Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › from around the net… on Goff/Wentz (a must read thread tho long)
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April 20, 2016 at 12:32 am #42282znModerator
from off the net
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ramsman34
Here’s my take on Goff. He is remarkable when he sets his feet and throws, especially on the deeper routes. He can’t muscle deeper throws with accuracy without that good base. His build is concerning a bit. He will take some snaps out of shotgun at the next level. But not every single one like at Cal. I wonder how well his ability to read a defense will translate when he has to turn away from the D then get his head back around and reassess. His footwork will be fine in that regard, its the not being able to stare down the D, read the safeties and coverage pre to post snap that would concern me. He just doesn’t have that on film to assess. He will have even less time to throw in the pros and if he can’t process that info after turning his back to the D, even faster than he did at Cal in the gun – that would be a major issue.
All in all, he is very, very skilled and his accuracy is top-flight. His pocket awareness is awesome. He played against some really good college teams as well. It is the system that worries me most when projecting him to the Rams. Followed by his build/durability at the next level, then his intermediate to deep arm strength when he can”t throw from a solid base – which he will have to do from time to time in the pros.
Can he develop all those areas with time? IDK, if his other skills are any indication, I wouldn’t bet against him developing into a very good pro. It is going to take some time however. I do like this kid. But, I like Wentz more – considerably more.
April 20, 2016 at 12:33 am #42283znModeratorfrom off the net
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Flipper336
Wentz is my pick . I like elite/rare traits and Wentz has them. I can run ANY play I can dream off and I like what little I have seen personality wise.
There is no way the Rams QB won’t be asked to work from under center and sell play action from there. So who has more reps doing what will they will be asked to do the most?
QUARTERBACK GRADING
This is the sheet I made to watch EVERY QB. Posted it here for a few years so it isn’t geared for a QB I like THIS year. I don’t change everything I have been doing because I think some guy has “IT”. “IT” is gradable when actual qualities are broken down IMO. This sheet is what I look for and how I balance attributes and their importance. If I can’t see the QB do these things I do not simply assume they will “just get it with practice”. It’s on here because some simply do NOT get it with more practice and all do it with different precision.
SET UP AND POCKET AWARENESS – 10 (76)
-quickness to release from under center into three-, five-, or seven-step drops with mobility and foot quickness with balance.
-chin on shoulder for backside awareness
-mobility in pocket to elude and avoid…hitch, hitch slide and throw
-feel pocket pressure
-strength in pocket
-does he know when to run/throw
-roll out left and right
-square shoulders on the move
-does he drift in the pocket?WENTZ VS GOFF –
The obvious, no idea how Goff will react to playing from under center. Wentz has good speed in his drops, settles with balance but then gets a bit inconsistent. Sometimes stands with dead feet and will sometimes widen his base too much. Both do a good job feeling pressure and will shuffle their feet away from it. Wentz will default to run a bit quickly at times while Goff defaults to fading back or throwing from his back foot. I like both in the pocket but if asked to pick a favorite I’ll take Goff. Both will stand their ground and deliver. Wentz seems to take those shots often in his legs while Goff takes more traditional shots. No plus/minus, just an observation on the Wentz hits (I felt it was a very high percentage of low hits) Wentz has a big edge throwing on the move/rolling out. Not only can Wentz make every throw on the move, his passes don’t look very different from when his feet are under him. Can’t think of anyone recently that is his equal here.EDGE – Wentz. I know pocket awareness is THE Goff trait but in my grading Wentz has done more, is no slouch in the pocket, and is a rare talent throwing on the move (from a moving pocket or not).
FIELD VISION/DEFENSE AND COVERAGE RECOGNITION – 10
-pre snap defensive reads/ability to identify the Mike linebacker, low safety or corner from slot and change protection
-blitz recognition
-ability to audible or change play at the line of scrimmage
-finding primary and secondary receivers
-coverage recognition on the move.
-quick and accurate reads
-proper progression
-timingWENTZ VS GOFF –
Both make pre and post snap reads. I believe Goff was given more responsibility in his offense because he showed he could but I still feel Wentz overall had more control/responsibilities because of the offense he was in. I have been reading Wentz doesn’t scan the field…I disagree. Both throw a LARGE percentage to their first read but I feel North Dakota’s first options took longer to develop so Wentz “starred down” his first option while Goff “made a quick decision”. I will say that Wentz has a good percentage of half field reads (especially because they roll the pocket a bunch) so you won’t see his head back and forth but he’s making reads. I like Goff’s progressions MUCH more compared to almost all QBs in any variant of his offense. He will allow plays to develop instead of the usual almost instant check down that makes me crazy in these offenses. Wentz could actually to a better job utilizing his check down. He will allow the play to develop…too long at times because he is very willing to default to his legs if even the check down is taken away. Goff is more willing to admit defeat on a given play (not a negative) Wentz holds out longer and is more willing to trust his arm when the play was simply defensed well or his legs to save a totally busted play.EDGE – Goff. Goff makes quick/smart decisions and has a good clock for plays developing. Wentz is too willing to default to his talent below the shoulders while Goff plays the game above the shoulders for as long as possible.
ACCURACY AND TOUCH – 10
-throwing all types of passing variations, trajectory, and ability to spin ball while taking off some strength.
-short: catchable balls thrown where defenders can’t make a play, squeeze into window, screen/swing passes
-intermediate/long: Stick it on receiver, deep-ball placement, squeeze over linebacker in front of safeties.WENTZ VS GOFF –
Both throw very catchable passes to all levels of the field. Wentz is the one that can throw a rope deep or across the field…Goff relies more on timing with these types of throws. Goff is better on slants/crossing patterns. I prefer Goff’s touch on timing based patterns and Wentz throwing in/through traffic. I will also say that Wentz was held back on long passes because his WRs lacked speed. Some will say overthrow on several passes I felt lacked ANY closing burst from his receiver.EDGE – What offense are you running?
DELIVERY AND RELEASE – 8
-type of release (over ear, sidearm, pitcher release on post leg, elongated motion)?
-upper-body passer lacks weight transfer?
-foot placement/balance
-release quickness
-follow through
-throw from different platforms?WENTZ VS GOFF –
Both have good arm motions. Goff has much better balance, consistency, and weight transfer. Honestly, he’s basically a finished product here. Wentz has an inconsistent lower half. He gets very wide in his base at times causing almost all arm throws. Gets away with it in college because his arm is so strong but will need much better lower/upper body communication. Wentz is a clear winner throwing from different arm slots. He can do it and lose almost nothing on his throw.EDGE – Goff.
ARM STRENGTH – 8
-live arm?
-intermediate velocity/zip
-long velocity/zip
-tightness of spiral
-wind up deep?
-balls lose interest?WENTZ VS GOFF –
Wentz has a rare arm. I’m comfortable saying Goff can make every NFL throw…because he can. Wentz can make some mad scientist OC dream throws or throws a defense can’t plan for. He can throw to all levels with ease, even on the move, stick throws between defenders and sideline throws that are only seen in rare arm talents.EDGE – Wentz
LEADERSHIP AND POISE – 6
-commands respect, raises expectation while elevating the play of teammates?
