[mention]Yoop[/mention]Labrev wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 17:15So the Jordan Love pick was good then, right?Yoop wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 14:42I new you'd go off into some tangent Labrev as soon as you said only one QB can play, it's like saying only one right guard can play so why bother backing him up, if the niners had your mind set they'd not even make the PO's last season.
the NFL has given thought to QB exemptions in the past, why they havn't enacted that imho is a huge mistake.
Rodgers Traded
Moderators: NCF, salmar80, BF004, APB, Packfntk
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
mixed feelings, like Favre, we picked his replacement when the franchise QB still had years of ability on tap, any pick can turn out to be great given time, however if the team needs help at other positions, then it's no help to the team in the present, I wouldn't have taken Love or Gary in those draft slots in those particular drafts.Labrev wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023 13:55@YoopLabrev wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 17:15So the Jordan Love pick was good then, right?Yoop wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 14:42I new you'd go off into some tangent Labrev as soon as you said only one QB can play, it's like saying only one right guard can play so why bother backing him up, if the niners had your mind set they'd not even make the PO's last season.
the NFL has given thought to QB exemptions in the past, why they havn't enacted that imho is a huge mistake.
why would you ever think I would change my opinions about this?
Sure caused a lot of stress. We will know soon if it was a good pick or not. We have no idea what kind of pick it was yet. Soon though, soon…Labrev wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 17:15So the Jordan Love pick was good then, right?Yoop wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 14:42ballony the reason QB's flunk out is lack of prep prior to being asked to start, Brunell, Hassellback, Brooks, where groomed a couple seasons, so was Flynn, we have learned here that a couple seasons sitting behind a established vet is the best way to give a QB a chance to succeed.Labrev wrote: ↑09 Jun 2023 11:44
Only one QB can play at a time. Those QBs I mentioned were just part of a lucky streak, not a sustainable model because starting-caliber QBs are a rarity. Since then, GB has only been able to do that with Matt Flynn, who was definitely an inferior QB to the ones previously mentioned, but we made him look better than he was because our O system was working wonders and the league hadn't figured out how to stop it (which they since have).
Also, Warner doesn't actually count because he was a try-out guy who didn't even stick around here long enough for us to take any real credit for his development. GB was a brief pit-stop in his career.
It's dumb. You can do the same thing at other positions, and not only is it easier to develop starting-caliber players at basically every other position and then flip them for picks, you can actually also play them while you have them, which you can't at QB unless the starter gets injured.
and why would you even attempt to tell me other positions are the same way, it's so apples to oranges it hardly deserves repeating, the only other position that even comes close to what a QB has to learn is TE, and even that pales compared to what a NFL QB has to know, owners cave to demands from fans to start rookie QB's because to them college success automatically translates to success at this level, it doesn't, thats why most of the QB's fail to ever even play close to slot value, although we have seen more success lately, it still pales in comparison for they way we've groomed Rodgers and now Love
I new you'd go off into some tangent Labrev as soon as you said only one QB can play, it's like saying only one right guard can play so why bother backing him up, if the niners had your mind set they'd not even make the PO's last season.
the NFL has given thought to QB exemptions in the past, why they havn't enacted that imho is a huge mistake.
I Do Not Hate Matt Lafleur
Okay, so when we cut out the weasel words, we find that you actually agree that we did overvalue QB above more immediate needs at other positions, namely because we already had a high-end QB1. Got it.Yoop wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023 14:33
(... jibber jabber...) when the franchise QB still had years of ability on tap, (... more jib-jab ...) if the team needs help at other positions, then it's no help to the team in the present, I wouldn't have taken Love or Gary in those draft slots in those particular drafts.
why would you ever think I would change my opinions about this?
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
His loss was a major blow to the Packers and the NFL. He died way too young.RingoCStarrQB wrote: ↑10 Jun 2023 18:43Oh. So people want to continue talking about Jack Vainisi, I hope.
