And instead of answering my question directly which was 'how does asking for competence equal asking for perfection?'.. you opt for a goal post move.
Ok. I'll play along
Nas wrote:
Fields was AWFUL last season. Part of that was Nagy, but most of it was on him.
Agree to a point on the 1st sentence, disagree partially with the last sentence. Fields was a rookie QB that got thrown into the mix earlier than he should have by a coach that clearly was in over his head, had no idea how to develop his own offense let alone a 2nd young QB he was handed. I'll let his failure with every single QB he worked with from veterans he insisted on having (Foles, Dalton) to a young high draft pick he hoodwinked his way into the job claiming he could develop in (Pro Bowl QB) Trubisky speak for itself.. and of course his eventual firing for being a stubborn, incompetent, one dimensional failure that was kept around at the very least a full season longer than he should have been.
But yeah, some of that was on Fields too.. as a rookie.
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He clearly has the physical tools to be special, but he needs to fix the MANY holes in his game.
Again, he was a rookie. I'm sure Jacksonville, and the Jets felt the same about the young QB's they drafted that fell flat on their faces too after they were thrust into early starting duties with poor, incompetent coaching.
You want to know what a rookie can look like with a competent coach and organization when he's asked to lead from the start? Take a look at Mac Jones. You dont think Trevor Lawrence of Justin Fields (who at least have more physical talent) could have flourished at a similar rate had they been drafted by the Pats?
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We all should be able to see improvement from him this year regardless of what he has around him.
And now we come to the goal post move I mentioned earlier. Yeah, ok, improvement, I can agree we should see that regardless of some things.
Now lets move onto what was actually said and being talked about that seemed to have you taking issue with my post - Fields showing us 'he's the guy', or 'showing us what he is', and me adding for that he will need some competent help. Showing 'improvement' isnt mutually exclusive (in my world) with showing 'he's the guy'. They arent the same thing. Mitch showed improvement from his rookie year with Fox to his 1st year with Nagy without proving 'he's the guy' after all.
Asking for things to at least be 'competent' shouldn't be some Hail Marry laughable idea that gets snarky reactions from people like you who want to come off as knowledgeable while claiming that concept is asking for things to be perfect. Taking that position literally leaves you dying on the hill of incompetence because its literally the only other option left after competence.
Its ridiculous on its face to suggest that in his 2nd season in the NFL, and his 1st season with yet another new coach in another new system, everything around him can be at a level of incompetence and he should still be good, he should still show progress that proves this that or the other. There isn't a QB on planet Earth that survives at a high level of efficiency operating under those same conditions, let alone a dude in his 2nd year, and his 1st with a new coach and system.