One Post wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Thanks for letting me know his age.
You're advocating that the Bears spend the #3 pick on a 21 year old QB with a spotty record at best versus 18 and 19 year olds.
Yet the Bears sent the 18th pick, a future #1 and a pile of shit for a 25 year old who in the year prior tore up the top 1% of football defenders and you claim that it was a folly trade?
Again, we all agree the Cutler deal didn't work out as planned, but given the scenarios above, most anyone would rather have the 25 year old deal than drafting your run of the mill Bortles, Russell, Bradford, Manuel, etc.
Especially in light of the hauls that the Rams and the Titans got for their top picks, the Bears made a stellar deal. Again, it didn't work out like everyone hoped, but the trade for the 25 year old who dominated the AFC West is the better odds on play than drafting the guy who lit up Coastal Carolina.
So I'll say this B-Rick, if you said at the time of the deal that Cutler was no more than an average QB, congratulations to you. Although I'd speculate that call was based less on acute sports knowledge (and your posts in the Cubs forum over the past two plus years will show that you indeed have very little acute sports knowledge) and more based on dumb luck. So you good on you for the call on Cutler.
I didn't say that the Cutler trade was necessarily wrong. He had the potential to improve and make it worth it and his age was a factor. He could have become a great to elite quarterback. He wasn't at that point and had major issues and that is why Denver did the unthinkable and drop him pretty quickly.
He was an average quarterback in Denver at the time of the trade. He snuck into the Pro Bowl because everyone else dropped out. He was 16th in qb rating. He was 14th in completion percentage. He was 3rd in yards but total yards often lies(see Hoyer). He was 7th in touchdowns but had the 2nd most interceptions in the league. So, unless you only care about yards(and you shouldn't) and touchdowns without context, he was average. His team also wasn't good, the coach got fired, and the team decided that Kyle Orton was a better option than him.
He had the potential to be much better. That is why you make the trade. I doubted he would suddenly start fixing his issues because he had a lot of mechanical issues and he already shown the same attitude that Bears fans and the numerous fired coaches he played for learned to love.
As I said, you picked a terrible place to fight me here. It wasn't your worst one this year but it probably is the second. If there is one thing that I can say with certainty it is that I was concerned about Cutler from the very beginning.
One Post wrote:
But if you're shitting on the Cutler deal (not based on hindsight) and advocating rolling the dice with some QB in the top 10 of the NFL draft, you either don't understand competition differential, or are dumb.
No, dumb is making a $250 bet you have no chance of winning because you claim you can afford it.
Drafting the best available quarterback with the third pick in the draft(within reason) for the most important position on the team is not dumb.