Last edited by Pugger on 12 Jun 2023 22:42, edited 1 time in total.
we didn't draft Love to trade him as we did with those QB's of the early 90's, true all where insurance in case the starter (Favre) faltered, none where actually chosen to replace him though, rather as backups and groomers to trade, when ya draft a QB in the first round you do so to eventually start him and replace a old vet.Labrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 08:45Okay, so when we cut out the weasel words, we find that you actually agree that we did overvalue QB above more immediate needs at other positions, namely because we already had a high-end QB1. Got it.Yoop wrote: ↑11 Jun 2023 14:33
(... jibber jabber...) when the franchise QB still had years of ability on tap, (... more jib-jab ...) if the team needs help at other positions, then it's no help to the team in the present, I wouldn't have taken Love or Gary in those draft slots in those particular drafts.
why would you ever think I would change my opinions about this?
that was not the case prior except for Rodgers.
you bet I value a 5th round QB to groom over a 5th round player at other positions
Love was drafted as insurance for Rodgers faltering; AR was not playing great. The FO's handling of the QB situation 2021-22 does not lead me to believe trading Love away was off the table. 2022 is proof that they would choose chasing 'chips with Rodgers over moving on w/ Love.Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 10:38we didn't draft Love to trade him as we did with those QB's of the early 90's, true all where insurance in case the starter (Favre) faltered, none where actually chosen to replace him though, rather as backups and groomers to trade, when ya draft a QB in the first round you do so to eventually start him and replace a old vet.
that was not the case prior except for Rodgers.
you bet I value a 5th round QB to groom over a 5th round player at other positions
So we return to our initial point: is putting heavy investment into backup QBs, a position where only one can play at a time and over a span of many years at a time, justified solely by the inherent importance of the position or the ability to flip those guys for picks?
You're out here saying, yes, it is. Okay, well if you think that, then you do not have a single thing to complain about with the Jordan Love pick: QB is all-important, and he doesn't need to replace Rodgers at all because you can just flip him for picks like Brunell/Warner/Brooks.
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
I *don't* think it's smart, so I can complain about the pick. What redeems the pick for me is the turn of events where we now we actually do need a QB and will play him.
But if that wasn't the case, no, having a very talented player at QB2 just because QB is important, and/or flipping him in a trade, would not make me think that drafting Love was a smart pick.
We would have to get back more in a trade, which was a 1st *and* 4th, for it to be justified, and nobody was going to offer that for a guy who played as little as Love did.
But then I would rather just draft guys who will play in 2020 than wait til 2023 to do that, even if the picks in 2023 are higher, because Now is more valuable than Later (time value of money). So it would have to be even more than getting back just barely more than a 1 and 4.
But if that wasn't the case, no, having a very talented player at QB2 just because QB is important, and/or flipping him in a trade, would not make me think that drafting Love was a smart pick.
We would have to get back more in a trade, which was a 1st *and* 4th, for it to be justified, and nobody was going to offer that for a guy who played as little as Love did.
But then I would rather just draft guys who will play in 2020 than wait til 2023 to do that, even if the picks in 2023 are higher, because Now is more valuable than Later (time value of money). So it would have to be even more than getting back just barely more than a 1 and 4.
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
using that draft capitol when we did on Love was wrong, using that draft capitol on a replacement QB is never wrong, the timing was poor Rodgers still had about 5 to 6 years of HOF play in him, the decline YOU saw in 017 and 18 was scheme in decline and lack of receivers needed for those schemes, anyone not invested in tarring down Rodgers knows this, course you'll consider this jiberish because it doesn't fit your narrative, and proof of that happened in Lafleurs first season, and it'll happen this season with the Jets.Labrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 11:44I *don't* think it's smart, so I can complain about the pick. What redeems the pick for me is the turn of events where we now we actually do need a QB and will play him.
