Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
January 28, 2025, 05:06:57 pm
Home Help Search Calendar Login Register
News: Brian Fein is now blogging weekly!  Make sure to check the homepage for his latest editorial.
+  The Dolphins Make Me Cry.com - Forums
|-+  TDMMC Forums
| |-+  Dolphins Discussion (Moderators: CF DolFan, MaineDolFan)
| | |-+  Good read about the Quarterback position
« previous next »
Pages: [1] 2 3 Print
Author Topic: Good read about the Quarterback position  (Read 7241 times)
tubba marxxx
Guest
« on: December 28, 2010, 02:26:40 pm »

http://fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/28/will-miami-ever-learn-the-marino-lesson/?partner=TOPIXNEWS&ei=5099



Will Miami Ever Learn Its Own Marino Lesson?
By LUIS DELOUREIRO

Luis DeLoureiro operates NFLStatAnalysis.net and is a contributor to the Cold Hard Football Facts.
Miami Dolphins

Chad Henne’s shaky season is almost over, and the Miami Dolphins will probably be addressing the quarterback position in the off-season. Again. And judging by recent history, they’ll probably be doing so via a journeyman backup or a second-round pick.

Consider the players who have started for the Dolphins since Dan Marino’s retirement after the 1999 season (number of starts in parentheses):
• Jay Fiedler (59)
• Chad Henne (26)
• Chad Pennington (20)
• Gus Frerotte (15)
• Joey Harrington (11)
• A.J. Feeley (eight)
• Cleo Lemon (eight)
• Ray Lucas (six)
• Trent Green (five)
• Brian Griese (five)
• John Beck (four)
• Daunte Culpepper (four)
• Sage Rosenfels (two)
• Damon Huard (one)
• Tyler Thigpen (one)

Miami has replaced one of the most productive passers in N.F.L. history with a lot of mediocrity.

The Dolphins have refused to invest a first-round pick in the game’s most important position. They have not taken a quarterback in the first round since Marino in 1983.

The only other franchises that haven’t taken a quarterback in the first round since 1998 are the Chiefs, Cowboys, Patriots, Saints, Seahawks and Panthers. (The Seahawks acquired Matt Hasselbeck in a trade that included a first-round pick.)

Each of those teams, except the Panthers, has a franchise quarterback in place. A first-round pick, for most of these teams, would be wasteful.

In a quirky draft fact, the Dolphins used second-round picks on quarterbacks in four consecutive drafts. They selected John Beck in 2007, Henne in 2008 and Pat White in 2009. They also traded their 2006 second-round pick to the Vikings to obtain Daunte Culpepper. Only Henne is still with the team. During this time, they have passed on Matt Ryan, Joe Flacco and Aaron Rodgers, among others. To be fair, they also passed on Brady Quinn.

Using the second round to acquire a franchise quarterback has been a losing proposition. As I stated in a post in April, quarterbacks picked in the second round almost never pan out for the team drafting them. Since 2001, 12 quarterbacks have been taken in the second round. Jimmy Clausen and Henne are the only two players starting for the team that drafted them. And both have a tenuous hold on the job.

Drew Brees was also a second-round pick, but he did not achieve his current level of success until signing with the New Orleans Saints – coincidentally, after the Dolphins opted to trade for Culpepper instead of signing Brees.

In fact, if you look all the way back to 1990, 22 quarterbacks have been selected in the second round and only Kordell Stewart and Jake Plummer led the team that drafted them for any period of time.

For almost 20 years, Dan Marino was the face of the Dolphins. Although he didn’t win a title, he broke just about every significant single-season and career passing record. One would think that, more than anyone, the Dolphins would understand the value of a franchise quarterback. But the team has opted to avoid the risk involved with first-round quarterbacks. Unfortunately, the Dolphins have also lost out on the  reward that comes with first-round quarterbacks.

A few additional notes:
• In terms of yards, the best passing season since Marino was by Chad Pennington in 2008 with 3,653. (Jets fans, that was also his career high.)
• Jay Fiedler is the only post-Marino QB to throw 20 TD passes, with 20 in 2001. Marino threw for 20-plus 13 times (30-plus four times, and 40-plus twice). He had only one season (1997) in which he started 16 games and didn’t throw for 20 TDs.
Logged
Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #1 on: December 28, 2010, 02:58:17 pm »

The Dolphins have refused to invest a first-round pick in the game’s most important position. They have not taken a quarterback in the first round since Marino in 1983.
Well that's a bit misleading since there was really no need to pick a 1st round QB from '83 until at least '95 or '96 and then who knew that Miami would go through such a cold spell of finding a QB after that.  Granted that in hindsight they should have taken a QB in the 1st round in one of the last 8 or 10 years, but that's not really that long and they have taken a number of 2nd round choices.  I was really only expecting them to draft a 1st round QB one time in all those years and that was Brady Quinn.  Shows what I know.

