anyone interested in RG3?

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  • #38150
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Interesting conversation.

    Me? I would rather saw my own toes off with a rusty blade.

    But of course that’s just my opinion.

    .

    #38152
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I would rather you sawed your toes off, toe.

    #38154
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    Why yes, I’m interested in RG3.

    Interested in seeing him sign elsewhere, that is.

    lsugh

    I know. Brilliant, right?

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 9 months ago by Avatar photonittany ram.
    #38156
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    I would rather you sawed your toes off, toe.

    Mis dedos son tus dedos

    #38157
    Avatar photojoemad
    Participant

    I’d rather stick with Case than moving to RG…..

    the only QB I want to see with RG initials is Roman G.

    #38158
    Ozoneranger
    Participant

    Interesting conversation.

    Me? I would rather saw my own toes off with a rusty blade.

    But of course that’s just my opinion.

    .

    Someone call a toe truck.

    #38160
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Interesting conversation.

    Me? I would rather saw my own toes off with a rusty blade.
    But of course that’s just my opinion.

    Someone call a toe truck.

    ——————-
    You know he tried to saw his thumb off once.

    He has no regard for his smaller parts.

    w
    v

    #38175
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    ——————-
    You know he tried to saw his thumb off once.

    He has no regard for his smaller parts.

    w
    v

    I think it was an axe to his knee. The guy is basically the Tin Man. He has no toes anyway (or heart), so the self-sacrifice he is offering is not as great as it might appear on first blush.

    #38182
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    ——————-
    You know he tried to saw his thumb off once.

    He has no regard for his smaller parts.

    w
    v

    I think it was an axe to his knee. The guy is basically the Tin Man. He has no toes anyway (or heart), so the self-sacrifice he is offering is not as great as it might appear on first blush.

    I suppose its true. If he was a real
    rams fan, he would have at least cut off
    his ears by now.

    I’m eating generic cheerios, btw.
    Do you ever eat processed cereal?
    Or do you just eat avocado’s and
    olives.

    w
    v

    #38184
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    I think it was an axe to his knee. The guy is basically the Tin Man. He has no toes anyway (or heart), so the self-sacrifice he is offering is not as great as it might appear on first blush.

    You’re getting personal, scarecrow.

    This board’s rules are very clear about that. The rules explicitly say, and this is a direct quote, “Scarecrow can’t get personal.”

    Well they actually say “Him Scarecrow not can be personal.” But grammar aside, that’s what they say.

    #38193
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I think it was an axe to his knee. The guy is basically the Tin Man. He has no toes anyway (or heart), so the self-sacrifice he is offering is not as great as it might appear on first blush.

    You’re getting personal, scarecrow.

    This board’s rules are very clear about that. The rules explicitly say, and this is a direct quote, “Scarecrow can’t get personal.”

    Well they actually say “Him Scarecrow not can be personal.” But grammar aside, that’s what they say.

    Uh, hey, look.

    If you have a personal problem with me, you should take it to email.

    Thanks,
    Zooey

    P.S. Pull my finger.

    #38492
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    I see real actual interest in RG3 out there among some Rams fans.

    He can’t play. He ain’t an NFL qb. And he’s poison in the locker room.

    If anyone is interested in him, post away—I’m all ears. I ain’t gonna fight about it, I just don’t understand the interest. What am I missing?

    .

    #38495
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I think Tebow, Johnny football, and the legend are all the same guy, except Tebow has better intangibles. Maybe they are attracted to the badboy image?

    Agamemnon

    #38496
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i don’t know that he’s poison. they used to say that about john elway. i think it’s worth a shot. if it doesn’t work no harm done.

    and they will essentially have gotten those three first rounders for nothing. ha!

    #38497
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    I understand the interest — i think its
    based on his first year. He did a lot
    of exciting stuff.

    I think some folks think if a coach
    designed the offense completely around
    RG’s talents/weaknesses he could get it done.

    Personally, i am skeptical, and i
    just dont think he has the leadership
    qualities ya need.

    w
    v

    #38498
    Herzog
    Participant

    For me, the fact that the entire locker room hated him is the mother of all red flags. I do understand the interest. Kind of like the interest in Foles….that one good year was just SO GOOD….. I also think it would turn out the same as the Foles signing did.

    #38509
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i’m not concerned with the problems in the locker room or if he’s arrogant.

    the only thing i worry about is his ability to play. if he can’t then you move on.

    but yeah. i have no reason to believe that rgiii is anything remotely close to a manziel. or a greg hardy so i’d have no problems if the rams took a gamble on him.

    #38512
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    NFL talent evaluators are divided on Robert Griffin III’s future

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/redskins/nfl-talent-evaluators-are-divided-on-robert-griffin-iiis-future/2016/02/01/190f0f16-c916-11e5-ae11-57b6aeab993f_story.html

    When the Washington Redskins finally release Robert Griffin III, an NFL executive and coach will roll the dice on the Heisman Trophy winner who spent 2015 as a third-string quarterback. But what kind of future Griffin has in store remains unclear.