But if that wasn't the case, no, having a very talented player at QB2 just because QB is important, and/or flipping him in a trade, would not make me think that drafting Love was a smart pick.
We would have to get back more in a trade, which was a 1st *and* 4th, for it to be justified, and nobody was going to offer that for a guy who played as little as Love did.
But then I would rather just draft guys who will play in 2020 than wait til 2023 to do that, even if the picks in 2023 are higher, because Now is more valuable than Later (time value of money). So it would have to be even more than getting back just barely more than a 1 and 4.
AND ya don't use 1st and 4th round picks to groom QB's to be backups or to trade, drag your mind out of lonnytoonville lol Hasselback, Brooksy and Brunell etc where not drafted to be Favres replacement, they where taken to be backups and groomed in hopes of getting more then we payed, and we did.
same with this draft and Clifford, a very well seasoned college player, however with physical limitations which dropped him to round 5, I could see him in a couple years of grooming bringing us a round two pick.
during Wolfs tenure he took a flyer on a QB in almost every draft,
Hasselbeck joined former Packers head coach Mike Holmgren and the Seattle Seahawks on March 2, 2001. The Packers traded him, along with their first draft pick (17th overall), to the Seahawks for their first (10th overall) and third-round draft picks (72nd overall).
On April 21, 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars traded third (66th overall) and fifth round (170th overall) picks in the 1995 NFL Draft to the Green Bay Packers in exchange for Brunell. This became the first trade in the Jacksonville Jaguars' franchise history, both Brunell and Hasellbeck where 5th round picks, Brooks was a 4th rounder, and he brought more value too.
The Packers traded Brooks and tight end Lamont Hall to the New Orleans Saints for linebacker K. D. Williams and the Saints' third round pick in the 2001 draft ahead of the 2000 season.
thats how this stuff is suppose to work.
Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 13:54using that draft capitol when we did on Love was wrong, using that draft capitol on a replacement QB is never wrong, the timing was poor Rodgers still had about 5 to 6 years of HOF play in him, the decline YOU saw in 017 and 18 was scheme in decline and lack of receivers needed for those schemes, anyone not invested in tarring down Rodgers knows this, course you'll consider this jiberish because it doesn't fit your narrative, and proof of that happened in Lafleurs first season, and it'll happen this season with the Jets.Labrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 11:44I *don't* think it's smart, so I can complain about the pick. What redeems the pick for me is the turn of events where we now we actually do need a QB and will play him.
But if that wasn't the case, no, having a very talented player at QB2 just because QB is important, and/or flipping him in a trade, would not make me think that drafting Love was a smart pick.
We would have to get back more in a trade, which was a 1st *and* 4th, for it to be justified, and nobody was going to offer that for a guy who played as little as Love did.
But then I would rather just draft guys who will play in 2020 than wait til 2023 to do that, even if the picks in 2023 are higher, because Now is more valuable than Later (time value of money). So it would have to be even more than getting back just barely more than a 1 and 4.
AND ya don't use 1st and 4th round picks to groom QB's to be backups or to trade, drag your mind out of lonnytoonville lol Hasselback, Brooksy and Brunell etc where not drafted to be Favres replacement, they where taken to be backups and groomed in hopes of getting more then we payed, and we did.
same with this draft and Clifford, a very well seasoned college player, however with physical limitations which dropped him to round 5, I could see him in a couple years of grooming bringing us a round two pick.
during Wolfs tenure he took a flyer on a QB in almost every draft,
Hasselbeck joined former Packers head coach Mike Holmgren and the Seattle Seahawks on March 2, 2001. The Packers traded him, along with their first draft pick (17th overall), to the Seahawks for their first (10th overall) and third-round draft picks (72nd overall).
On April 21, 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars traded third (66th overall) and fifth round (170th overall) picks in the 1995 NFL Draft to the Green Bay Packers in exchange for Brunell. This became the first trade in the Jacksonville Jaguars' franchise history, both Brunell and Hasellbeck where 5th round picks, Brooks was a 4th rounder, and he brought more value too.
