Based on that clear speculation, you assess the team's mindset on Love's timeline, and then you draw conclusions of disappointment based on a timeline you surmised through sheer speculation.
It's fine to speculate; we're all speculating. But don't say things so assured and emphatically as "the team had every intention" and base a whole set of conclusions off of an assumption without recognizing that there is no basis in evidence for it.
Like I said, this is the franchise--with many people who were brought up in the same culture/leadership still running the show--that waited 3 years for Rodgers. This is a league in which Jimmy G was drafted to be Brady's replacement and when Brady re-asserted himself as a long-term answer, and saw Jimmy G traded. The pick for Love was a long-term pick that opened doors to different paths, rather than set the organization on a pre-determined path. ANY good leader would only make such a move with contingency plans and options. Gutey has shown himself--especially through the strife of this year--to be someone who can adapt to new realities.
Anyone who tells me that the Packers picked Love knowing what would happen and with a pre-determined replacement timeline... it just doesn't have any ring of truth or sense to it if you ask me. The team drafted a
potential successor to their HoF QB with
three years left on his contract precisely
because it creates options for the team, not because it sets a path for the team. This offseason, in which they retained Rodgers against his wishes, proves that. If the team were attempting to set in motion a clear path to replacement, they had the opportunity to take it, and they did not. If the team was trying to set in motion a clear path to replacement, they could have chosen not to restructure Rodgers' contract to push money out into future years and increase dead money if he leaves mere months before making the draft pick. But they did.
The actual actions the Packers have taken--starting with the Rodgers restructure, including keeping TBLS, and then bringing Rodgers back after last offseason when he wanted to force their hand--indicate a fluid situation dependent on the real-time results of Jordan Love. Nothing in the team's actual actions has indicated even remotely a path-dependent outcome to this. It's only Rodgers who seems assured of a pre-determined outcome which he is aiming to change. The fact that he believed that he did change it ("threw a wrench in their plans") only goes to prove that the circumstance
is changeable at any given time. We're in a choose-your-own-adventure book, not a novel.