    Over the past two weeks, league executives, scouts and head and assistant coaches offered a range of opinions on Griffin’s prospects. Because Griffin remains under contract with Washington, all spoke on the condition of anonymity so they could freely give their opinions without subjecting their teams to tampering charges.

    Of the dozen interviewed for this story, the majority expressed a belief that Griffin is capable of landing a starting role with a new team next season, citing both the lack of sure-fire talent available in this year’s draft and the playmaking ability Griffin showed in 2012, when he was named the offensive rookie of the year.

    Others were more skeptical, expressing doubts over Griffin’s ability to stay healthy and saying opponents have figured out what he can and can’t do and thus know how to stop him.

    Ultimately, Griffin’s chances at future NFL success hinge on what kind of quarterback he is willing to work to be — and whether he can find a situation that will allow him the opportunity to do so.

    ‘He can still play’

    Griffin hasn’t dazzled since his remarkable 2012 season. Sustained health and consistent play from the pocket have proven elusive. Still, he has shown flashes, observers say, and five of the league insiders — a front-office executive, two coaches and two scouts — believe there is just too much talent there for Griffin not to start for some team in 2016.

    Whether it was three 300-yard games to open the 2013 season, or the way he directed the Redskins against Jacksonville before getting hurt in Week 2 of 2014, or the game-winning drive he directed against Philadelphia in Week 16 of that season, Griffin has displayed starting capabilities, the five proponents said.

    “Of course he can still play,” an AFC pro scout said. “He can make all the throws; he can run. He’s shown that. It isn’t just on the player. Coaching does come into it. You’ve got to be willing to adapt your system to a player’s strengths. I know he didn’t want to run that anymore, but I think he’s probably been humbled and he’s probably been working to get better. If he finds the right situation, he can be a starter again. For sure.”

    Said a pro scout from an NFC team: “There isn’t a quarterback in this draft as talented as RGIII. They’re all developmental guys that will need to hold the clipboard for a few years. Griffin can play right away.”

    Any team signing Griffin would do so partially on faith, because he produced just two shaky preseason outings in 2015 and an uneven body of work in 2014. A general manager, asked about Griffin’s prospects, said that his overall body of work, plus the maturity he displayed last season after getting benched, likely will help his chances.

    “He has handled himself well this year in a tough situation,” the general manager said. “It’s probably a good thing to be humbled. He’ll go somewhere, get an opportunity and show he can still play. He’s a Heisman Trophy winner, had a great rookie season. That doesn’t just happen. He’s just got to find the right situation.”

    ‘No. He’s done.’

    As another high-ranking talent evaluator from an NFC team points out, there is a graveyard full of the careers of great college quarterbacks who didn’t pan out in the NFL. A slew of heralded prospects have been unable to adjust to the speed of the NFL game and the complexity of its defenses.

    Skeptics attribute Griffin’s rookie success to something that can’t be replicated: an element of surprise. He thrived greatly as a rookie partly because of his world-class athleticism, but largely because he directed an offense that Mike Shanahan and Kyle Shanahan — taking cues from Baylor’s playbook — tailored to his strengths.

    “He was running a system the league had never seen before. Not on that scale,” an NFC front-office executive said. “They didn’t know how to stop it. But coaches are smart. They did their homework in the offseason, came back the next year, and that element of surprise doesn’t exist anymore. So, RG doesn’t scare them anymore.”

    Griffin had his knee reconstructed between the 2012 and 2013 seasons, and an ankle dislocation sidelined him for six weeks in 2014. The injury history prompted one AFC defensive coach who has faced the quarterback to say that regardless of the team that signs Griffin, or the system he plays in, he will not experience sustained success.

    “No. He’s done,” he said. “He can’t stay healthy. Running the type of system that he needs to run, his body isn’t able to hold up in the NFL. He can’t play the way he needs to play and stay healthy.”

    Another AFC assistant coach said he didn’t see why Griffin couldn’t run a system similar to what Cam Newton runs for Carolina. However, two critics pointed out that Griffin lacks Newton’s body type and durability.

    One NFC executive thought it might serve Griffin well to be a backup again next season.

    “His problem right now is his accuracy, which is a direct reflection of his bad footwork and mechanics in the pocket,” the NFC executive said. “Although he is fast, he is not the dynamic change-of-direction athlete that many think he is. This offseason should be all about getting back to the basics for him. He’ll be a good backup for someone that can provide a spark off the bench.

    “Coming out, you loved his playmaking ability and the touch he showed on his deep ball. You knew that he wasn’t a finished product and that it would be an adjustment for him to learn the different coverage reads and sight adjustments.”

