Various thoughts from posts earlier in this thread.
1. I don't regret the Cutler deal and would definitely do it again. Cutler is a Franchise caliber QB. He was a 25 year old Pro Bowl QB who has proven that with the proper tools, he can be highly effective throwing the ball. No player on the field other than the Center has the ball in their hands as much as the QB and history has proven that you are about 10x more likely to win a Championship with a Franchise signal caller than without. Is Cutler having a rough season, especially in the Red Zone and when it comes to forcing the ball into places he shouldn't? Sure. Are there reasons and excuses galore for this? Yes. Does Cutler deserve the blame? Plenty of it. But would I rather go back to the days of 22 starting QB's over 8 seasons? Are you f**king nuts?
2. Long story short, Cutler has young developing weapons. I agree with the concept that a Chicago Bears receiving corp consisting of a legit #1 (Brandon Marshall if he becomes available), Devin Hester as a stretch the field deep threat, Johnnie Knox as a solid slot guy that is interchangeable with Hester on the outside, Bennett as a solid possession guy, and Olsen, who is developing into one of the better receiving TE's in the league, is a pretty good arsenal. In his first year with Cutler, Olsen is a 70 catch, 650 yard, 9-10 TD guy. Cutler has got to get his INT's under control, no doubt. But hopefully this is his exception year. His INT's have never been this high, and despite what is being called a bad year, he's still on pace to throw for nearly 4,000 yards and just under 25 TD's. What's a good year look like? 4600+ and 30+ TD's? Even with a 1/3 less picks, he'd have 20 INT's. What would a Bears team look like with a 4,600 yard QB who had 32 TD's and 20 INT's? I think we're playoff bound. How about you?
3. Pace is supposedly injured now...The crop of free agent OT's was pretty rough and with the retirement of John Tait and the equally miserable play of John St. Claire, Angelo did the best he could signing Pace, Schaeffer, and Omiyale and hoping two panned out. As of right now, none have. Is it Angelo's fault that the free agent crop was bad? No. Is it his fault the OL was allowed to get to this point? Absolutely.
4. Cutler can be a Franchise, Pro Bowl caliber guy. Does he have the tools? Not yet. Does he have an Offensive Coordinator who has sucked for some time? Yes. Was Cutler a former Pro Bowl QB at 25 years old in a division with Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger and Phillip Rivers and Peyton Manning and a Brett Favre on the Jets? Yes, he was. Its not exactly fitting a square peg into a round hole to think its more likely we're screwing him up, is it?
5. If Cutler plays just like this for the next 3-5 years, then it will be a bad trade. Of course, he is completing about the same number of balls as a percentage. He's on pace to throw about the same number of TD's that he averages. He's rushing for similar statistics, too. But the major differences are that he's getting sacked far more than he ever has in his career and....guess what....he's throwing more INT's than he ever has in his career. Its like magic...
6. When any QB is surrounded by talent, he appears MORE talented. In Tom Brady's 1st season with Randy Moss on the roster, his yardage totals increased by 36%, his TD's increased by 108%, his INT's dropped by 33%, his completion percentage hit a career high, and his passer rating went up 30 points. Brady posted career highs in yardage, TD's, completion percentage, yards per attempt, interceptions (low), times sacked (low), passer rating, and even in rushing TD's. If the Bears added Brandon Marshall and Cutler saw even half the boost that Brady got from the addition of Moss in terms of percentages, he'd be looking at a 4700 yard, 35 TD, 19 INT, with a 90.4 passer rating. In other words, I think that would help. Those are Pro Bowl and playoff numbers for a QB. Just a thought.
|