Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Sea Hawk Run!'s avatar

Star QBs are rare and ridiculously expensive. The best QBs entering the draft are extremely expensive and risky. QBs that teams gave up on are dirt cheap, and are even less likely to succeed, but might also have great college tape, and were probably let go from a bad team that had questionable coaching, a poor O-line, and no Pro Bowl targets.

JS plays Moneyball.

Expand full comment
Grant's avatar

I can't think of a single example in the last couple decades of a quarterback who wasn't already a star, changing teams and becoming a star. Geno might be the best success story for this plot line ever, and I don't think it's Hallmark movie worthy at this point (win a Super Bowl and we'll start talking movie rights). Hasselbeck? Trent Green? There's probably some other good QBs that had their original teams give up on them only to become solid/pro-bowl-ish players, but even these guys were let go due to circumstance (Hasselbeck was behind Favre and Green got hurt and replaced by Kurt Warner) and not for poor play. The point is that Geno's story is truly unique. If Lock, Howell, Fields, Lance, Zach Wilson or whoever manage to have a sustained franchise QB kind of career it would be a unique and amazing story. Maybe Baker Mayfield will be that guy. If we're really really lucky, Howell will be that guy. In all likelihood, however, he's got a Marcus Mariota/Gardner Minshew ceiling.

Expand full comment
38 more comments...

No posts