    Three big questions

    Perhaps the biggest uncertainty about Griffin is his willingness to return to a system that uses him frequently as a runner. He repeatedly said he envisioned himself developing into an Aaron Rodgers-style quarterback who uses his legs to buy himself time to throw.

    Griffin and Jay Gruden, the coach who benched him in 2015, agreed that the read option used in small doses can help keep a defense off balance, but both said that heavy doses likely would lead to more injuries.

    Mike Shanahan, who was fired at the end of 2013, often said that Griffin needed to learn how to slide and find other ways to protect himself. But Griffin, both as a third- and fourth-year player, didn’t exhibit an ability to do so.

    Seeking to limit his risk of injury, Gruden and Griffin agreed that a West Coast offense predicated on timing, short drop-backs and quick releases, was the way to go. But Griffin struggled in those areas, at times confusing three- and five-step drops and holding on to the ball too long.

    Because Griffin hasn’t played since the preseason, it is hard to envision him having made significant strides, one coach said. The quarterback routinely remained on the field long after practice to work on his mechanics, but such solo work, and even practice work, differs greatly from game speed.

    “As a quarterback, it’s very hard to grow and develop when you’re not getting those game reps,” the coach said. “You really have to take advantage of every opportunity in those practices and treat them like games. But it’s really a challenge because it’s not the same.”

    Time on the sideline might have “humbled” Griffin, as the talent evaluators put it, perhaps leaving him more receptive to running an offense similar to Washington’s in 2012. But that leads back to the durability issues.

    And so, potential Griffin suitors are left with three big questions: Does he still view himself as a pocket passer rather than a dual-threat quarterback? Has he improved enough to run a pro-style offense with the necessary crisp accuracy and timing? And has he learned how to protect himself to improve his durability?

    What has to happen
    Even those coaches, scouts and executives who maintained confidence in Griffin expressed that belief with one caveat: Griffin could only excel if he is in the right situation and paired with the right staff that believes in him.

    At least five teams — the Cleveland Browns, Houston Texans, New York Jets, Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers — will likely look to add quarterbacks this offseason. But a job vacancy doesn’t mean an ideal situation.

    One coach said Griffin, who might not be released until March 9, can only succeed under a coach who commits to fully overhauling his system to enhance Griffin’s strengths and mask his deficiencies, much like Washington did in 2012. But that coach described such a scenario as highly unlikely.

    Some talent evaluators wondered whether Griffin will receive a fair shake on his next team. A study published in October on race and quarterback survival in the NFL concluded that African American quarterbacks, between 2001 and 2009, were twice as likely as white quarterbacks to be benched.

    Throughout the 2015 season, fans and media members speculated about whether race was a factor in Griffin’s demotion in favor of Kirk Cousins. That odd quarterback transition began once Griffin was placed in the concussion protocol by the team during the preseason. Those surveyed were split on whether they felt race played a role.

    “I don’t see how Griffin couldn’t have done what Cousins did this season,” said one NFC scout, noting that Cousins had better protection under offensive line coach Bill Callahan, who was new to Washington, and benefited from the emergence of tight end Jordan Reed.

    Another NFC executive, though, didn’t think that Griffin could have thrown for 4,166 yards and finished fifth in the NFL with a 101.6 passer rating, as did Cousins, who came from a pro-style system at Michigan State. That background, the executive believed, made him a better fit for Gruden’s West Coast offense than did Griffin’s time in a spread/read-option offense at Baylor.

    “Hence why the Shanahans adjusted what they usually do to fit his skill set,” the executive said. “RGIII’s main problem is himself and the bad advice that he’s been given. At some point, he has to look in the mirror and take responsibility for himself and stop looking to blame others. It’s time to man up.”

    Wherever he lands, Griffin will need to continue to develop his game. Based on his approach during the 2015 season, and according to those who have spoken with him, he appears committed to doing so.

    Because of that, even Gruden, who deemed Griffin an ill fit for his system, believes Griffin will exhibit growth at his next destination.

    “In the long run, hopefully it’ll make him a better quarterback,” Gruden said. “I know he grew a lot being a third-string quarterback here: different system, different terminology. Things like that were new to him. I think the skill set that he has and he learned from Shanahan, the new stuff that he learned from us, I think that will make him a better quarterback wherever he goes — however it works out for him.”