-composure and the ability to perform in pressure situations
-not forcing balls into double or triple coverage
-ability and confidence to consistently deliver big plays under pressure
-smart decisions in time out management, milk clock before snapping ball
-4th quarterWENTZ VS GOFF –
Both seem well respected by teammates and coaches. Wentz is going to take this section for me because of his play in the LATE 4th quarter of big games. Last minute game winning TD vs a tough Northern Iowa team with NFL talent, National championship game last year, and I’m drawing a blank on I feel two others (any help Deadpool?) but the bottom line is that his game steps up big in big situations.EDGE – Wentz
BALL HANDLING – 4
-hand size
-under center transfer
-snap in shotgun
-selling play action
-smooth with eyes downfield
-where does the QB hold the ballWENTZ VS GOFF –
Again, Goff will get dinged here because of his offense. He does well in every aspect that he is asked to do though. No small hand issues. I can think of one pump fake into the dirt but that happens to everyone once in awhile. Now with all the caveats out of the way…Wentz is very good in this area. As with any run option plan there will be some exchange issues but they are rare and Wentz is excellent at selling fakes/play action. Their red zone/short yardage offense takes full advantage of this and it shows in some WIDE open plays in a very congested part of the field.EDGE – Wentz
RUNNING ABILITY- 4
-scrambling
-ability to run downhill with production
-big-play runner
-yards after contactWENTZ VS GOFF –
Wentz is the obvious winner here BUT Goff can move the chains with his legs when a play breaks down.EDGE – Wentz
POTENTIAL – 10
-if utilized in ideal scenarioEDGE – Wentz. If you don’t see the upside difference, I can’t show it to you.
HEIGHT/WEIGHT – 6
-for a particular positionEDGE – Wentz, BUT I am not scared by Goff’s weight/frame AT ALL.
GENERAL TALKING POINTS –
Level of competition. Doesn’t factor for me. Wentz also played WITH lower level competition, not just against, and his physical talent was man amongst boys.
April 20, 2016 at 12:34 am #42284znModerator===
from a much longer post, here: http://www.ramsrule.com/herd/read.php?5,651218,651218#msg-651218
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XXXIVwin
I know I’m late to the Goff/Wentz debate-fest, but I gotta get this off my chest.
To me, Goff looks special. Wentz looks like he could be “very good.”
…
BOTTOM LINE: When I watch Jared Goff’s college tape, I get the same reaction as when I watched see Aaron Donald’s college tape. Many times I thought “WOW—how did he do that!??!!” And then, even more shocking, it becomes ROUTINE. The more you watch Goff’s tape, the more you realize he does the amazing REPEATEDLY and CONSISTENTLY. And it’s the same damn knock for both Donald and Goff: “Yeah, but he’s a little small for the position.” For both Goff and Donald, it’s demonstrably not true.
To me, Goff looks Super Bowls, Wentz looks Playoffs. Wentz has “It”, Goff has IT.
FINAL DISCLAIMER: I acknowledge I could be wrong about EVERYTHING in this long post, I’ve been horribly wrong about the Rams plenty of times. Maybe Goff is weak-armed and too skinny and he’ll have trouble adjusting to a pro-style offense and all his good habits will get knocked out of him. Maybe Wentz will be a solid stud for years to come.
But right now, I have my heart set on Goff, and I’ll have to drink lots of Kool-Aid if they surprise me and go with Wentz. For Wentz supporters, feel free to disagree with me, I know we all just want what’s best for our Rams!
April 20, 2016 at 12:35 am #42285znModeratorfrom off the net
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alyoshamucci
Gotta say I prefer Wentz, But I have no problem if it’s Goff at all. I think I said right after the combine I expected them to go 1-2 overall. Maybe earlier than the combine.[
For Goff … I have only seen footwork like his within the pocket from Brady. It’s a small thing, and Flip mentions it in his ability to move smoothly, but the amount of plays I saw him easily slide around with guys in the pocket with him, or in a collapsing pocket, to make the same type of throw that I would expect of a flawlessly clean pocket … it’s just stunning. His pocket movement makes him look like a video game character. Like he’s defying physics.
Also, a second thing … cognition speed. It was highlighted on my favorite play by him (I have these for all QBs I think can go top ten). It was 3rd and 7 … he had two plays before well defended .. and the defense was playing really tight. At the snap of the ball he spotted the tiniest opening where Lawler was going to split 3 defenders … from mid snap to the ball reaching his hands he was already set to throw and he barely shuffled his weight on his feet … I have to say that of the three defenders, none of them got a full step toward where Lawler made the catch. He trusted his feet, his arm, his accuracy, his WR, and his read … and caught the defense flat-footed.For Wentz
I did not expect him to even really play the National Championship game … and coming off an injury I didn’t expect him sharp. So the sheer surprise was kinda radical. His first throw in the Senior Bowl was into a really tight window … in fact, the players were under and over coverage and were daring him to throw it in. And he was like “Yeah I can hit that” … and he stuck it over and under the deep corner and underneath man right on the sideline. I actually “felt” the throw.
Wentz’s body language suggests personality characteristics I like in a human being … passion and humility intertwined.One thing I like in my QBs is irrational optimism. And having the mixture of passion and humility is more likely to produce that. That the psych theorist in me talking, but that’s part of my system.
April 20, 2016 at 12:36 am #42286znModerator==
from off the net
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Deadpool
My Goff and Wentz breakdown
First Goff
Jared Goff – Cal – 6′-4″ 215 lbs
The “Bear” Raid offense at a glance:
4 WRs sets with no TE and a single back.
A ton of screens, WR screens, inside screens, RB screens. Every screen in the book.
Not a lot of deep stuff, more short to intermediate
Never under center
Never audibled (at least from what I could tell)
Never called out line protections
Very few designed QB roll outs
Some called QB drawsPro’s:
-Arm is enough to make all the NFL throws.
Ex. Against Utah he threw from the opposite hash at the 41 yard line to the 3 yard line on a dime for a TD.
-Moves well laterally in the pocket
-Moves up well in the pocket
-Goes though progressions
Ex. He went to his 3rd and 2nd options early in the Utah game. 3rd progression at least once in UCLA game
-He competes, even if Cal was out of it, he didn’t seem to give up and just kept firing
-When allowed to set up his accuracy is elite at all levels
Ex. he was lights out against Air Force
-Will change arm slot to complete passes
-Will put air under the ball when needed (although, he could do it more)
-An ok runner, he knows how to slide
-Willing to throw into tight windows
-Can take a hit
-Seems calm in a chaotic pocketCons:
-As stated, will take some time with a pro style offense
-Sometimes is totally unaware of the rush. It could get him killed.
-Deep ball accuracy is hit and miss
-when forced to reload, accuracy is downright bad.
-While arm is good enough, he rarely throws with a lot of zip. Not an elite arm.
-Goes down on first contact.
-Will force passes
Ex. again going to the Utah game Lawler was at fault with the1st int., the next 4 (yes 5 total) were all on Goff.==
Next Wentz:
Carson Wentz – NDSU – 6′-5″ 237 lbs.
NDSU’s offense at a glance:
Ball control pro style offense. Top FCS team usually in ToP, like to control the line of Scrimmage with 3 RBs in the run game and wear you down.
Will run some jet sweep stuff
A fair amount of QB keeper stuff.
Playaction
Under center and from the gun.Pro’s:
-Wentz had total control of the offense, from calling any play in the playbook to calling out protections.
-Played from under center
-Elite arm
-Throws with touch at all levels
-Will change arm slot to make the completion
-Will move in the pocket to avoid the rush, but also to find a throwing lane
-Can throw on the run, but he will throw on the run. Rarely stops after a roll out, sets and throws.
-Tough, physical runner
-throws into tight windows
-Clutch QB, seems calm all the time
Ex. – see last TD pass in Northern Iowa game.