The Packers traded Brooks and tight end Lamont Hall to the New Orleans Saints for linebacker K. D. Williams and the Saints' third round pick in the 2001 draft ahead of the 2000 season.
thats how this stuff is suppose to work.
I didn't say drafting QBs in the mid-rounds is stupid. I am all for it. What's stupid is how this team pooh-poohed Brett Hundley and instead got rid of him for a high-ceiling/low-floor guy in Kizer who was a disaster, all because Hundley was "just" a serviceable backup rather than the next Brooks or Brunell. That's overvaluing the QB position.
Also, you're wrong, the decline in 2018 and 2019 wasn't a lack of receivers; he won MVP with the *exact same* WR group in 2020. The problem is Rodgers only plays that hard and great when he's pissed off, and his play falls off when he's fat and contented.
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
so then according to you Rodgers played pissed off 11 of his 13 seasons starting for us, no sale, the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per seasonLabrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 15:07Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 13:54using that draft capitol when we did on Love was wrong, using that draft capitol on a replacement QB is never wrong, the timing was poor Rodgers still had about 5 to 6 years of HOF play in him, the decline YOU saw in 017 and 18 was scheme in decline and lack of receivers needed for those schemes, anyone not invested in tarring down Rodgers knows this, course you'll consider this jiberish because it doesn't fit your narrative, and proof of that happened in Lafleurs first season, and it'll happen this season with the Jets.Labrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 11:44I *don't* think it's smart, so I can complain about the pick. What redeems the pick for me is the turn of events where we now we actually do need a QB and will play him.
But if that wasn't the case, no, having a very talented player at QB2 just because QB is important, and/or flipping him in a trade, would not make me think that drafting Love was a smart pick.
We would have to get back more in a trade, which was a 1st *and* 4th, for it to be justified, and nobody was going to offer that for a guy who played as little as Love did.
But then I would rather just draft guys who will play in 2020 than wait til 2023 to do that, even if the picks in 2023 are higher, because Now is more valuable than Later (time value of money). So it would have to be even more than getting back just barely more than a 1 and 4.
AND ya don't use 1st and 4th round picks to groom QB's to be backups or to trade, drag your mind out of lonnytoonville lol Hasselback, Brooksy and Brunell etc where not drafted to be Favres replacement, they where taken to be backups and groomed in hopes of getting more then we payed, and we did.
same with this draft and Clifford, a very well seasoned college player, however with physical limitations which dropped him to round 5, I could see him in a couple years of grooming bringing us a round two pick.
during Wolfs tenure he took a flyer on a QB in almost every draft,
Hasselbeck joined former Packers head coach Mike Holmgren and the Seattle Seahawks on March 2, 2001. The Packers traded him, along with their first draft pick (17th overall), to the Seahawks for their first (10th overall) and third-round draft picks (72nd overall).
On April 21, 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars traded third (66th overall) and fifth round (170th overall) picks in the 1995 NFL Draft to the Green Bay Packers in exchange for Brunell. This became the first trade in the Jacksonville Jaguars' franchise history, both Brunell and Hasellbeck where 5th round picks, Brooks was a 4th rounder, and he brought more value too.
The Packers traded Brooks and tight end Lamont Hall to the New Orleans Saints for linebacker K. D. Williams and the Saints' third round pick in the 2001 draft ahead of the 2000 season.
thats how this stuff is suppose to work.
I didn't say drafting QBs in the mid-rounds is stupid. I am all for it. What's stupid is how this team pooh-poohed Brett Hundley and instead got rid of him for a high-ceiling/low-floor guy in Kizer who was a disaster, all because Hundley was "just" a serviceable backup rather than the next Brooks or Brunell. That's overvaluing the QB position.
