veganfan21 wrote:
badrogue17 wrote:
Juiced wrote:
You have to fire the entire staff if you are going to draft a QB with the 1st pick. If they don't then it doesn't matter who they draft because the team will fail them like they did Justin. Justin with his talent should never be 22nd ranked in the league. He likely never would have been a HOF franchise QB, but could have been good enough to lead us to the playoffs with the right culture and scheme.
Or maybe the scouting reports that followed “Justin” out of college citing his deficiencies were correct and that’s who he is no matter who’s coaching him.
This is correct, juiced. You are for some reason asserting that because Justin is athletic and strong therefore he must be destined for something higher than 22 overall at QB. The same logic would apply to any Olympic athlete or MMA fighter with similar traits to Fields - because of their elite traits they must necessarily be destined for NFL greatness. Extremely flawed thinking.
The difference between Justin and an Olympic athlete or MMA fighter with similar traits to Fields is Fields is a QB and they are not. He's been throwing a football his entire life. If he was running track since grade school or training to be a fighter in the MMA the last decade or so he would probably be pretty good at it.
Not saying he would have ended up in the HOF, but he should at least be top 15 in the league with his talent.
Found this old pre-season article from SI. Changed the name to Fields from whom it was originally about.
Potential 2024 pre-season article:
Has anyone seen Justin Fields of the Chicago Bears? Oh, there he is, right over there, talking to the quarterback coach. Which quarterback coach? Good question. It's, let's see, it's, uh, Bobby Slowik. They're working on the new attack, which head coach Matt Eberflus says will be like Cincinnati's and feature four wideouts. You say Fields looks a bit confused? Well, this is his fourth year in the league, and he's working under his fourth quarterback coach. Consequently his rankings have steadily dropped—from 76.9 to 68.5 to last year's 62.3, which was next to last in the NFL. This off season the Bears gave him a vote of confidence by drafting USC Trojans quarterback Caleb Williams in the first round. (They couldn't sign him, and he ended up with the Patriots.)
The Bears talk about fresh legs, fresh faces and fresh raw talent just waiting to be cooked. But they always do that in Chicago. They bury you with names. Still, Chicago isn't without talent. Right tackle Darnel Wright, is outstanding; Teven Jenkins is a potential Pro Bowler when he's not limping; and wideout D.J. Moore was dazzling last year. This year's second first round pick (the Bears always have lots of selections), wideout Rome Oduze, may be almost as good as Moore. Next years No. 1 from NE. The Bears can always trade it away, as they did with Caleb Williams. Then they'll have even more draft choices for '26.
Anyone want to guess who this article was written about?