-Was consistently the best QB this off-season. From Senior Bowl to Combine, step up in competition didn’t effect him.
-Goes thru progressions (although not all the time)
Ex. Northern Iowa, 1st pass of the game starts looking left, moves to the middle and throws there, incomplete.
He competes.Con’s
-Needs to learn to slide or go out of bounds. He is an aggressive runner that could get him killed in the NFL.
-Has had a few injuries over his career, ankle sprain against Montana, broken wrist against USD (never came out of either game, although he should have)
-Accuracy can be spotty, more-so as a Jr then a Sr., but if his accuracy was off, it stayed off.
-Sometimes takes off and runs too early, not going thru progressions
-Needs to speed up his process. Although it looked fine at the Senior Bowl. He can be late on some throws.
-Makes some throws that just should not be made. Trusts his arm too much I guess.==
As far as other stuff
Both are smart, clean off the field prospects that are seemingly leaders (I know Wentz is, Goff seems like it) that really comes down to personal taste.
One one hand you have a smaller, QB with a lot of bigtime college football under his belt. On the other hand you have a big, strong armed QB with 14 fewer starts at the FCS level.
You are going to hear upside with Wentz and more polished with Goff. I don’t necessarily buy that. Wentz has performed well at everything he has been asked to. Senior Bowl with a bunch of FBS guys? Best QB all week. Combine with the the best of the best and who was the best? Wentz again. So at what point does Wentz get credit for just being a good QB?
The other thing is that you hear: Well, he played at division 2 (wrong) or played at a lower level or beat up on lesser competition. Well sure, but his team was also built from the same type of guys. He never had a Lawler on his team like Goff did. Heck, Jacksonville State was built with basically all FBS transfers, not NDSU. If you want to argue that he has only thrown 600 or so college passes, fine. I’ll buy that. But he has competed at every level of this thing and nothing phases him.
And as far as Goff, he might be more polished as far as passing, but he has a ways to go in a pro style offense. As far as pro style offense its Wentz all day. I think Goff is actually the one with the upside. He’s younger, his arm/body can and should get bigger and as he grows into a pro style offense he will get more comfortable and to me that lends itself to upside.
To me they are close to even. I give Wentz the edge on his size/arm. but its personal taste.I like a Rothlisberger over a Ryan. Or a Flacco over Bridgewater.
If you feel more comfortable with a guy like Matt Ryan you are going to like Goff. If a big armed QB that can extend plays with his legs like Rothlisberger, then Wentz is your guy.
Here’s the million dollar question: Does Wentz make the leap to the NFL more or less seamless then Goff makes the adjustment to a prostyle offense?
Oh and just food for thought: Who do you want as your QB in Seattle in December in the rain with the division on the line? Or GB in January in the first round of the playoffs?
And for dessert: Could lightning really strike twice and Goff actually develops into Aaron Rodgers? Or Kyle Boller?
April 20, 2016 at 12:37 am #42287znModerator===
from off the net
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jrry32
The Rams got tired of trying to plug the QB holes with a bunch of low percentage options. They made a ballsy move and increased the odds of finding a viable starting QB significantly. And they did it in the right year.
I actually prefer Goff. He played behind a bad OL in college. Dude had to learn how to work the pocket and buy time with his footwork in order to survive. He’s a special player in terms of pocket instincts, movement, and poise under pressure. He has really quick feet as well which definitely helps.
He’s the sort of guy who can buy time in the pocket with quick, subtle movements like Brady and Manning do/did. Guys like that are uber valuable and make their OLs look good.
Unfortunately for Wentz, one of his biggest flaws right now is how raw his pocket movement is. He doesn’t keep his feet active when he’s standing in the pocket and his throwing base was too wide. He’s shown improvement since the end of the season but it’s still going to be something that he’ll have to keep working on and improving. Goff’s way ahead of him in terms of pocket movement and instincts.
Wentz kind of reminds me of a young Bradford. He typically had good protection so he wasn’t forced to master pocket movement in the same way Goff was. He could settle after taking his drop a lot of the time. Goff had to move or he’d get crushed. If Bradford had Goff’s instincts in the pocket, his feet, and his pocket movement, Bradford would be one of the best QBs in the NFL right now.
Goff is the more pro ready passer.
Goff’s style of play is a very easy fit here. He’s a traditional pocket passer with solid mobility. He’s a pretty easy guy to fit into almost any NFL scheme.
I like Wentz a lot but I prefer Goff. I think Goff will be a great QB. IMO, he has Peyton Manning like potential and I don’t take a statement like that lightly. Peyton Manning is the best QB I’ve ever seen play. Regardless, if they pick Wentz, I’ll be happy. If they pick Goff, I’ll be elated. It’s a decision they can’t mess up unless they don’t pick either.
As for Mannion, he isn’t a throw away. He’s the expected outcome of a 3rd round QB…a backup. Your percentage chances of drafting a starting QB in the 3rd round are around 10%.
April 20, 2016 at 12:37 am #42288znModerator===
from off the net
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dolphinlover123
I’m a Cal fan and a prospective Rams fan. No Cal fan wants Goff to go to the Browns. We want the best for him and we hope that he goes to the Rams. Cal fans love Goff and have high expectations for him. It’s truly been a blessing to watch him play.
He is really accurate most of the time and just makes plays. You might think that Wentz is better on his feet, but trust me, Goff knows when and how to use his feet. He scrambles really well and is actually deceivingly shifty. Wentz might be the more physical one, but Goff plays really smart, and he can throw his body for the team when necessary. He’s certainly done that at Cal.
Goff could’ve been so much better had he had a little more time in the pocket. Our O-line was one of the worst and gave Goff very little time in the pocket (which also explains his very quick releases). Goff has taken so many hits the first two years at Cal. That’s one reason that I really hope that Goff goes to the Rams. He will get crushed at Cleveland. Make no mistake though. He is deadly when defenses show blitz. He lets them come to him and throws over them and eats them up.
Goff throws great deep balls and knows which shoulder to throw at. His footwork has also received plenty of praise. Just give him some time in the pocket, and you’ve got a deadly QB.
Don’t let Cal’s poor records in his first two years worry you. Our defense has been rated the worst in the entire division 1 football. Our O-line has also been prettyyyy bad. But still, he always keeps his cool and will make his throws.
TLDR
1. Goff is accurate and times his throws very well. Enough strength.
2. He is great in the red-zone
3. Amazing footwork that allows him to scramble and move in his pocket to buy time and look for his receivers
4. Great against blitz
5. Quick reads and releases
6. He is a quality guy that won’t start drama. He is humble and does the right things.
7. Cal’s defense and O-line sucked. And actually our running game was not good either. So even though we ran a pretty one dimensional offense, he did pretty well.April 20, 2016 at 1:36 am #42292znModeratorjrry32
I like Wentz a lot but I prefer Goff. I think Goff will be a great QB. IMO, he has Peyton Manning like potential and I don’t take a statement like that lightly. Peyton Manning is the best QB I’ve ever seen play. Regardless, if they pick Wentz, I’ll be happy. If they pick Goff, I’ll be elated. It’s a decision they can’t mess up unless they don’t pick either.
some follow-up
==jrry32
I’ve seen people throwing unfair and inaccurate criticisms at Wentz. Both guys are talented. Both guys have the ability to be great in the NFL. Both guys will be outstanding picks at #1.