Also, you're wrong, the decline in 2018 and 2019 wasn't a lack of receivers; he won MVP with the *exact same* WR group in 2020. The problem is Rodgers only plays that hard and great when he's pissed off, and his play falls off when he's fat and contented.
Oh. Well, because you want to be pedantic about it, then no. He got fat and comfy when we gave him that extension in 2018. Before that, he didn't *need* to be pissed to play great.
But even in his earlier career, there were instances showing that Rodgers plays his best when he's pissed. The fabled "chip on his shoulder" has always been part of Rodgers's legend (the true legend, not the made up fan-fic which his cult defenders use to rewrite history). Rodgers had that chip on his shoulder at the beginning of his career because:
(1) he got snubbed in the 2005 NFL Draft, fell to the 20s when he had the talent to go #1 overall;
(2) he was attacked in 2008 by Favre fans who were mad that the org chose to move on from Brett and make him QB1;
(3) he had lots of haters in the media who said he wasn't clutch and couldn't win big games.
Or when critics got on him in 2012 so hard that he threw 6 TDs against Houston to hand them their first loss of the season, and directed a "Shhh" at said critics: https://www.usatoday.com/story/gameon/2 ... s/1633801/
He was constantly slighted from 2008-2010 and had to grind to shut the haters up. Then he won a SuperBowl, SuperBowl MVP, and put up the best year of a QB ever in 2011. Over time, nobody could say anything bad about him. Instead, people started making constant excuses for him, he got fat/comfy, and he stopped grinding.
Then suddenly he wins two MVPs, right after the org drafts his ostensible replacement/successor? It's obvious how and why that happened: he got pissed that they were going to Favre him and he turned it on. Then last year he got comfy again as we gave him another megadeal and Gute bent over backwards to make him feel valued, and this year came reports that he stopped putting in the work.
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
Yes, MM's offense no longer cut it and MLF installed a better system. I never disagreed on that.the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per season
I did, however, disagree on the lack of talent at WR.
So 1 WR played "better" (not played "well," just "better," better than he did as a rookie). What else? That alone does not seem like enough to fix a lack of talent at a whole position.
Or maybe... maybe that goes to show that the position group did NOT lack talent as alleged, since the same talent (other than 1 WR improving between seasons) was good enough to support a QB's MVP season!!
“Most other nations don't allow a terrorist to be their leader.”
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
“... Yet so many allow their leaders to be terrorists.”—Magneto
You're going down that path again with spitting out stuff without validating and will get this thread into trouble. I advise turning down the dial on this. (such as the MVS thing being a better player in 2019 compared to 2018)Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 16:38so then according to you Rodgers played pissed off 11 of his 13 seasons starting for us, no sale, the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per seasonLabrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 15:07Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 13:54
using that draft capitol when we did on Love was wrong, using that draft capitol on a replacement QB is never wrong, the timing was poor Rodgers still had about 5 to 6 years of HOF play in him, the decline YOU saw in 017 and 18 was scheme in decline and lack of receivers needed for those schemes, anyone not invested in tarring down Rodgers knows this, course you'll consider this jiberish because it doesn't fit your narrative, and proof of that happened in Lafleurs first season, and it'll happen this season with the Jets.
AND ya don't use 1st and 4th round picks to groom QB's to be backups or to trade, drag your mind out of lonnytoonville lol Hasselback, Brooksy and Brunell etc where not drafted to be Favres replacement, they where taken to be backups and groomed in hopes of getting more then we payed, and we did.
same with this draft and Clifford, a very well seasoned college player, however with physical limitations which dropped him to round 5, I could see him in a couple years of grooming bringing us a round two pick.
during Wolfs tenure he took a flyer on a QB in almost every draft,
Hasselbeck joined former Packers head coach Mike Holmgren and the Seattle Seahawks on March 2, 2001. The Packers traded him, along with their first draft pick (17th overall), to the Seahawks for their first (10th overall) and third-round draft picks (72nd overall).
