courtesy flush wrote:
At this point, I would take Jackson or Orton in a heartbeat over Grossman.
Grossman's mechanics are getting progressively worse, and he's starting to look like David Carr in the pocket. He doesn't have the arm strength to compensate for throwing off the back foot and, as a result, accuracy has really become an issue.
When Griese struggled, everybody rushed to yell "so it wasn't Rex's fault!" But Grossman wasn't any better than Griese at forcing the defense to play the pass. At least Griese moved the chains.
Sure, Grossman might shine in training camp and some exhibition games.
But when it's late in the game and you gotta move the chains, you give the ball to the guy who will step up and deliver the throw.
That's the problem...you just named a bunch of guys that DON'T fit the description of a "go to" guy. Feel free to take as many average, under-achievers on your team as you like CF. But if you don't have an offensive line, a running game and reliable receivers...then you have a shitty offense. Peyton Manning, with a shitty offensive line, no running game and unreliable receivers, is an average (maybe below average if the defense blows too) quarterback. Grossman, Griese, Orton, Jackson, Carr are all awful, even worse (0 to 30 rating) quarterbacks in that scenario. I don't need to give examples if you saw the Bears play last year. The only time the offense looked ok last year was when the defense played up to it's potential.
The quarterback is like a driver in a car. He's the most important person because he decides where and when to go, how fast or slow to go and is involved in every action. But if you have a no engine or flat tires, it doesn't really matter who's driving it, does it? Conversely, if you have a car with the most powerful engine in the world, you don't really need the best driver anymore...just someone to hit the gas and hang on to the wheel. He's still an important part but not really the reason for winning.
The Bears won't find a "Peyton Manning" type quarterback by next year but the o-line and running game can make a turn around in that time frame. Next year's quarterback will just be a placeholder for whoever comes in as the next quarterback of the future, so I wouldn't get too excited this year's choice.