    #38520
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    i’m waving my rgiii flag here i know. but i think this locker room poison talk. this arrogance. i think it’s all overblown. the media taking some harmless stories and running with it.

    he was benched all of last year, and i don’t remember any rumblings coming from his camp. and now this story says he spent time after practice working on his skills. i don’t get the sense of any kind of attitude problem. i just think he needs a new start. with a coaching staff committed to developing him.

    i see an alex smith type career trajectory for him. a mobile quarterback coming from a spread offense who struggled early on with injuries and learning a new offense. alex smith struggled for 4 years. way more than rgiii did i might add. didn’t find any kind of proper footing until his 5th year at the age of 25 after he missed his entire fourth season in 2008. didn’t really take off until his age 27 season.

    rgiii? missed his entire fourth season due to being benched and is now entering his fifth season at the age of 26. and let me say again. i don’t think rgiii struggled half as much as alex smith did. again. find a coaching staff that’s committed to him, and i think you will see real progress from him.

    #38521
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    let me also add. and maybe this doesn’t mean that much, but in 2014, just for comparison’s sake.

    kirk cousins’ passer rating was 86.4.

    rgiii? 86.9.

    kirk cousins. the quarterback coming out of a pro system in college?

    126-204 1710 yards 61.8% 8.4 avg 10 tds 9 ints 8 scks

    rgiii?

    147-214 1694 yards 68.7% 7.9 avg 4 tds 6 ints 33 scks

    by all accounts this guy is a competitor. he works hard. maybe he needed to be taken down a notch. maybe he’s been humbled a little bit. too hard headed in the past. but maybe he’s matured a bit this past season.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 9 months ago by Avatar photoInvaderRam.
    #38526
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Alex Smith may not be a bad comparison.

    But how much would that kind of QB be worth when he’s going to cost a decent sum of money, and you’ve got Foles’ salary on the books, and Alex Smith isn’t a big upgrade of Keenum. An upgrade, maybe, but when you consider the salary cap eaten up by the QB position, I’m not sure it’s worth it. I’ll pass on RGIII.

    #38534
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    well. ya gotta do the background research. interview him. almost like drafting him again. figure out what he’s looking for salary wise.

    they’ll probably talk to the position coach. interestingly. weinke worked a little with rgiii. to what extent i have no idea, but he did work him out at img academy.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/football-insider/post/taking-the-measure-of-robert-griffin-iii/2012/04/19/gIQAfD2yTT_blog.html

    More to his liking was the afternoon activity – a full football-specific workout on a back field a five-minute golf-cart ride away, overseen by Chris Weinke, the director of the IMG Madden Football Academy and, like Griffin, a former Heisman Trophy winner (2000, Florida State).

    There, Griffin – sporting gold shoes and gaudy teal, pink, white and black socks, and fitted with sensors on each forearm to measure his sweat — navigated an obstacle course of cones and blocking dummies as he unleashed a torrent of screaming, tight spirals that had Weinke’s jaw dropping.

    “Off the charts,” Weinke said. “You can just see the athleticism coming out. Now, he’s the first to admit he still has work to do. That’s good. He knows that…. But he’s as good as I’ve been around.”

    An approaching lightning storm cut the proceedings short, but Griffin had to catch a flight home to Texas anyway. First, though, at Weinke’s request, Griffin stopped to shake hands and take photos with a half-dozen teenaged football students who had gathered on the sidelines to watch.

    #39040
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Could the Rams be a perfect fit for RG3?

    Nick Wagoner

    http://espn.go.com/blog/st-louis-rams/post/_/id/26849/could-rams-be-a-fit-for-rg3

    EARTH CITY, Mo. — Undoubtedly, the Los Angeles Rams will be connected to just about any quarterback with a pulse this offseason. Such is life when your current depth chart consists of Case Keenum, Nick Foles and Sean Mannion.

    By now, you’ve heard the Peyton Manning rumors for as unlikely as they might be, the Johnny Manziel whispers for as even more unlikely as they might be, and it’s safe to say that will only continue until the Rams add at least one quarterback either via free agency or the NFL draft.

    With that in mind, ESPN’s Mike Sando examined five potential landing spots for Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III. Checking in at No. 3 on that list? You guessed it, the Rams.

    Obviously, there’d be a certain symmetry in the Rams adding Griffin now. They were the team that received a boatload of draft picks from the Redskins in 2012 so Washington could use the No. 2 overall pick on Griffin. After RG3 led Washington to the playoffs in a dynamic rookie season, it was all downhill after. And now it’s likely that the team will release Griffin assuming it can’t find a trade partner.

    From a Rams perspective, it’s fair to wonder whether Griffin would be an upgrade over what they currently have. But there could be some intriguing things about him that would draw the Rams’ interest.

    The Rams have made it clear they want to be a run-centric offense with a passing game that can complement with play action passes and deep shots. When coach Jeff Fisher switched from Foles to Keenum last year, he also mentioned the desire to have a more mobile option who could extend plays. Those would seem to be things that would fit Griffin’s skill set.

    Of course, Griffin comes with his share of flaws as well or else we wouldn’t even be discussing his possible availability. Only time will tell how the Rams figure out their quarterback conundrum but for now we can throw one more name into the hat.

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