Pat White was a mistake, no question about it.  I don't think Henne was, it just hasn't worked out up to this point.  I honestly was quite excited about John Beck too, but he hasn't worked out like I thought he would either.

But the biggest mistake was getting Culpepper instead of Brees and I was very disappointed about that choice at the time.  I actually wanted Miami to Draft Brees in 2001 and I think there was some talk about that.  That would have solved a lot of problems for Miami the last 10 years.  He's also wrong about Drew Brees, his 4th year in the league was actually his breakout year, 2 years before he went to New Orleans and after 2 years of being just OK as the starter.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2010, 03:22:32 pm by Pappy13 » Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
Sunstroke
YJFF Member
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 22869

Stop your bloodclot cryin'!


Email
« Reply #2 on: December 28, 2010, 03:11:38 pm »

During this time, they have passed on Matt Ryan, Joe Flacco and Aaron Rodgers, among others. To be fair, they also passed on Brady Quinn.

If this writer "really" was sincerely looking to be fair, rather than attempting to lead the reader into agreeing with his point, he wouldn't have put three known "success story" QBs and only one "failure story" QB in that example.

There are a couple of other examples of this writer "skewing the verbiage to support his point" in this article, but so many journalists do it these days that it has pretty much become the status quo.
 
But the biggest mistake was getting Culpepper instead of Brees and I was very disappointed about that choice at the time. 

That makes two of us...I wanted Brees to come to Miami so bad when he left SD.

Logged

"There's no such thing as objectivity. We're all just interpreting signals from the universe and trying to make sense of them. Dim, shaky, weak, staticky little signals that only hint at the complexity of a universe that we cannot begin to comprehend."
~ Micah Leggat
MyGodWearsAHoodie
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 14581



« Reply #3 on: December 28, 2010, 03:27:45 pm »

Well that's a bit misleading since there was really no need to pick a 1st round QB from '83 until at least '95 or '96 and then who knew that Miami would go through such a cold spell of finding a QB after that.  Granted that in hindsight they should have taken a QB in the 1st round in one of the last 8 or 10 years, but that's not really that long and they have taken a number of 2nd round choices. 

I disagree. 

What Miami should have done is drafted a QB in the 6th or 7th round almost every year when you had Marino.  Patriots got Brady in the 6th while they had a starting QB - Bledsoe.  They got Cassel in the 7th while they had Brady.  Greenbay drafted Flynn in the 7th while they had Rogers. 

I think the smart thing to do when you have a franchise QB already is not go find some hasbeen mediocre journeyman that you know will never be capable of being a franchise QB to be the backup.  Instead every year bring in a late round draft pick or UDFA let them battle it out in camp keep the best or two best as back up and 3rd.  Eventually you might find a franchise QB that way.  And with almost no risk or downside. 
Logged

There are two rules for success:
 1. Never tell everything you know.
Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #4 on: December 28, 2010, 03:37:17 pm »

What Miami should have done is drafted a QB in the 6th or 7th round almost every year when you had Marino.  Patriots got Brady in the 6th while they had a starting QB - Bledsoe.  They got Cassel in the 7th while they had Brady.  Greenbay drafted Flynn in the 7th while they had Rogers.
They did.  They drafted the following QB's during the Marino years.  Only Scott Mitchell turned into much of anything.  Lightning strikes in a bottle only so many times.

YR. Rd. Player (Pick)
'86 10  Jeff Wickersham (274)
'87 12  Jim Karsatos (322)
'88 7   Kerwin Bell (180)
'90 4   Scott Mitchell (93)
'92 11b Mark Barsotti (296)
'98 6b  John Dutton (172)


We might have be able to hold onto Scott Mitchell a bit longer if Marino hadn't gotten hurt in '93 and Mitchell replaced him pretty admirably and it became hard to keep him around.