Wentz is a plenty accurate QB. And while Goff’s release is quicker, it’s not enough of a difference for me. I do prefer Goff because Goff is more polished but if Wentz is the pick, people will end up being very happy with the pick. Wentz has a ton of upside and is already a very talented QB. There’s a whole hell of a lot of film of Wentz throwing into tight windows and making NFL throws/reads. Wentz had better numbers in the red-zone in 2015. That is what matters more than anything.
Wentz will not be a runner at the NFL level. Like Blake Bortles or Andrew Luck, he’ll be a threat to pick-up yardage with his legs if he gets outside the pocket or gets a seam. But you’re not drafting him to run. You’re drafting him to be a pocket passer. And there’s more than enough film out there that shows he has that ability. He has some mechanical flaws in the lower body similar to the ones Blake Bortles and Jameis Winston had coming out. They’ve improved during the pre-draft process but he’ll need to continue to progress. And yes, he’ll have to work on his pocket movement and footwork.
That all said, these are things that can be developed and are often developed. Wentz has a lot of things that can’t be taught along with a very rare athletic skill-set.(6’5″ 237 with mobility and a rifle for an arm) Wentz has the mental acuity, accuracy, and instincts need to be great. He’s not as polished as Goff but given time, that’ll come.
And one thing people seem to constantly ignore is that Wentz wasn’t playing FCS talent on Oregon. Wentz was playing FCS talent on a FCS team. He had FCS linemen, he had FCS receivers, and he had FCS backs. He didn’t get bigger windows or worse coverage because of the level of competition. Because his WRs weren’t good.
It’s like some people expect Wentz to be putting up unheard of numbers to compensate for the lower level of competition. But he’s in a pro style run first system with FCS caliber players around him. It’s simply not realistic. If he’s facing just as tight of windows as guys like Goff and Lynch (and he did) and making just as tough of reads (and he did) then there’s no true advantage.
Is it worth considering that he played at the FCS? Yes. But only to the point that you actively look for the sort of plays that translate to the NFL. And there are plenty of those in his film.
It’s also worth mentioning that it’s ridiculously hard to get picked in the first round as a FCS QB. Teams tend to be skeptical of FCS players and it’s hard to find guys with the caliber of talent who standout enough in the FCS to go that highly. Basically, you have to be VERY SPECIAL to be drafted in the first round as a FCS QB. There have only been two guys drafted in the first round at QB from FCS programs since 1990…Steve McNair and Joe Flacco. I’d say that sort of history bodes well for Wentz.
Whether it’s Wentz or Goff on draft day, I’ll be happy.
April 20, 2016 at 7:57 am #42294znModeratoreven MORE follow-up
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jrry32
I’ve spent months watching the QBs in this draft to try and determine who the Rams should draft after seeing our struggles this year.
For those who have only seen the highlights and read the scouting reports or heard from the talking head, I hope this is useful for you. I’m going to break down the strengths and weaknesses of each passer, compare them to a few NFL passers, and explain my preference for Goff over Wentz. For those of you who question where my report comes from, I watched between 12 and 20 games for each of Goff and Wentz which includes games from past years. Here are my reports on each:
Goff
Strengths:
Great accuracy and touch on passes to all levels of the field. Will hit the strike zone consistently. Can drop the ball in the bucket on deep passes. Puts the ball in the correct spot for YAC. Doesn’t throw with more velocity than is needed. Consistently throws the ball in a way to protect his WRs when possible.
Outstanding pocket presence, movement, and poise under pressure. He’s truly Luck caliber in his ability to maneuver the pocket, buy time, and find or create throwing lanes as a college passer. He has active, quick feet which allow him to set and reset quickly when moving and get the ball out in an instant. Dealt with a lot of pressure due to having a poor performing OL and constantly threw with defenders in his face or after he was forced off his spot.
Top tier mental processing speed through his progressions and reads. Quick-minded player who can move through full-field reads with speed. Consistently can get to his 3rd or 4th progression when needed even when under fire. Rarely locks onto WRs. He also throws with great anticipation. He understands how to throw a WR open and how throws should be timed.
Tough SOB. He took a beating throughout his career at Cal due to his OL and due to the team’s lack of success. His defense was consistently one of the worst in the NCAA and forced Goff into shootouts. They went 1-11 his freshman year and 5-7 his sophomore year. Goff kept it together, never got discouraged, and helped Cal go 8-5 in his junior year. Some will blame Goff for his team not winning more but Cal’s offense actually ranked 11th in points per game with 38.2 points per game scored his sophomore year…the problem was that their defense gave up 39.8 points per game. His junior year, the offense performed similarly with 37.8 points per game ranking 17th in the NCAA but the defense improved to allowing only 30.7 points per game which accounted for the team winning 8 games instead of 5. For those who knock Goff for not winning more, I have to wonder how a QB can compensate for a defense that allows nearly 40 points per game. Even Drew Brees has struggled to get New Orleans over the hump when their defense is among the worst in the NFL.Excellent intangibles. I have heard nothing but good things about Goff’s work ethic, film habits, personality, leadership, and character. He’s not an outgoing and outwardly confident at Wentz but Goff is the type of kid who is the first in and the last out by all reports and is popular among teammates. Goff was also responsible for running his offense at the LOS and received more responsibility at the LOS from his OC than any other QB who played under him.
Checks all the physical boxes. Goff is 6’4″ 215 with solid mobility, awesomely quick feet, and an above average arm. His hands are meet the minimum criteria in terms of size. And he’s never missed a start due to an injury although he did suffer a separated shoulder in the last game of his freshman year at Cal.
Great decision-maker. Goff is a lot like Peyton Manning in how you’d classify him. He’s not a true gunslinger or a true game manager. He mixes elements of both but leans a tad more towards the gunslinger side of the coin. He’s never shied away from testing tight coverage, he will take shots down the field, and he has a tremendous amount of confidence in his ability to fit throws into tight windows.
Quick, natural release. Goff gets the ball out quickly and efficiently.
Weaknesses:
Goff has a skinny frame and his hands are smaller than you’d like. He had some issues with fumbles during his career although it did seem to improve in his final year at Cal. There are some concerns that his frame will lead to durability issues in the NFL. It’s possible.
Goff will occasionally short-arm passes that he rushes which leads to inaccuracy. He also has some stretches of inconsistency when teams are able to throw him off his rhythm. He’s definitely a rhythm passer. When he’s on, he’s lethal but he does have some stretches in games where he’s off.
Goff’s arm is above average but it isn’t elite. He won’t be able to make some of the intermediate to deep sideline throws with zip at the NFL level against tight coverage. But there’s a possibility that his arm strength will increase as he adds weight and physically matures.
Goff can be fooled by underneath zone defenders at times which has led to interceptions. Will also force some passes knowing there is a risk of interception. Washington State got him once using a Cover-2 Trap. Goff went after the trap a few others times in the game and got away with it. He’s definitely a guy who will take some risks.
Hasn’t had many big moments in his career. Cal hasn’t been a contender and Goff hasn’t had to make many drives in big, close games. He did it this year against Arizona State but it wasn’t a game on a big stage.
Goff played in an Air Raid variant so taking drops under center and learning a NFL playbook and NFL verbiage will be new to him.Overall:
Frankly, Goff doesn’t have a lot of true weaknesses. He has some attributes that aren’t strengths but they’re more neutral than weaknesses. He’s a polished passer who is extremely adept mentally and a great pure thrower. I’ve been smitten with him for over a year. Some will say that he resembles Bradford. And he does. He looks like college Bradford. Skinny kid who is a great pure thrower. But he’s so much more advanced in the pocket than Bradford was. I hate to throw around this comparison but he really reminds me of Peyton Manning. Manning is the best QB I’ve seen play the game and one of my favorite players of all time so I don’t throw that comparison around lightly. But he has feet, instincts, and movement in the pocket that are like Manning. And his coach even discusses how Goff studied Manning’s feet and mannerisms in the pocket. What I see in Goff is a guy who I think will realistically pan out like Philip Rivers.(I can’t say he’ll pan out like Manning…it’s just not fair to any player to expect that) He’s not a dead-on comparison for Rivers as they have different body types, throwing motions, and demeanors. However, like Rivers, Goff has great movement and feel in the pocket, he is highly effective throwing vertically despite not possessing an elite arm, and he’s a highly intelligent guy with a great feel for the game. I was reading an article where Goff was describing his thought process on a series of plays. He explained how he recognized that Stanford was playing a Cover-2, anticipated that their CB would not abandon his assignment to jump the underneath route because of his inexperience, and then showed a video of him making a perfect throw into the window created by the Stanford CB carrying the outside WR up the field rather than abandoning the assignment to jump the route the slot WR ran. Then Goff explained that the next time they ran that play in the same game, he expected the CB to not play the outside WR quite as tightly due to being burned once. Due to this, Goff threw the same route but released the ball a tick earlier and threw it to his WR’s back hip to keep the CB from being able to jump the route, and then they showed the video of the throw being put on his WR’s back hip a split second sooner and the CB trying to jump the route but failing because the ball was on the other side of the WR. What’s my point here? Goff combines all the things you look for in a great QB into one skill-set. He’s highly intelligent, he’s deadly accurate, he has outstanding work habits, and he has amazing instincts in the pocket. I think he’s a #1 overall caliber player and if we draft him, we’ll win at least one Super Bowl with him as a our QB. You can bookmark this thread if you think that comment is too “optimistic.”
Wentz
Strengths:
Wentz is the most physically talented passer since Cam Newton and Colin Kaepernick. We’re talking about a 6’5″ 235 pound QB with good mobility and a rifle for an arm. The day he steps onto the NFL field, he’ll have one of the strongest arms in the NFL. This is a kid who can make any throw you ask him to. There is no throw off limits in an offense. You want a 15 yard out route from the opposite hash? He’ll make the throw. You want a 60 yard hail mary bomb? He’ll make the throw. He’s got an unreal arm. We’re talking Kaepernick, Newton, Cutler, Rodgers tier arm here.
Wentz is a very accurate passer with the potential to be even more accurate in the future. He will make a lot of throws that make your jaw-drop because of his arm strength/accuracy combination. I saw him make throws to intermediate comebacks where the CB was blanketing the WR. I saw him make a throw down the seam that dropped perfectly between 3 defenders to his WR. And despite his arm strength, the touch is there. He’ll put some mustard on shorter throws when the window is tight but he knows when to take something off the ball. And he needs to make a tough throw, he will. People have a far more negative impression of his deep ball than they should because he throws it with such good touch. He has slow WRs so he airs the ball out to allow them to adjust to it and make plays rather than trying to throw lasers that they won’t be able to run under. People think that his deep ball will hang at times but it’s by design. I’ve seen him throw passes 55 yards in the air on a line.
Wentz’s instincts in the pocket are good. He feels pressure, he reacts, and he does his best to escape pressure. Wentz doesn’t drop his eyes. He doesn’t get happy feet. He doesn’t fear being hit. He has a good feel for pressure and knows when to get rid of the ball. He has great poise and composure in the pocket.
Wentz is a great runner who is a legitimate threat to take off and pick up big chunks of yardage if the defense doesn’t respect his legs. He isn’t Kaepernick or RGIII fast but he has good vision, good agility, and is fearless (too much so, frankly).
Wentz is an outstanding decision-maker who rarely forces balls into coverage. He will not hesitate to take risks or take shots down the field but he’s not a guy who takes unjustifiable risks. And when he does take risks, he generally puts the ball in a spot where only his guy will make a play.
Wentz’s intelligence and intangibles are top notch. People have been raving about his work habits, leadership, intelligence, and character. He’s the type of guy that NFL evaluators dream of at QB. He’s a good ole boy who speaks with confidence, commands respect, studies hard in the classroom and the film room, and behaves himself off the field. Type of kid who is the first one in the building and the last to leave. And I’ve heard rumors that he has an insanely good memory and ability to retain information.
Wentz played in a pro style run-first system that has a lot of similarities to the offense that the Rams currently run. He used verbiage similar to the verbiage used in the pros. He’s a very pro ready player mentally and was responsible for running his pro style offense at the LOS (this included calling protections). Wentz made full-field reads, went through progressions with speed, and threw NFL routes.
Wentz played in plenty of big moments and made a number of big time plays and big time drives in those games. There’s no question of whether he can handle pressure or “clutch” situations. This is a kid who led a come from behind game winning drive with less than 2 minutes left down 4 in the FCS National Championship game during his first year as a starter. In the big moments, Wentz will step up.
Weaknesses:
Wentz’s lower body mechanics need a lot of refinement. Like Jameis Winston, he plays with too wide of a throwing base which constantly forces him to set and reset when he’s forced off his spot and wastes precious time before he throws trying to get himself in a proper base. Wentz also is very inconsistent with his pocket movement. He flashes it from time to time but allows his feet to die too often in the pocket. He’s got to keep his feet active and keep moving or he’ll be a sitting duck in the NFL. He received consistent protection at NDSU from a talented OL so he was able to get away with picking a spot and staying there a lot of the time. Wentz’s feet are also not as agile and light as Goff’s.
Wentz needs to be more deceptive with his eyes. He locks onto WRs at times and can get tunnel vision. He’s definitely behind Goff in this category as Goff does a great job of moving defenders with his eyes and keeping from locking onto targets. Wentz got away with it in college because he has such a cannon for an arm but he needs to be more consistent using his eyes to move defenders or NFL defenders will pick on him as a rookie.
Wentz needs to do a better job of protecting the ball when he runs and protecting himself. He took a lot of unnecessary hits at NDSU and ended up breaking his wrist due to that. He also fumbled quite a bit when he took off and ran. We can’t have either of those things in the NFL because both are easily preventable.
Wentz doesn’t move as quickly and seamlessly through his progressions as Goff does. He’ll lock onto WRs from time to time and be late to his second or third progression. But this is understandable as he has a lot less starting experience.
Wentz played at the FCS level so he didn’t perform against anywhere near the level of athletes he’ll be facing at the NFL. That all said, he still threw against plenty of tight windows due to how unathletic his WRs were.
Overall:
Wentz has bigger questions and is less polished than Goff. He’s got some mechanical issues in his lower body that he’ll have to work through although he did show significant improvement during the Senior Bowl and pre-draft process as a whole. However, Wentz is incredibly physically gifted and has all the requisite attributes needed to be great. He has the instincts and mental acuity. I don’t see anything lacking in his skill-set aside from the correctable issues that I discussed above. He does have some similarities to Bradford in that he’s not as fleet-footed as Goff in the pocket and didn’t have to develop great pocket movement in college due to his protection but I think he has a better feel for pressure than Bradford did coming out and is more poised under pressure. Wentz’s ceiling is sky high and he’s a great fit for a run first offense. Especially one that wants to throw vertically. Wentz needs to protect himself in the NFL in order to stay healthy. Some people compare him to Big Ben but I don’t really see the same game there. Ben is such a strong guy and unwilling to go down. Wentz doesn’t have the same strength and tackle-breaking ability in the pocket.
Personally, I think he’s more like a young Carson Palmer. People may scoff at that who don’t remember Palmer when he was younger before the catastrophic knee injury but Palmer actually ran a 4.65 40 coming out of college. My personal opinion is that, despite Wentz’s athleticism, he shouldn’t be used as a runner in the NFL. Like Palmer, he has the ability to be a great pocket passer. Develop him as a passer and protect him from injuries. If he has a seam, he can certainly run. Just make sure he knows to get down and protect himself. Wentz has some similarities to Bortles although I think he’s more mentally polished than Bortles was. Ultimately though, I think he has Favre-caliber throwing ability. He doesn’t have the gunslinger mindset that Favre has but he has that caliber of an arm and movement skills. I fully expect Wentz to be a top 10 QB in the NFL once he develops. One thing I loved reading about Wentz was the breakdown of the game winning TD he threw against Northern Iowa. In Wentz’s first year as a starter, Northern Iowa kicked NDSU’s ass. You knew Wentz wanted to get revenge. Northern Iowa got after Wentz and hit him a lot in that game. Wentz threw his first two INTs of the season in that game because their defense was playing so well. One of them was simply a bad decision under pressure. Down 4 with less than 2 minutes, Wentz drove NDSU almost 80 yards. On his final play, Wentz recognized that the defense was in Cover-1 man and recognized the blitz they were bringing so he changed the protection and audibled the play to take advantage of the match-up of his slot WR on the LB. Wentz threw a slot fade that the FS in Cover-1 couldn’t get to and the LB covering the slot WR wasn’t in position to defend for the game winning TD. It was equally impressive that he recognized the coverage early enough to change the concept and the blitz to change the protection as well as him also having the confidence to change the play and the protection in that sort of situation (45 seconds left in the game down by 4 just inside the red-zone). I think Wentz is every bit worth being the #2 pick and I expect whoever takes him will end up being very happy with him.
..
Those are my thoughts and I think the Rams have a win-win decision on their hands.
I slightly prefer Goff over Wentz. But both guys will be franchise QBs in the NFL. I do think Goff is the more polished player and the less risky choice. Despite the offense he played in, he’s a very developed QB who is ready to step in and make an immediate impact…and he’s not lacking for upside either.
No matter what happens on April 28th, this team has a bright future with Goff or Wentz at the helm.. I think both Goff and Wentz are the right choices. It’s a win-win and we can’t go wrong. I prefer Goff. But a person isn’t wrong to prefer Wentz. They simply value certain attributes differently than I do.
…
In terms of the Rams offense, I happen to think that our WRs/TEs will look a whole lot better with a QB who can throw the ball accurately and on time. Especially Britt and Austin. Britt will never be Calvin Johnson but he’s a legitimate vertical threat. With better QB play the past couple years, I think he has at least one 1000 yard season. And we have no idea what Austin can or will be. His route running seemed to improve a lot last year but our QBs just couldn’t get him the ball.
Will our WR/TE corps be great? No. But they don’t have to be. We’re run a first offense. We just need a guy at QB who can make the throws that are there and help us sustain drive. We don’t need a lot out of our rookie passer.
April 21, 2016 at 8:25 am #42350znModeratorstill yet even MORE follow-up…again
==
jrry32
Here are some great examples of what make Goff special:
https://gifs.com/gif/W61WDx
https://gifs.com/gif/v2wmV5
https://gifs.com/gif/xkyoX3
https://gifs.com/gif/PNG631
https://gifs.com/gif/o2mAxB
https://gifs.com/gif/v2wmG0
https://gifs.com/gif/W61WMQ(make sure to watch the last video because the work he does on that play for a first down is incredible)
I purposefully didn’t pick big plays and scoring plays from that game.(trust me, there were some amazing throws for big plays/TDs in this game that I easily could have picked) I picked plays that seem like fairly run of the mill plays on the stat sheet. The reason I picked these plays is because they illustrate the things that Goff does that will make the biggest difference at the next level.
He’s got bodies all around him and yet he’s fully in control. He’s moving with a purpose and always knows where his receivers are so he’s ready to get the ball out to the open man as soon as he has enough time.
That’s what wins you football games. The guy who can buy just that extra split second of time when the pocket is collapsing and hit his open WR with the ball. If there’s anything that Goff is incredible at, it’s moving within the pocket and knowing exactly where his WRs are when it comes time to get rid of the ball. Goff is a much more frustrating guy for a pass rush because of how well he moves in the pocket and how good his instincts are. It’s like going up against Tom Brady and Drew Brees. Doesn’t matter how good a job you do at collapsing the pocket, they always seem to find day-light and get the ball out.
And I recognize a few of the examples I posted here are check-downs but that’s my point. Peyton Manning murders teams with check-downs. Because when he’s under pressure, he always seems to know who is open. Goff has that same sort of ability. He’s not too selfish. When he knows the pressure is coming, he’ll hit his check-down guy. And he moves so quickly through his progressions and reads that he actually gives his check-down guy an opportunity to pick up yards after the catch.
Goff’s instincts, movement, and poise in the pocket are special. He has a great feel for where throwing lanes are and an innate sense of where pressure is coming from. He has extremely quick feet which allow him to move quick and reset quickly to get the ball out. And the guy doesn’t drop his eyes. He keeps his head on a swivel and knows exactly who to get the ball to as soon as he’s bought enough time to get it out.
The guy’s OL sucked. And it forced him to develop these skills. Thank the Lord it did. Because this is a kid who can step in right away and make the Rams OL look good.
There are some similarities to Bradford but Goff is on a whole another level when it comes to pocket instincts, movement, and poise under pressure. He’s among the best I’ve evaluated in those categories. Bradford wasn’t. It’s the one blind spot I had with Bradford. When he got the NFL, it became apparent how raw he was in that regard. He improved over time but he’s never grown comfortable with pressure. He’s a guy you have to keep clean.
What about snaps under center, the footwork, timing and the progressions on 3, 5 and 7 step drops? And turning one’s back to the defense on play-action? Goff has been working all off-season on this, has tremendously quick feet and polished footwork, and processes things extremely quickly on the field. He can handle it. There is going to be a transition for every QB. The question is if they have the attributes to successfully make the transition. Goff does. So does Wentz. But it’ll be easier for Goff because he has less things in his game that he’ll have to focus on refining.
Whether the QB is Goff or Wentz, I’m happy they took the chance to get one of those two guys. It makes me feel good about our chances and it gives me hope that this team has a bright future. This is a franchise defining pick. And I don’t think they can get it wrong. By god, that feels freaking great to me.
I think people underestimate how bad our QBs were last year. I’m never going to subscribe to the idea that the offense is just screwed because it’s Fisher. It’s unfortunate that we don’t have the same caliber of offensive minds that we do defensive minds (at least, that we know of yet). Because Gregg Williams is amazing at adjusting his system to the talent he has. But you put enough talent in any system and it will work. Upgrading from Foles/Keenum to a #1 overall pick will make a major difference. That’s a serious difference in talent. I really don’t understand the stance that (for instance) Drew Brees (or a Drew Brees like QB) would be elite under Sean Payton but somehow be terrible here.
I really hope people don’t believe that Fisher would have struggled sustaining success with guys like Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Drew Brees, etc. Fisher has never sustained success with a pocket passer because his pocket passers have been guys like Billy Volek, Kerry Collins, Austin Davis, Shaun Hill, Injured Sam Bradford, Kellen Clemens, etc.
—
On the frequent Wentz/Roethlisberger comparisons. Ben is such a unique player. He’s massive and very difficult to bring down. Wentz isn’t that big or strong in the pocket. Wentz isn’t a small guy but he doesn’t have Ben’s strength and tackle-breaking ability. Can’t really compare him based on that. Ben is just too unique. It would be like comparing a QB with good mobility to Mike Vick. Just can’t do that. Will take a really special player to get the Ben comparison. The guy in this class who breaks tackles like Ben is Jacoby Brissett but Brissett isn’t a consistent enough thrower or consistent enough mentally at this point to earn that comparison.
Bortles is a closer comparison but Bortles had such a great feel in the pocket and really good movement as a prospect. Wentz isn’t on his level in that regard. But at the same time Wentz has a lot in common with Palmer and Bortles. I’d say he’s a mix of both guys.
And, Wentz isn’t McNair either. McNair got scholarship offers from schools like Florida to play HB. Wentz isn’t that caliber of athlete. He’s not going to be running all over NFL defenses.
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April 21, 2016 at 9:32 am #42354wvParticipantWhen i watch Goff, i just cringe a bit at
his repeated throwing off balance…i dunno.
My gut tells me his rookie year is gonna
be full of INTs. I dont get that feeling
with Wentz.I see that Goff is a pocket-master in college.
Great instincts for flowing in and around the pocket.
I’m just not sure its gonna translate in the pros.My gut also tells me he wont last the first year.
He’ll get kilt with that sleek body moving around
the pocket the way he does.Course, i know my ‘gut’ dont really know nuthin.
w
vApril 23, 2016 at 8:36 pm #42481znModeratoroff the net
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The Dallas Analysis
Wentz:
Pro’s
-Elite Arm Strength
-Good Accuracy
-Athletic enough to hurt you with his feet
-Size
-Good thrower on the move
– Highly intelligent and a natural leader
-Clutch gamer –> multiple game winning drives and two time champion. This is my favorite part of his game. The guy wins.Cons
– Progressions: I watched the Northern Iowa game and he did not go through multiple progressions ONCE. He picks a target based on the presnap and will force it to him. It worked in Division 2 but it will not at the pro level. This is by far his biggest flaw. However, once he gets out of the pocket, he keeps his eyes downfield and makes progressions. Only when he escapes the pocket though.
– Played against weak talent
– Injury concerns. He was hurt his whole junior season in highschool and broke his wrist in college forcing him to miss over half the season last year
– Will turn 24 in DecemberGoff
Pros
– Elite short to mid range accuracy. Still accurate on the deep ball but not elite
– Only 21 years old. People talk about how skinny he is but forget that he will naturally gain another 15 pounds in 2 years.
– Smart
– Goes through multiple progressions very quickly
– Pocket presence. Keeps feet constantly moving in the pocket and feels the rush
– Doesn’t get scared by the pressure. Hes used to getting crushed all game and it doesn’t phase him
– Quick Release. This makes up for not having elite arm strengthCons
– Doesn’t have the most zip on his ball. He is young and still can increase his arm strength.
– Not as vocal as I’d like him to be, but not as quiet as Sam Bradford thank goodness.
– Won’t hurt you with his scrambling ability
– Air Raid offense. Will have to adjust to taking snaps under center
– Didn’t win as many games as I’d like him to. To his defense, his WRs dropped countless passes and his oline and defense sucked. Still, I would have liked to see him come away with more W’s
-Throws off his back foot too oftenConclusion:
Both of these QB’s will be quality starters in the NFL and picking between them is much harder than I thought it would be. To be completely honest, I don’t think I’ll know who I want until Roger Goodell walks up to the podium. I’m that torn between the two
April 23, 2016 at 9:05 pm #42484InvaderRamModeratori’m not sure i quite get the complaints about goff’s arm strength. i looked at ball velocities from the combine, and goff ranks among the best. now. in this environment, there’s not pressure in your face and guys can step into their throws and fully extend. i’d guess it’s different when you got guys in your face.
but here’s a sample of ball velocities from the last couple drafts.
in mph:
goff – 58
wentz – 57
cousins – 59
mannion – 57
mariota – 56
winston – 55
bortles – 56
wilson – 55
flacco – 55
newton – 56
foles – 57
carr, manziel, luck, rgiii, and tannehill did not throw.so i don’t know if i’m missing something, but his arm seems to be on par with most nfl prospects. i also think his arm has a higher ceiling than a lot of these guys listed as he puts on weight and muscle. combine that with his accuracy and you’d think he’s got a good chance.
http://www.pass2win.com/ball-velocity-exposing-the-power-qb.html
- This reply was modified 8 years, 7 months ago by InvaderRam.
April 23, 2016 at 9:07 pm #42486znModeratorso i don’t know if i’m missing something, but his arm seems to be on par with most nfl prospects.
IMO that’s because an mph metric can’t distinguish between a very quick release and a strong arm.
Goff has a quick release, not all that strong an arm though not a bad one by any means.
Bulger was very similar. Didn’t have a Wentz-strong arm, but had a quick release, and as a result threw a fantastic line-drive deep out.
.
April 23, 2016 at 9:27 pm #42487InvaderRamModeratorso i don’t know if i’m missing something, but his arm seems to be on par with most nfl prospects.
IMO that’s because an mph metric can’t distinguish between a very quick release and a strong arm.
Goff has a quick release, not all that strong an arm though not a bad one by any means.
Bulger was very similar. Didn’t have a Wentz-strong arm, but had a quick release, and as a result threw a fantastic line-drive deep out.
.
but my understanding is it’s not measuring release. it’s measuring how fast a ball gets from point a to point b.
for example. nick foles threw 57 mph. my understanding is he does not have a quick release.
April 23, 2016 at 9:30 pm #42488InvaderRamModeratorand i though bulger’s quick release just meant that cornerbacks couldn’t get a good jump on his pass because the ball got out of his hands so fast. again. i don’t think that’s what that metric is measuring.
April 23, 2016 at 9:43 pm #42489InvaderRamModeratormy guess is that when goff has time to set up and use his lower body to step into his throw, he can throw with velocity. when he’s got a pass rush on him and he can’t use his lower body as much and has to strong arm it, the velocity goes down. a guy like carson wentz, has the luxury of not having to set up like a goff does and can basically strong arm it with velocity. that’s where i think goff has to work on his upper body strength which he apparently didn’t do while at cal due to a shoulder injury. though his coaches are saying this is something he can and will work on in the future.
April 23, 2016 at 10:44 pm #42494znModeratorand i though bulger’s quick release just meant that cornerbacks couldn’t get a good jump on his pass because the ball got out of his hands so fast. again. i don’t think that’s what that metric is measuring.
Velocity can come from either thing–a quick release or a strong arm.
The metric comes from drills. It doesn’t measure live action. In fact I am not sure anyone can do that. (How do you use a speed gun with film?)
A quick release, like Bulger’s or Marino’s, gives the pass velocity. A strong arm does too. Just looking at the numbers, you can’t determine which thing is accounting most for the velocity.
In terms of on the field play, no one could know…again, the speed gun thing is a drill, it’s not measuring live action.
From what we see in games, though, it’s clear that Goff doesn’t have as strong an arm as Wentz, and that Wentz doesn’t have as quick a release as Goff.
…
April 23, 2016 at 11:37 pm #42498InvaderRamModeratori do think his arm can get stronger either way. like i said. his coaches said that due to his shoulder injury which he suffered in 2013, he didn’t do much in the way of upper body strength in 2014 or 2015. just working on that i would think you’d see increases in arm strength much like has been seen with tom brady.
