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Nope.Yes. Do you have a point?
Nope.Yes. Do you have a point?
The lack of a instant-impact ILB draftee is directly because we traded for QW, who is a foundational player for our second round pick and also not trading out of the shot at Caleb Downs, which would have likely netted an extra 2nd. I do not regret acquiring either player.
But the draft, fringe churn, and fringe trades should not have been our only options as the position has been neglected in general for years.
I can picture a world where Overshown returns to elite status, Winters continues his climb to the top of second tier players, and Barham becomes an enforcer and selective blitzing specialist.
A strong front can help enable that development, but it's going to take a while.
Murray made a Mazi-level negative impact last year and was one of the main reasons we landed so historically bad, so I'm super glad he's gone. But for such an 'actively churning' team we're still bad there. I just can't understand how we let it get this way.
I think it’s a bit off to call or imply the Eagles’ or Seahawk LB’s are coached up JAGs. Whatever they were before 2025, the players fielded last year played very well by any standard. They were certainly coached well, but it was more than that too.When the Eagles won the Super Bowl in 2024 Nakobe Dean missed the playoffs and their ILB's were Zack Baun and Oren Burks during the playoffs. Baun was a complete JAG who was basically a ST guy prior to joining Fangio, and Burks is another JAG who has bounced around the league.
Last year Seattle's best ILB was Ernest Jones, another guy who has bounced around and never really been anything much better than a fringe starter similar to a guy like Dee Winters. Drake Thomas was a UDFA who came into the 2025 season playing a grand total of 40 defensive snaps, Tyrice Knight was a 4th rounder in 2024 who didn't do much as a rookie.
The fact of the matter is that the only two things that matter next year defensively are health and the extent to which Parker is a legit defensive mind or not. You can build defenses around elite ILB's, but you can also have an elite defense with complete JAG's at the position.
If Parker is legit and we stay mostly healthy, our defense will at least be above average and plenty good enough to make some noise with our offense. If he can't live up to the hype we'll probably be somewhere between shit and average.
The talent at ILB has almost nothing to do with it unless we have 3 serious injuries there, which is why I said it comes down to health and Parker.
I think it’s a bit off to call or imply the Eagles’ or Seahawk LB’s are coached up JAGs. Whatever they were before 2025, the players fielded last year played very well by any standard. They were certainly coached well, but it was more than that too.
I mean by that reckoning, Mark Tunei, Nate Newton, John Gesek, and Kevin Gogan were the definition of JAGs and journeymen— all but complete scrubs. Then all of a sudden they became the foundation of one of the great OL’s in club history.
It had a lot to do with patterns shortening enabling shorter required blocking windows, confidence building behind better skill talent including and especially a certain #22, and natural maturity, but bottom line they together achieved lasting greatness.
Not saying either of these LBing units are the 80’s Bears, Giants, or Saints, but they have each become good on their own with or without great coaching.
We saw Overshown thrive under Zimmer and still play well enough under Flus, despite his injury recovery.The key is that you don't need elite, blue chip players in certain spots if you have the right coaching, which is why I said Parker is the real key, not some theoretical talent threshold at ILB.
We saw Overshown thrive under Zimmer and still play well enough under Flus, despite his injury recovery.
Imagine what he might have done with great coaching as well.
Parker was great as a positional coach, but he has to prove he can scale himself through others as a Defensive Coordinator, and so it will not just be Parker's skill at coaching but his skill in hiring and getting his new LB coaches, Scott Symons (ILBs) and Chidera Uzo-Diribe (OLBs), to fit his vision and architecture.
Gonna be a learning curve.
But you also need talented players. JAGs and late round picks can't be consistently relied upon.
I like him, I really do, but I meant an accomplished starter, a dependable star like BrooksHello.
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If we get Brooks you may as well just go ahead and book your plane tickets to Inglewood now.I like him, I really do, but I meant an accomplished starter, a dependable star like Brooks
When was Overshown ever elite?The lack of a instant-impact ILB draftee is directly because we traded for QW, who is a foundational player for our second round pick and also not trading out of the shot at Caleb Downs, which would have likely netted an extra 2nd. I do not regret acquiring either player.
But the draft, fringe churn, and fringe trades should not have been our only options as the position has been neglected in general for years.
I can picture a world where Overshown returns to elite status, Winters continues his climb to the top of second tier players, and Barham becomes an enforcer and selective blitzing specialist.
A strong front can help enable that development, but it's going to take a while.
Murray made a Mazi-level negative impact last year and was one of the main reasons we landed so historically bad, so I'm super glad he's gone. But for such an 'actively churning' team we're still bad there. I just can't understand how we let it get this way.
Well, injury prevented us from seeing him voted all-pro, pro-bowl, or anything like that. So maybe not elite, but…When was Overshown ever elite?
I think the problem is what are the odds Overshown stays healthy? So then it's Winters and what, hoping Barham gets it right away?
And Downs may be a good box player but he's like 5-10, 205. Not a LB.