« Last Edit: December 28, 2010, 03:59:35 pm by Pappy13 » Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
MyGodWearsAHoodie
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 14581



« Reply #5 on: December 28, 2010, 03:54:17 pm »

They did.  They drafted the following QB's during the Marino years.  Only Scott Mitchell turned into much of anything.  Lightning strikes in a bottle only so many times.


YR. Rd. Player (Pick)
'86 10  Jeff Wickersham (274)
'87 12  Jim Karsatos (322)
'88 7   Kerwin Bell (180)
'90 4   Scott Mitchell (93)
'92 11b Mark Barsotti (296)
'98 6b  John Dutton (172)


We might have be able to hold onto Scott Mitchell a bit longer if Marino hadn't gotten hurt in '93 and Mitchell replaced him pretty admirably and it became hard to keep him around.

What about 93, 94, 95, 96, 97?    His career was obviously winding down at this point.  Maybe not 93 if they thought they had a replacement in Mitchell.  But in '94 they should have drafted someone in the late rounds who potential could have been Marino's replacement and if after a year on the roster he wasn't try again.  Lighting only strikes only so often.  You have to keep fishing. 

QBs drafted by the Patriots while Brady has been the QB.

02 Rohan Davey
03 Kliff Kingsbury
05 Matt Cassel
08 Kevin O'Connell    
10 Zac Robinson

That is one every two years.  And only one out of five has amounted to anything. 
Logged

There are two rules for success:
 1. Never tell everything you know.
Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #6 on: December 28, 2010, 04:00:13 pm »

^^ Miami had Bernie Kosar backing up Dan from '94 to '96, there really wasn't much point.  Shula probably thought Kosar would take the reigns from Dan, but then Jimmy Johnson came in and Kosar retired because of injuries.

You do have to question why Jimmy didn't draft more QB's from 96-99 seeing as how he blamed Marino for Miami's failures, but that probably had to do with Jimmy's ego.  He thought he could get anyone to play QB since he'd done it in college when he recruited the top high school athletes every year.  Shula knew better.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2010, 04:07:09 pm by Pappy13 » Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
MyGodWearsAHoodie
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 14581



« Reply #7 on: December 28, 2010, 04:11:16 pm »

^^^ Bernie is only two years younger than Dan.  He never was going to be the future of the franchise. 

Logged

There are two rules for success:
 1. Never tell everything you know.
Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #8 on: December 28, 2010, 04:20:41 pm »

^^^ Bernie is only two years younger than Dan.  He never was going to be the future of the franchise. 
'95 was Shula's last draft, so maybe '94 or '95 they should have taken a late round QB, but other than that Shula did exactly what you have suggested should be done.

When Jimmy came in, Miami still had a good passing attack, Jimmy's task was to rebuild the defense and get a running back.  He suceeded at fixing the defense, but failed on landing a RB or a replacement for Marino.  Let's be honest here, Jimmy had no intention of being the head coach for more than a couple years.  He wasn't forward looking.  He was trying to rebuild the defense quickly and get the last bit out of Marino for one last shot at a SB.  Miami is still paying the price for that lack of leadership.

You have no idea how lucky you have been the last several years to have BB.  If it was easy, then there would be 10 of him.  There isn't.  You need to enjoy it while it lasts, because when he's gone you'll miss him.  These things you take for granted now will be only a memory.

Shula WAS BB before there ever was a BB.  You think that the next guy the Patriots bring in is going to be able to do what BB has done?  Keep dreaming.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2010, 04:25:37 pm by Pappy13 » Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
MyGodWearsAHoodie
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 14581



« Reply #9 on: December 28, 2010, 04:39:12 pm »

^^yes, Shula was a great coach.  BB and DS are among the all time greats. And I do know that the next coach Pats coach won't be nearly as good.

One thing that give me hope is that Kraft might by on par with Rooney as owners go. 

But the topic was what should the Dolphins done to avoid going from QB to QB in panic mode as they have for the past decade plus. I offer that they should have been looking during the JJ years, not waiting until DM retired to draft someone in the first round. 
Logged

There are two rules for success:
 1. Never tell everything you know.
Spider-Dan
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 15970


Bay Area Niner-Hater


« Reply #10 on: December 28, 2010, 05:01:30 pm »

Looking at relevant QBs that were drafted in the 6th round or later from 93-97:

Elvis Grbac (8th, 93)
Trent Green (8th, 93)
Gus Frerotte (7th, 94)
Koy Detmer (7th, 97)

If we're going to play hindsight draft wizard, this isn't a very good approach to take.