April 24, 2016 at 1:26 am #42503AgamemnonParticipantlink: http://thebiglead.com/2016/03/02/carson-wentz-wonderlic/
Carson Wentz Scored a 29 on the Wonderlic, Higher than Peyton Manning and Cam Newton
on Wentz, the darling of the 2016 NFL quarterback class – for now, anyway – recently had a strong showing at the NFL Combine, and that includes his Wonderlic score. According to Bob McGinn of the Journal Sentinel, Wentz scored a 29 on the Wonderlic, ahead of the likes of Peyton Manning (28), Ben Roethlisberger (25) and Cam Newton (21). You can see a more comprehensive list below.
What does this mean? Nobody knows. Johnny Manziel scored a 32 a couple years ago, but he’s repeatedly failed in his decision-making off the field. So the 32 shows that Wentz definitely has a functioning brain.
[Aside: DeForest Buckner scored a 9, according to McGinn. He’s a defensive end. Reggie Ragland scored a 10. He’s an inside linebacker. If you’re looking for perspective: Ray Lewis, an all-time great inside linebacker, scored a 13.]
Scores for Jared Goff and Christian Hackenberg and Connor Cook and Cardale Jones and Paxton Lynch haven’t come in yet.
Perhaps only interesting to me: Wentz’s 29 lines up with another red-headed QB: Andy Dalton.
Greg McElroy, NY Jets, 48
Blaine Gabbert, Jacksonville, 42
Alex Smith, San Francisco, 40
Eli Manning, NY Giants, 39
Andrew Luck, Indianapolis, 37
Tony Romo, Dallas, 37*
Colin Kaepernick, San Francisco, 37
Sam Bradford, St. Louis, 36
Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay, 35
Christian Ponder, Minnesota 35
Marcus Mariota, Tennessee, 33
Tom Brady, New England 33
Johnny Manziel, Cleveland, 32
Matt Ryan, Atlanta, 32
Andy Dalton, Cincinnati 29
Mark Sanchez, NY Jets, 28
Peyton Manning, Indianapolis, 28
Blake Bortles, Jacksonville, 28
Jameis Winston, Tampa Bay, 27
Brandon Weeden, Cleveland, 27
Ryan Mallett, New England, 26
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh 25
Robert Griffin III, Washington, 24
Cam Newton, Carolina, 21
Jake Locker, Tennessee 20
Teddy Bridgewater, Minnesota, 20
Derek Carr, Raiders, 20The top 2 QBs in the draft dominated the Wonderlic
Wentz 40
Goff 36— John Middlekauff (@JohnMiddlekauff) March 28, 2016
Carson Wentz, Jared Goff's Reported Scores on Wonderlic Test Revealed
Carson Wentz, Jared Goff’s Reported Scores on Wonderlic Test Revealed
By Tyler Conway , Featured Columnist Mar 28, 2016Carson Wentz has eclipsed Jared Goff on many talent evaluators’ draft boards, thanks in large part to his prototypical size and arm strength. Now, the North Dakota State product has another check in the win column: Wonderlic scores.
John Middlekauff of 95.7 The Game reported Monday that Wentz scored a 40 out of 50 on the combine’s intelligence test, while Goff scored a 36. Both numbers are considered excellent overall, but this should only further Wentz’s rapid rise up draft boards.
Unheralded to most casual observers for nearly the entire 2015 season, Wentz is now a surefire top-10 pick. Equipped with size (6’5″, 237 lbs) and above-average athleticism (4.77-second 40-yard dash at the combine), he is everything scouts look for on paper. Playing at an FCS school kept him from the public’s view, but NFL teams have fallen for him to the point that his largely lost 2015 campaign has been thrown out the window.
ESPN.com’s Todd McShay currently has him going No. 2 to the Cleveland Browns, as does Bleacher Report’s Matt Miller. The Browns recently signed Robert Griffin III, but that should do little to change things if Cleveland believes Wentz is a franchise quarterback.
“I think he’s the most NFL-ready quarterback that we’ve had in the last couple of years,” former NFL coach Jon Gruden said in an ESPN feature on Wentz, per Mary Kay Cabot of Cleveland.com.
Goff, who spent nearly all of 2015 as the consensus top-ranked quarterback, has become a bit of a victim of the draft process. Scouts who spent years raving about the Cal product have spent the past few months finding flaws. Whether it’s his hand size (9″), arm strength or offensive scheme, the hand-wringing has seemingly made him the clear second option.
As it stands, Goff is going No. 7 to the 49ers in both McShay’s and Miller’s mock drafts. That seems like the top of his draft trajectory at this point. If the Browns pass on Wentz, it’s theoretically possible Goff falls out of the top 10—assuming no team trades up.
Their solid Wonderlic results should help reinforce Goff and Wentz as the draft’s top two quarterbacks. Wentz’s score of 40 ranks among the best in recent NFL history, while Goff’s is one point better than that of former Cal product Aaron Rodgers.
The idea that Wonderlics somehow translate to NFL superiority has long since been debunked, but getting a high score has never hurt anyone.
There is a bit of conflict about the exact score/s, 29 or 40.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 7 months ago by Agamemnon.
April 24, 2016 at 11:41 am #42531AgamemnonParticipantThe top 2 QBs in the draft dominated the Wonderlic
Wentz 40
Goff 36— John Middlekauff (@JohnMiddlekauff) March 28, 2016
http://nflcombineresults.com/playerpage.php?i=21337
Mannion had a 40 on the wondelic, too, best in his class.
April 24, 2016 at 11:59 am #42533znModeratorMannion had a 40 on the wondelic, too, best in his clas
Okay, sure, they can play football, but can they clearly explain the particle physics of mass.
If they could it would be an advantage, because they could then demonstrate that what LOOKED like an incompletion was, in an alternative universe, a TD pass.
Big advantage!
April 24, 2016 at 1:09 pm #42536InvaderRamModeratorone thing i like about goff is his ypa which was 8.9 last year. and it wasn’t pumped up by short safe passes and an extremely high completion percentage. to me that tells me he was throwing a lot of downfield passes and not just playing it safe.
i’ve had at least one friend tell me did take a lot of risks at cal which can be both good and bad.
April 24, 2016 at 7:13 pm #42547znModeratorone thing i like about goff is his ypa which was 8.9 last year
You know I looked and I couldn’t find any splits that would tell me what percentage of his total attempts were short, long, or medium.
I can find those stats on pro qbs, not college qbs.
April 24, 2016 at 7:40 pm #42548InvaderRamModeratorone thing i like about goff is his ypa which was 8.9 last year
You know I looked and I couldn’t find any splits that would tell me what percentage of his total attempts were short, long, or medium.
I can find those stats on pro qbs, not college qbs.
yeah. i can only assume from looking at those stats. it’s hard to tell how that ypa number was produced. but just generally looking at the modern day qb, the good ones tend to have a relative high ypa.
edit: i don’t know exactly how true that is about the ypa, but my impression is goff is not just a guy who throws screens and short passes.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 7 months ago by InvaderRam.
- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by InvaderRam.
April 24, 2016 at 9:55 pm #42553znModeratori don’t know exactly how true that is about the ypa, but my impression is goff is not just a guy who throws screens and short passes.
I agree. Yes a good ypa is a good sign. I just wish I could explore around and see what it’s based on. I have the same impression about it all that you do, but I would like to see what the numbers say too. Just a habit I have and unfortunately it has been frustrated by not knowing how/where to find those kinds of college splits.
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