On April 21, 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars traded third (66th overall) and fifth round (170th overall) picks in the 1995 NFL Draft to the Green Bay Packers in exchange for Brunell. This became the first trade in the Jacksonville Jaguars' franchise history, both Brunell and Hasellbeck where 5th round picks, Brooks was a 4th rounder, and he brought more value too.
The Packers traded Brooks and tight end Lamont Hall to the New Orleans Saints for linebacker K. D. Williams and the Saints' third round pick in the 2001 draft ahead of the 2000 season.
thats how this stuff is suppose to work.
I didn't say drafting QBs in the mid-rounds is stupid. I am all for it. What's stupid is how this team pooh-poohed Brett Hundley and instead got rid of him for a high-ceiling/low-floor guy in Kizer who was a disaster, all because Hundley was "just" a serviceable backup rather than the next Brooks or Brunell. That's overvaluing the QB position.
Also, you're wrong, the decline in 2018 and 2019 wasn't a lack of receivers; he won MVP with the *exact same* WR group in 2020. The problem is Rodgers only plays that hard and great when he's pissed off, and his play falls off when he's fat and contented.
The timing of the Love pick couldn't be wrong, at least not in the sense of the Packers making a mistake. It had to be 2020 or never. Drafting Love may or may not have been a mistake, we can't know yet anymore than we could about Rodgers at the same stage. But if it was a mistake, it wasn't a timing mistake.Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 13:54
using that draft capitol when we did on Love was wrong, using that draft capitol on a replacement QB is never wrong, the timing was poor Rodgers still had about 5 to 6 years of HOF play in him, the decline YOU saw in 017 and 18 was scheme in decline and lack of receivers needed for those schemes, anyone not invested in tarring down Rodgers knows this, course you'll consider this jiberish because it doesn't fit your narrative, and proof of that happened in Lafleurs first season, and it'll happen this season with the Jets.
everything I just said is accurate, since 2016 we've had one receiver Rodgers could count on and a bunch of others that where less dependable, and the key to Lafleurs success was running the football more.go pak go wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 17:47You're going down that path again with spitting out stuff without validating and will get this thread into trouble. I advise turning down the dial on this. (such as the MVS thing being a better player in 2019 compared to 2018)Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 16:38so then according to you Rodgers played pissed off 11 of his 13 seasons starting for us, no sale, the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per seasonLabrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 15:07
I didn't say drafting QBs in the mid-rounds is stupid. I am all for it. What's stupid is how this team pooh-poohed Brett Hundley and instead got rid of him for a high-ceiling/low-floor guy in Kizer who was a disaster, all because Hundley was "just" a serviceable backup rather than the next Brooks or Brunell. That's overvaluing the QB position.
Also, you're wrong, the decline in 2018 and 2019 wasn't a lack of receivers; he won MVP with the *exact same* WR group in 2020. The problem is Rodgers only plays that hard and great when he's pissed off, and his play falls off when he's fat and contented.
the only reason you defend these second and third tier receivers is because you hate Rodgers, your a funny guy, Rodgers will go into the HOF as the highest rated passer, and if our GM's would have kept drafting QB's in the 2nd round we'd probably have a couple more Lombardi'sLabrev wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 17:46Yes, MM's offense no longer cut it and MLF installed a better system. I never disagreed on that.the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per season
I did, however, disagree on the lack of talent at WR.
So 1 WR played "better" (not played "well," just "better," better than he did as a rookie). What else? That alone does not seem like enough to fix a lack of talent at a whole position.
Or maybe... maybe that goes to show that the position group did NOT lack talent as alleged, since the same talent (other than 1 WR improving between seasons) was good enough to support a QB's MVP season!!
You stated MVS got better after his rookie season which is why Rodgers production got better (particularly in 2019) which isn't really true. MVS actually had a decline in production in 2019. He did have an uptick in TDs in 2020 due to an increase in long ball catches but overall his production between 2018 and 2021 was quite consistent on a per game basis with 2020 being his best year and 2019 being his worst year.Yoop wrote: ↑13 Jun 2023 06:14everything I just said is accurate, since 2016 we've had one receiver Rodgers could count on and a bunch of others that where less dependable, and the key to Lafleurs success was running the football more.go pak go wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 17:47You're going down that path again with spitting out stuff without validating and will get this thread into trouble. I advise turning down the dial on this. (such as the MVS thing being a better player in 2019 compared to 2018)Yoop wrote: ↑12 Jun 2023 16:38
so then according to you Rodgers played pissed off 11 of his 13 seasons starting for us, no sale, the decline with the Packers passing offense in 2017 and 18 landed squarely on McCarthy's passing schemes and the lack of talent at WR, it was better in 019 simply because Lafleur used more balance of run to pass and dialed back the deep routes, also MVS was no longer a rookie, and played better, imagine that players getting better or worse per season
By far and away the receiver to point to who elevated his play after 2018 was Davante Adams. Adams went from "we were shocked to hear him say he is a top 10 WR" in 2018 to clearly the league's best WR in 2019 - 2021.
Last edited by go pak go on 13 Jun 2023 08:31, edited 1 time in total.
using MVS and not the rest of the WR, RB's OL, was probably wrong simply because your using it to twist this around, the point is under Lafleurs new offensive schemes everything improved, which helped Rodgers to improve.go pak go wrote: ↑13 Jun 2023 06:57You stated MVS got better after his rookie season which is why Rodgers production got better (particularly in 2019) which isn't really true. MVS actually had a decline in production in 2019. He did have an uptick in TDs in 2020 due to an increase in long ball catches but overall his production between 2018 and 2021 was quite consistent on a per game basis with 2020 being his best year and 2019 being his worst year.
By far and away the receiver to point to who elevated his player after 2018 was Davante Adams. Adams went from "we were shocked to hear him say he is a top 10 WR" in 2018 to clearly the league's best WR in 2019 - 2021.
he didn't go from a declining QB to all of a sudden vastly better because he decided to as you and others suggest, it took a few games but Rodgers adapted to Lafleurs offense as well as any QB has with any scheme change.
and he'll do it again for the Jets.
I haven't suggested anything in this mini-series though I have given significant credit to MLF for turning Rodgers around in the past. I have been very consistent on that.Yoop wrote: ↑13 Jun 2023 07:54using MVS and not the rest of the WR, RB's OL, was probably wrong simply because your using it to twist this around, the point is under Lafleurs new offensive schemes everything improved, which helped Rodgers to improve.go pak go wrote: ↑13 Jun 2023 06:57You stated MVS got better after his rookie season which is why Rodgers production got better (particularly in 2019) which isn't really true. MVS actually had a decline in production in 2019. He did have an uptick in TDs in 2020 due to an increase in long ball catches but overall his production between 2018 and 2021 was quite consistent on a per game basis with 2020 being his best year and 2019 being his worst year.
By far and away the receiver to point to who elevated his player after 2018 was Davante Adams. Adams went from "we were shocked to hear him say he is a top 10 WR" in 2018 to clearly the league's best WR in 2019 - 2021.
he didn't go from a declining QB to all of a sudden vastly better because he decided to as you and others suggest, it took a few games but Rodgers adapted to Lafleurs offense as well as any QB has with any scheme change.
and he'll do it again for the Jets.
I simply read a post of yours that didn't make sense and politely warned that you were heading down a path of using wrong information to try and win an argument. And as usual, you got defensive when I did it and then followed up with when specifically called out, "it doesn't matter the larger point is we have it in for Rodgers"
But to your question, like all things in life, the final answer is likely a combination of everything. MLF definitely was a genius in adapting his scheme for better results, but Rodgers also deserves a ton of credit for getting serious and significantly turning his play around after a couple of years of poor play for Rodgers standard (around average play for NFL standards)