Of course, you could argue that MIA should have taken an undrafted Kurt Warner or Jeff Garcia.  To me, that's revisionism at its most stark, but you could make that argument.
Logged

Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #11 on: December 28, 2010, 05:15:29 pm »

But the topic was what should the Dolphins done to avoid going from QB to QB in panic mode as they have for the past decade plus. I offer that they should have been looking during the JJ years, not waiting until DM retired to draft someone in the first round.
I'm not disagreeing with you that it's the correct strategy, I'm only saying that just because you look, doesn't guarantee you are going to find someone.  The Dolphins looked for years with Shula and didn't find anyone other than Scott Mitchell.  The Patriots were EXTREMELY fortunate to get Tom Brady that late.  Cassell is a nice QB, but that's it, a nice QB, not really much to be bragging about.  He's had a great year playing an extremely soft schedule.  He does it again next year, I'll give him his due.

Certainly Miami could have done more and should have, but that's easy to say in hindsight.  I remember the entire NFL busting on the Dolphins for not taking Brady Quinn, but no offense to him, seems like it was the right thing to do to pass on him (not necessarily taking Ginn).

Finding a franchise QB is not a science, it's mostly luck.  A lot of it depends on what happens AFTER you get the guy on your roster.  Had Tom Brady gone to the Detroit Lions instead of the Patriots, it's possible no one knows who he is today.  I firmly believe that.  Miami has done an average job at best of developing the talent they've brought to this team the last 10 years and QB is no exception.  I blame most of that on the coaching staff.  We haven't had a good coaching staff since JJ left and JJ was only good on the defensive side of the ball.  It's not necessarily who you draft, it's what you do with the players you draft that matters.  Miami has done an average job which is why they are an average team.  Get a first class coaching staff in here and just watch how Miami is suddenly brilliant at drafting players.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2010, 05:37:49 pm by Pappy13 » Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
MyGodWearsAHoodie
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 14581



« Reply #12 on: December 28, 2010, 05:41:43 pm »

I'm only saying that just because you look, doesn't guarantee you are going to find someone.

And I am not saying that looking guarantees you will find some one.  But I like the odds of better of looking at 3 late round picks and 3 UDFA at finding one good QB out of the 6 than the odds that the one you spend a first round draft pick on a QB he will be a good one. 

Quote

  The Dolphins looked for years with Shula and didn't find anyone other than Scott Mitchell.

You only need to find one. 

Quote

  The Patriots were EXTREMELY fortunate to get Tom Brady that late.  Cassell is a nice QB, but that's it, a nice QB, not really much to be bragging about.


I agree with you about Pats being extremely fortunate with Tom.  Cassel isn't Tom Brady, but he is better than anyone that that has been behind center for the Dolphins since Danny retired.  Odds of any team getting the next Tom Brady/Dan Marino is pretty small, it is what you hope for, but not realistically expectation.   But a Matt Cassel quality player is enough to build a team around.   

Quote

Finding a franchise QB is not a science, it's mostly luck.  


My point is it that you have a better chance at getting lucky the more often you roll the dice. 

Quote
A lot of it depends on what happens AFTER you get the guy on your team too. 

The smart thing to help Henne along would be to fire the OC, so Henne will be forced to learn a new offense.   Roll Eyes Or maybe not.

Logged

There are two rules for success:
 1. Never tell everything you know.
Pappy13
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 8384



« Reply #13 on: December 28, 2010, 05:54:09 pm »

The smart thing to help Henne along would be to fire the OC, so Henne will be forced to learn a new offense.   Roll Eyes Or maybe not.
Well it certainly can't hurt to forget the old one.
Logged

That which does not kill me...gives me XP.
Spider-Dan
Global Moderator
Uber Member
*****
Posts: 15970


Bay Area Niner-Hater


« Reply #14 on: December 28, 2010, 07:46:44 pm »

Cassel isn't Tom Brady, but he is better than anyone that that has been behind center for the Dolphins since Danny retired.
In what respect is Cassel better than Jay Fiedler?

Cassel inherited a 16-0 team and couldn't make the playoffs.
He went 4-11 as KC's starter last year.
He has yet to win a playoff game.
Logged

Pages: [1] 2 3 Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

The Dolphins Make Me Cry - Copyright© 2008 - Designed and Marketed by Dave Gray


Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines